- Eberswalde Hoard
The Eberswalde Hoard or Treasure of Eberswalde (German: "Schatz von Eberswalde" or "Goldfund von Eberswalde") is a
Bronze Age hoard of 81gold objects with a total weight of 2.59 kg. [ [http://www.morgenpost.de/content/2004/02/01/brandenburg/656911.html Berliner Morgenpost, 01/02/2004] ] The largest prehistoric assembly of gold objects ever found inGermany , it is considered to be one of the most important finds from theCentral Europe an Bronze Age. [ [http://www.deutsche-allgemeine-zeitung.de/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=885&Itemid=29 Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, 30/03/2007] ] Today, it forms part of theRussia n "Beutekunst" (seeLooted art ), i.e. the group of artifacts and works of art taken to Russia from Germany at the end of theSecond World War .Discovery
The hoard was discovered 1 m below the ground surface on the
May 16 1913 , during excavations for a house within the grounds of a brass factory at Finow (Oberbarnim ), part ofEberswalde inBrandenburg . The factory supervisor alertedCarl Schuchhardt , the director of the Prehistoric Department of the Royal Museums atBerlin , who acceded the hoard to that collection.Description
The hoard had been deposited in a globular vessel with a lid. In it were eight gold bowls, which contained another 73 gold objects. The bowls were thin-walled chased gold vessels with copious ornamental decoration. The other objects included neck rings, bracelets and 60 wire arm spirals. 55 double spirals were tied into bundles. A gold
ingot , a piece of metal shaped like acrucible and two smaller pieces probably represent raw material for the production of such objects.Origin, date
The hoard used to be thought to represent the stores of a merchant, but more recent research assumes that the objects once belonged to a person of high status or power. The hoard is dated to the 10th or 9th century BC, i.e. the local late Bronze Age.
Later history
After the end of the
Second World War in 1945, the Eberswalde Hoard disappeared from the Berlin museum, along with the so-called "Treasure of Priam". The suspicion that theRed Army might have removed both finds was denied by the Soviets for decades. After Russian presidentBoris Yeltsin admitted that "Priam's Treasure" was in Russian hands, the authorities ceased to explicitly deny that they also held Eberswalde Hoard. In 2004, a reporter from German magazine "Der Spiegel " located it in a secret depot withinMoscow 'sPushkin Museum . Negotiations about the return of such displaced material are under way. Reproductions of the hoard are on display at the Museum für Vor- und Frühgeschichte in Berlin and theStadt- und Kreismuseum inEberswalde . The Eberswalde replica is by local goldsmith Eckhard Herrmann. [Märkische Oderzeitung, 24. Okt. 2006]Literature
* Carl Schuchhardt: "Der Goldfund vom Messingwerk bei Eberswalde". Berlin 1914.
References
*Translation/Ref|de|Eberswalder Goldschatz|oldid=46870273
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