Carpathian gold in Spain: New research rewrites the story of a Bronze Age princess
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Carpathian gold in Spain: New research rewrites the story of a Bronze Age princess
Grave goods from San Antón (Orihuela, Alicante) Circa 1800 BC © MARQ. Technical Documentary Archive.



MADRID.- For centuries, a humble grave discovered in the blistering heat of southern Spain has held a secret pointing to the distant heart of Europe. Now, the National Archaeological Museum (MAN) is finally pulling back the curtain on this intriguing mystery with its new temporary exhibition, “The Princess of the Carpathians: The Argàric Gold of San Antón.”

On view in the museum's dynamic Archaeological Novelties Room, this exhibition—its fourth since the room's creation last year—is the culmination of decades of re-evaluation and recent groundbreaking research. It’s a story that bridges the Iberian Peninsula's advanced Bronze Age culture, the Argàric society (2200−1500 BC), with the sophisticated traditions of Central Europe.

The Enigmatic Grave

The centerpiece of the show is the grave goods of a woman found over a century ago at the San Antón site in Orihuela, Alicante. When Jesuit priest Julio Furgús unearthed the tomb around 1904, he discovered a high-status burial containing classic Argàric treasures: silver spirals near her skull, a copper knife, and a handmade ceramic vessel.

But one element stood out: a scattering of 75 tiny, perforated gold cones found near her neck. These pieces, each barely three millimeters thick, were unlike anything else found in Iberian Bronze Age archaeology. After Furgús's death and the dispersal of his collection, only 42 of the cones survived, now carefully preserved by the Archaeological Museum of Alicante (MARQ).

2,000 Kilometers and a New Identity

For years, the gold cones were a fascinating anomaly. Recent investigations, however, have provided a stunning new context. Detailed studies now confidently link these pieces to the Carpathian region, more than 2,000 kilometers away.

In Central Europe, at the same time the Argàric society flourished, elites wore clothing adorned with identical cones, crafted from bronze or gold. Experts now believe the gold cones found at San Antón arrived sewn onto a dress, suggesting a powerful connection between the Mediterranean and the inner continent.

The exhibition's name, "The Princess of the Carpathians," reflects the profound questions this discovery raises. Was this woman a high-ranking Argàric noble who received an exotic gift of unparalleled luxury? Or was she a woman of high standing from the Carpathian area who traveled to the Iberian Peninsula as part of an arranged marriage?

While the unfortunate loss of the skeleton prevents modern DNA analysis from confirming her origin, the context powerfully supports the latter theory. Recent genetic studies have shown that Argàric women often left their original settlements to marry, a strategy used by elite families to weave trade and political alliances across vast regions of Europe and the Mediterranean. The cones, still unique in Spain more than a century after their discovery, are a tangible record of this prehistoric international diplomacy.

A Forum for Dialogue

The MAN is utilizing the exhibition to turn the Novelties Room into a vibrant forum for scientific debate, showcasing the constantly evolving nature of archaeology.

The show is complemented by a rich program of roundtables and a self-guided tour linking the findings to the museum's permanent collections. With the help of the Provincial Council of Alicante and collaborators like Red Eléctrica, the "Princess of the Carpathians" is more than just an exhibition; it's an invitation to explore a spectacular moment when gold, power, and people first began to connect the ancient world .










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