Anthropology
Related: About this forumHiker Accidentally Discovers Ancient Roman Shrine To Mountain Gods In The Alps
DR. KATIE SPALDING
Freelance Writer
Published
March 17, 2023
The site of the finds, at the foot of the Ammertenhorn, at the end of summer 2022. © Archaeological Service of the Canton of Bern, Regula Glatz
It must be frustrating, sometimes, to be a professional archaeologist. Here you are, slogging away on years-long excavations in the scorching desert or freezing English rain, just hoping to find a tiny clue about ancient burial rites or something only for some rando to wander up a mountain one day and accidentally stumble upon a long-lost shrine to the Ancient Roman mountain gods.
We do find single Roman coins occasionally in the Alps, but this site is unusual because of the amount of coins and the location, Regula Gubler, scientific project manager on the archeological team thats been investigating the site since 2022, told Newsweek.
We are only at the beginning of the investigations, but we think it is a holy place, she explained. [P]eople went [there] to deposit votive offerings mainly coins, but also other objects asking the deities for things or thanking them [
] I guess a kind of pilgrimage.
The first sign that something interesting might have been going on in the area came back in 2020, when a stray hiker happened across a single ancient coin buried amongst the rubble.
More:
https://www.iflscience.com/hiker-accidentally-discovers-ancient-roman-shrine-to-mountain-gods-in-the-alps-68035
Old Crank
(4,670 posts)It is good that the hiker didn't loot the place before letting peopel know.
jaxexpat
(7,794 posts)Mountain gods have a reputation for low tolerance toward pilferers. Nice "excavation" you got here, would be a shame if there was an avalanche, just sayin'. These "archaeologists" better watch their backs. At least until they reach the foothills.
LittleGirl
(8,441 posts)is the reason these are even being seen.
Effete Snob
(8,387 posts)Did you ever notice that if something is found, and no practical use for it can be determined, then it must have been religious?
Like, this thing is useless and makes no sense at all - therefore it was a shrine.
Upon entering New Jersey, travelers had to make an offering to the gods.