A team of archaeologists working at the Heraclea Sintica site near Petrich in Bulgaria have found a large, extremely well-preserved, gold necklace, possibly dating from the fourth century CE.
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| Screenshot from BNT |
The gold necklace was made in one of the elite ateliers in ancient Rome, according to a report by Bulgarian National Television. Researchers suggest that the necklace was lost in the panic when the violent earthquake destroyed the city.
The place of the August 2017 find was an unexpected one. Most finds of jewellery and gold are in necropolises, in the graves of wealthy people, not in the city.
Professor Lyudmil Vagalinski of the National Archaeological Museum in Sofia, who has headed the dig since 2007, said that the good state of preservation of the gold necklace suggested that it was produced in the fourth century.
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| Screenshot from BNT |
Vagalinski indicated that he did not believe that this had been a jewellery shop: “If we were going to find a jewellery shop, we would find some other jewellery and there would have to be some other tools, but in this context, we find that it is a building from the end of the fourth century”.
Over the centuries, Heraclea Sintica experienced several strong earthquakes, triggering the decline of the city. Shops became dwellings.
Necklaces of the kind found at the Bulgarian site were in fashion for a long time, from the second to the fifth centuries. They were made in specialist workshops.
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| Screenshot from BNT |
“And what impresses us is that in the city, to the last, to the last moment, until the end of the fourth century, there were wealthy people who continued to live in the city.”
According to the report, the owner of the necklace probably survived the earthquake, because no human remains had been found. The residents of the city seemed to have been able to escape to a safe place.
Source: The Sofia Globe [August 30, 2017]








