![]() He was wearing a sheepskin cap and leather belt and still had the rope used to hang him knotted around his neck. (Most people in this time period were cremated, so the fact he was buried in a bog lends credence to the "human sacrifice" theory.)Īccording to Museum Silkeborg, where the mummy is now on display, Tollund Man was between 30 and 40 years old when he died and stood at least 5 feet 4 inches (163 centimeters) tall (perhaps a bit taller, presuming his body shrank in the bog after death). ![]() Researchers suspect his death was part of a ritual sacrifice because Tollund Man was then laid to rest in a fetal position, with his eyes and mouth carefully closed, according to Museum Silkeborg in Denmark. On his last day, he ate a meal of barley porridge and fish and was then hanged until he suffocated. The exquisitely preserved mummy belongs to a man who lived during the Iron Age, between about 405 B.C. Tollund Man, a bog body found in Denmark in 1940, may be evidence of human sacrifice. ![]() (Image credit: Tim Graham /Getty Contributor) Tollund Man may have been a victim of human sacrifice between 405 B.C.
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