Grauballe Man was about 34 years old when he met his death. He died from
a deep cut to the throat. His right shinbone was also fractured. He
undoubtedly suffered a violent end - he was executed - and was then laid
naked in a water-filled peat cutting in the bog. The ultimate sacrifice
was made that day around 290 BC - a human life - to the supernatural
powers or in the service of some other urgent cause. Few finds from
Denmark's prehistory enjoy the attention and interest afforded by the
public and the media to Grauballe Man, who is exhibited at Moesgaard
Museum, south of Aarhus, Denmark. With this book in hand it is not
difficult to imagine a person of flesh and blood who wandered around
during the first centuries of the Iron Age, long before Caesar was born.
Archaeologist Pauline Asingh of Moesgaard Museum presents the very
latest discoveries about Grauballe Man, his life, his afterlife, his bog
and the interpretation of him and his time. In telling his story she
brings prehistory dramatically to life.