During the National Archaeology Days (19-21 June 2015), Inrap will present the latest results of this excavation, finished only a few days ago.
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| The individual was laid to rest adorned with a heavy gold torque and gold bracelets [Credit: © Denis Gliksman/Inrap] |
Lying in the center of the tomb, with the head to the south, the prince was inhumed with his two-wheeled chariot. He is decorated with his jewelry. His solid gold torque weighs more than 500 g, which is even more than that of the princess of Vix… This stiff necklace is richly decorated with the double motif of a winged monster, extended by pear-shaped stamps. He has gold bracelets on his wrists, and on his left bicep a lignite armlet. These objects are similar to those found in the tomb of Reinheim (Germany).
Near his nape, the archaeologists found several, finely worked amber beads, originally forming a necklace or hair decoration.
Part of his costume has been preserved, including two iron and coral hooks that attached a piece of clothing of which a few leather pieces and a row of rivets highlighting the collar remain. From his shoes the bodkins and bronze hooks remain.
Prince or princess?
Due to the poor preservation of the bones, it is not yet possible to determine the sex of the individual with certitude. Could the prince of Lavau be a princess? At the beginning of the 5th century, between the end of the Hallstatt and beginning of the La Tène periods, several princess tombs exist in the north-east quarter of France, such as that of Vix.
We must thus be cautious in our interpretation of these funerary remains belonging to the highest classes of the society. In addition to the study of the tomb and its contents, the aristocrat, and his/her sex, will be the subject of a complete biological anthropological study.
Source: Inrap [June 20, 2015]






