#ancientgreece #ancientrelics #archeology A diagram of the Great Tumulus of Vergina with the four graves, one of which was previously thought to contain the body of Philip II (Yannis Maniatis, Konstantina Drosou , Miren Iraeta Orbegozo , Dorothea Mylopotamitaki, Terence A. Brown, Keri Brown, Robert Frei, Sahra Talamo, Hannes Schroeder , Theodore G. Antikas, Laura Wynn-Antikas) A tomb in Greece’s Vergina, previously thought to be the resting place of Alexander the Great's father, Philip II, likely contains the remains of a different man and a young woman. Radiocarbon dating suggests the man and woman in the tomb lived between 388 and 356 BC, whereas Philip II died in 336 BC. The man's age at death (25-35) also contradicts Philip II's age at death (around 46). Six infants buried in the tomb between 150 BC and 130 AD are likely unrelated to the original occupants, suggesting it was reused during the Roman period, scientists say. Analysis suggests the man spent his childhood away from the Macedonian capital
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