The Lovers of Valdaro
A pair of human skeletons found at a construction site outside
Mantua, Italy, are believed by archaeologists to be a man and a woman
from the Neolithic period, buried around 6,000 years ago. For 6,000 years, two young lovers have been locked in an eternal embrace, hidden from the eyes of the world. This past weekend, the
Lovers of Valdaro named for the little village near Mantua, in
northern Italy, where they were first discovered were seen by the
public for the first time.
After the discovery, many thought that the couple had been killed. It would fit in well with the history of an Italian region famous for many tragic love stories. Mantua is the city where Romeo was exiled and was
told that his Juliet was dead. The composer Giuseppe Verdi chose it as
the location for his opera Rigoletto , another story of star-crossed
love and death.
But subsequent research revealed that the skeletons did not have any signs of a violent death. They were a woman and a man, ages between 18
and 20 years old. Some have wondered if they died together, holding each
other in a freezing night. Professor Silvia Bagnoli, the president of
the association Lovers in Mantua, doesn't exclude this possibility, but
she says that more likely the skeletons were laid out in that position after their deaths.
The mystery might never be solved. Still, many want to see the
couple. The association Lovers in Mantua is campaigning for their right
to have a room of their own. According to Bagnoli, €250,000 will be
enough for an exhibition center and another €200,000 could pay for a
multimedia space to tell the world the mysterious story of these
prehistoric lovers.
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