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Identifying the battlefield at Mohács is at hand, Gábor Bertók, who is conducting the investigation, told Mandiner. A stray lead bullet can now help you find the exact location of the battle, the archaeologist reported.
Archaeologist Gábor Bertók, president of the Mohács 500 Battle and Battlefield Research Association, said:
In 2016, we changed our method and started the massive search for metals. We have a one square kilometer scatter point on the Majs border, where we found hundreds of war finds. Most of them are lead projectiles, 70 percent of which are between 10 and 15 mm in diameter, and we also publish these statistics. We have received a lot of criticism that these projectiles are too small for the time, those small projectiles were not used at that time, that is, critics say that said May war cannot be traces of the battle of 1526.
The decisive evidence is a projectile found in one of the tombs that has been found to be related to the Battle of Mohács, which is between 12 and 13 millimeters in diameter. And if there is a 13-millimeter bullet in a wounded man in a tomb in 1526: simply because of this fact, the claim that the Mayan site cannot be a trace of the Battle of Mohács can no longer be stopped. Archaeologically, therefore, so far, this little bullet is the pinnacle in the grave, truly confirming the identification of the battlefield.
Previously, the royal chancellor István Brodarics was one of the main sources of the battle: he witnessed and gave a rather plastic geographical description of the site. He wrote about a nearby settlement called Földvár, which confused those looking for a place. Increasingly, it appears that the Brodarics was simply wrong about the settlement’s name, and the projectiles found around the Majs may be conclusive evidence.
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