A huge bronze age fortress was built on the Marquis de La Encomienda manor near the huge Almendralejo in Spain. The stronghold was built 4,900 years ago and even though it was reinforced to nine, it fell on the enemy and was destroyed about 400 years later.
The Chalcolthic Fort was the first to be built on a hill at an altitude of 1030 feet and offers a 360-degree view of the landscape. Its first stage is the pentagonal Adobe Wall with five forts above it, and a small entrance gate described by archaeologists is described as “shaped like crab claws.” Add the other two concentric walls to the original shell later. The walls are reinforced with three defensive ditches and 25 fortresses and are placed at strategic locations to give the defending fighter the maximum firing angle and protected spots. The single entrance is only 27.6 inches, which is a very narrow bottleneck that can be passed by for any possible attacker.
The walls of the fortress surround the area over three acres. The remains of huts and reservoirs found in composite walls and ditches indicate the coordinates of the leader’s organized workforce. The complexity of the defense structure enhances the possibility.
Archaeologists have also found evidence of a fire, even wooden doors burning on adobe walls. Adobe is non-flammable and doors are not near any other flammable materials. This suggests that the fire may have been intentional. The large number of arrows found in the combustion layer confirms this theory. Cortijo Lobato Fortress was abandoned around 2450 BC and remained abandoned until the Roman Empire (2nd century AD)
The fortress was discovered in a preliminary investigation conducted in 2021 at the site of the solar park in the old Cortijo Lobato area. Archaeological contractor Tera SL excavated the site and found various copper-age objects (arrows, shafts, plates, bowls, bowls, loom weights) as well as defenses and residences. After a long-standing occupation, a tomb was found near the second defense ditches, with human beings present at the scene of the High Roman Empire.
The lonely funeral consists of the body of a man between 25 and 35 years old, lying on his face on the back of a pugio (dagger). “This suggests that individuals may have played a military role, as Phuket is the standard dagger used by the Roman legion.” The burial seemed to be in a hurry, because “there are almost no corpses deep enough in the pit to contain the body.” Apart from the feet, the bones Almost complete, the foot seemed to have been cut off. It is worth noting that the dagger was found in a special state of preservation – completely complete and still in the sheath. […]
At first, archaeologists debated whether the skeleton remains belonged to soldiers or soldiers who just obtained daggers or civilians. But in the burial, Pagio’s intentional placement “is a way to show that he was a member of the army and was given an undispersed funeral,” a rare practice in this period hints at a story that has not been discovered.
If confirmed as a soldier, “he could only belong to Legio Vii Gemina, the only Roman legion stationed in Hispanics at the time. The veteran was founded in 74 AD in Legio (Modern) of Asturian territory (Modern). Leon) a quarter. Unlike other legions engaged in direct military movements, Legio VII Gemina mainly performs escort duties, road surveillance and provincial safety.
Pugio is currently conducting protection and analysis. The researchers hope to extract archaeological DNA from one of the dead’s teeth, which, if successful, could shed light on the person’s background, life and death.