Nebra Sky Disc: British Museum to display world's 'oldest map of stars'
An ancient object thought to be the world's oldest map of the stars is to go on display at the British Museum.
The Nebra Sky
Disc is widely believed to be 3,600 years old, dating from the Bronze Age.
The bronze
disc was unearthed in Germany in 1999 and is considered one of the most
important archaeological finds of the 20th Century.
But its
discovery has also been controversial, with a small number of scholars
disputing its authenticity.
The Nebra
disc measures about 30cm and has a blue-green patina emblazoned with gold symbols
representing the Sun, Moon, stars, solstices and other cosmic phenomena.
According to
Unesco, which includes the artefact on its global list of important historic
documents, the disc gives a unique glimpse into humanity's early knowledge of
the heavens.
It belongs to
Germany's State Museum of Prehistory in Halle but is being loaned to the
British Museum - the first time it has been loaned abroad in 15 years.
The British
Museum said it would go on show as part of an exhibition on Stonehenge, opening
in February.
"It's
going to be eye-opening," said Neil Wilkin, curator of The World Of
Stonehenge exhibition.
"The
Nebra Sky Disc and the sun pendant are two of the most remarkable surviving
objects from Bronze Age Europe," he said.
"Both
have only recently been unearthed, literally, after remaining hidden in the
ground for over three millennia.
"We're
delighted that they will both be key pieces in our once-in-a-lifetime
Stonehenge exhibition at the British Museum.
"While
both were found hundreds of miles from Stonehenge, we'll be using them to shine
a light on the vast interconnected world that existed around the ancient
monument, spanning Britain, Ireland and mainland Europe."
The original
purpose of Stonehenge remains a mystery, but the stone circle built in about
2,500 BC is aligned with the movements of the Sun.
The Sun and
its solstices are also represented with markings on the Nebra disc - and
experts believe the Sun was central to northern European Bronze Age religion.
Archaeologist
and Bronze Age expert Prof Miranda Aldhouse-Green previously told the BBC that
the symbols on the Nebra disc "are all part of a complex European wide
belief system whereby people looked at the heavens, worshipped them, worshipped
the sun, worshipped the moon, aligned their monuments on the sunrise or the
moonrise".
"And
because Nebra has brought all these symbols together it tells us for the first
time perhaps what people were really seeing, perceiving and believing."
She compared
the Nebra disc to a visible version of a sacred text.
Source BBC
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