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The Mysterious Bog People: Rituals and Sacrifice in Ancient Europe
From: December 6, 2002 To: September 1, 2003 |
Presented by AIM Trimark Investments
Throughout large parts of Europe, wet landscape features such as rivers, brooks, wells and especially bogs had a particular meaning for people in the past. Since ancient times, people were attracted yet frightened by the misty environment of the bogs. They sacrificed their most valuable items in sacred bogs, rituals that are still mysterious to us today. Numerous artefacts discovered over the last two centuries in various parts of North-western Europe bear witness to the special significance of the bogs for the ancestors of many Europeans and North Americans. Pottery, flint tools, axes, jewellery, coins, and human bodies were sacrificed in the bogs to honour pagan gods.
This exhibition will be the most comprehensive ever produced on the rituals of people living in North-western Europe in prehistoric times. It will present the latest research on the mysterious bog people who are little known to most of us.
A joint project of the Drents Museum (Assen, Netherlands), the Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum (Hanover, Germany), the Canadian Museum of Civilization and the Glenbow Museum (Calgary).
Communiqué: Treasures from European Bogs Come to Canada
Communiqué: Last Chance to Discover The Mysterious Bog People
Communiqué: The Mysterious Bog People attracts a quarter-million visitors
Announcement: Already over 150,000 visitors
Communiqué: One of North America’s Top 100 events in 2003
Communiqué: Secrets of European Bogs Revealed across Two Continents!
Virtual exhibition
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