The man’s body was found in a peat puddle at Lindow Moss in the English county of Cheshire, not far from Wilmslow. Notably, this body is so perfectly preserved that it is possible to identify the cause of death and the last meal.

Scientists claim that the Lindow Man was a healthy male in his 20s at the time of his death. Due to the lack of tangible proof that he had put in a lot of effort, this individual may have had a high status in the society of the period.The precise cause of why Lindow Man’s body is so well maintained in its natural environment has not yet been determined by scientists. They have identified the cause of death, though, and they think a grisly sacrifice ceremony was involved.

As a result of several injuries to the head, neck, chest, and ribs, Lindow Man had an extremely gruesome death. There are still some cuts on the neck and chest, but blunt objects that apply a lot of force to the body are to blame for the majority of the wounds.The Lindow Man might have been the object of a particular sacrifice, claims University College London’s Anne Ross, a specialist in Celtic and Don Robins’s history. Because he still has a piece of partially digested burnt bread in his stomach.
The victims selected for sacrifice in ancient Celtic society had to select slices of bread from sacks of bread. And the unfortunate one who lands on the charred piece of bread will end up being sacrificed. Scientists have also determined that it is more plausible that Lindow Man was sacrificed in order to enlist the aid of three Celtic gods in order to stop a Roman invasion of the Celts in 60 AD.