Four-thousand year old gold-adorned skeleton found near Windsor [View all]
Last edited Mon Apr 22, 2013, 05:08 AM - Edit history (1)
Archaeologists, excavating near the Royal Borough, have discovered the 4400 year old gold-adorned skeleton of an upper class woman who was almost certainly a member of the local ruling elite.
She is the earliest known woman adorned with such treasures ever found in Britain.
The individual, aged around 40, was buried, wearing a necklace of folded sheet gold, amber and lignite beads, just a century or two after the construction of Stonehenge some 60 miles to the south-west. Even the buttons, thought to have been used to secure the upper part of her now long-vanished burial garment, were made of amber. She also appears to have worn a bracelet of lignite beads.
The archaeologist in charge of the excavation, Gareth Chaffey of Wessex Archaeology, believes that she may have been a person of power perhaps even the prehistoric equivalent of a princess or queen.
Its known that in southern Britain, some high status men of that era the Copper Age had gold possessions, but this is the first time archaeologists have found a woman of that period being accorded the same sort of material status.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/archaeology/fourthousand-year-old-goldadorned-skeleton-found-near-windsor-8581819.html

