4,500-Year-Old Three Warrior Graves Found in Germany, One Still Wearing an Arm Guard

Extraordinary discovery during the construction of a New Power Line: Archaeologists unearth a cemetery from the Copper Age with Three Warrior Graves. One of the deceased even wore part of his armor.

Archaeologists have discovered an approximately 4,500-year-old cemetery with ten graves from the Bell Beaker culture near Förderstedt, located in the Salzlandkreis district of Germany.

Currently, three particularly well-preserved burials have been uncovered. The deceased, buried in a hunched position facing east, were interred under a common burial mound. Women were laid on the right side, while men were on the left side of the body.

“A common burial mound covered all three deceased,” said project leader Susanne Friederich from the State Office for Heritage Preservation and Archaeology of Saxony-Anhalt.

In the Bell Beaker culture, the ᴅᴇᴀᴅ were always buried in a hunched position facing east. The name comes from the bell-shaped ceramic vessels that were filled with food and placed in the grave for the journey to the afterlife.

Among the most striking discoveries are the grave goods found within the tombs. In one grave, archaeologists unearthed a bell-shaped ceramic vessel, approximately 15 centimeters in diameter, filled with food to accompany the deceased on their journey to the afterlife.


At the time of burial, the deceased was still wearing his arm guard, which helps archers avoid injuring themselves with the bowstring.
PH๏τo: Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert/dpa
At the time of burial, the deceased was still wearing his arm guard, which helps archers avoid injuring themselves with the bowstring. PH๏τo: Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert/dpa

This vessel was found in one of the three central burials. In the second burial, a stone arm guard was discovered. The archaeologist stated, “This indicates a male hunter or warrior.” The arm guard, measuring approximately eight by four centimeters, cushioned the snapping bowstring and thus prevented injuries.

“The third grave is remarkably well-preserved. In the back area of a warrior, two arrowheads were found. They were very close together,” Friederich noted. “Additionally, a quiver was faintly outlined in the sediment. This container for the arrows was made of organic material and has decayed. Only a different color and structure in the sediment indicate that the deceased was buried with his equipment.”

Graves Well-Preserved by Loess Clay

Although the graves were discovered at a depth of about two meters, they were originally much deeper or well-protected by a high burial mound. Excavation leader Christian Lau explained, “The graves were not placed on the surface, as is often observed with artificially mounded graves. Instead, the burial pit was dug through the upper soil layers and the loess clay down to the sand and filled with unmixed loess clay.”

This has allowed the bones to remain very well preserved. If they had been lying directly in the sand, the state of preservation would have been significantly worse. The graves will now be excavated in their entirety and examined more closely in the laboratory.

The excavations are taking place in advance of the expansion of the direct current line “SuedOstLink.”  The entire power line is approximately 540 kilometers long, stretching from Wolmirstedt near Magdeburg to the Isar site near Landshut in Bavaria.

Sachsen Anhalt

Cover Image Credit: Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert/dpa

Related Posts

The Great Sword of Dunvegan: A Legendary Tale of Scottish Medieval Craftsmanship

A Masterpiece of Highland Heritage In the heart of Scotland’s rugged Highlands stands an extraordinary piece of history – the great sword of Dunvegan. This magnificent claymore,…

Remarkable Discovery: 500-Year-Old Incan Mummy Sporting a Feather Headdress Found Near Lima

An Ancient Cemetery Revealed In a remarkable archaeological find near Lima, Peru, thousands of Inca mummies have been uncovered from a significant ancient cemetery located beneath a…

The Inlaid Eye of the Seated Scribe: A Marvel of Ancient Egyptian Craftsmanship

The Seated Scribe, an iconic piece of ancient Egyptian art dating back to the Old Kingdom (circa 2600-2350 BCE), stands as one of the finest examples of…

The Lion Fortress: A Kingdom Carved from Fear and Dream

In the heart of Sri Lanka, a stone giant rises from the encircling jungle. This is Sigiriya, the Lion Rock, a colossal volcanic plug that bears the…

The Stone Sentinel: A Dream of the Desert

In the painted badlands of southern Utah, where the earth is a furnace and the sky a vast, unbroken blue, a silent army of stone stands in…

The Balancing Giant: A Sentinel of Ice and Time

In the vast, untamed silence of Baffin Island, where the sky meets the earth in a stark and endless horizon, a stone giant keeps its watch. This…