Testimony from the Iceman
The 5,000-plus-year-old Neolithic man discovered a decade ago is telling scientists how he lived and died
- By Bob Cullen
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2003, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 10)
The broken ribs figured prominently in the death scenario published in 1993 by Spindler, the chief archaeologist on the Innsbruck research team. In his best-selling The Man in the Ice, Spindler hypothesized that Otzi had been involved in some catastrophic event, most likely a battle. His ribs had been broken. He fled the scene, leaving his bow and arrows behind, which forced him to start work on a new bow. But the pain of the rib injury was too great to bear at extreme altitudes. Exhausted, he lay down and died.
No one had disproved that theory when the body was brought to Italy in 1998. Though the first police and rescue workers to respond to the news of a body in the ice were Austrian and they had taken it to Innsbruck, a survey made two weeks after the discovery determined that Otzi had actually been found in Italy, about 100 yards from the Austrian border. Italy quickly claimed permanent custody, but did not assume it until six years later, when the specially designed refrigerated vault had been installed in the old bank building in Bolzano (renamed the South Tirol Museum of Archaeology), after repeated testing of the refrigeration technique on another mummified body.
Otzi’s transfer was ostensibly friendly, primarily because the ties between Austria and Italy’s South Tirol are old and strong. Even today, about 70 percent of the province’s population is of German origin. It enjoys a degree of autonomy within Italy, and all of the towns and highway signs have names in both Italian and German. But there was an undercurrent of tension to the transfer, something Egarter expressed in a conversation before he showed Otzi to me. “Sometimes the Austrians believe that the South Tiroleans are a small country living on tourism and agriculture and they are a little bit—not stupid, but not sophisticated like the university people in Innsbruck,” he said. “People here in South Tirol sometimes have an inferiority complex.”
Sophisticated or not, the South Tiroleans found themselves responsible for one of the world’s archaeological treasures. Egarter was cast in a central role, given the task of preserving the body. He had no credentials in archaeology. His career had been spent managing a staff of 65 people in the local hospital’s pathology department, analyzing tissue samples sent by other doctors and doing autopsies. He might, for instance, be asked by an insurance company to determine whether a driver pulled from a car wreck had died from the collision or had perhaps had a heart attack that led to the crash. “Dr. Bruno Hosp, the minister of culture for South Tirol, called me in and told me they had been looking for a conservator for Otzi in South Tirol and had become convinced that I was the man who had the most to do with death,” Egarter said, explaining his appointment.
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Comments (5)
45 years is old even for the 1800's. Agriculture, copper, mobility, in an area just north of Etruscan territory. Thousands of years before Etruscan civilization. Someone shot an arrow into him, and no signs of cannibalism. This stuff is great.
So much is lost to time and decay it's tragic.
Posted by Fred on October 14,2011 | 07:14 PM
otzi was 500 years old when he was discovered
Posted by Frank on July 28,2011 | 10:34 PM
was otzi realy 5000 years old when he died
Posted by on January 20,2011 | 08:32 AM
I second the comment above--I began looking for research on tattoos and was astonished to find out that the Iceman had tattoos--and now I am getting off-track reading this article!
Posted by Olivia on September 29,2010 | 09:31 AM
This is amazing! I first started my research no Tattoos this lead me to The Tattoos on the "Iceman". I was so into what I had found it lead me to go off track a bit.
I then started reading Testimony from the Iceman. All I can say is WOW!! I would like to know more...
Posted by Darla on July 24,2009 | 06:25 PM