Otzi, the Iceman of Bolzano

January 21, 2009 · Print This Article

Not every city can boast a world-famous archaeological phenomenon, but in Otzi the Iceman, Bolzano has just that.  Bolzano’s South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology is home to the immaculately preserved body of Otzi, the mummified traveller from around 3300 BC who was discovered in a Tyrolean glacier in the early 1990s.  Offering an unprecedented insight into Copper Age European culture, the mummified, frozen body was discovered complete with its clothing and possessions such as copper axe, flint knife, bow, arrows and quiver, which are all preserved at the museum.

As the home of Europe’s oldest known natural human mummy, Bolzano has long been the centre of attention for archaeological enthusiasts and anthropologists, but this is too good an opportunity to miss for passing visitors too.  Anyone passing through Bolzano, in their hire-car or on foot, simply must visit this most remarkable of sights.  The museum was specifically established in 1998 to house Otzi, who is now held in a climate controlled chamber. Along with original finds there are models, reconstructions and multimedia presentations showing Ötzi in the context of the early history of the southern Alpine region.

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