World
Rare ancient Celtic artifact unearthed in Poland, 2,300-year-old metal object excavated from charcoal pit
Nearly 350 artifacts have been unearthed during research at the Łysa Góra archaeological site in Poland, including a rare 2,300-year-old Celtic helmet, providing further confirmation of the Celtic presence in northeastern Poland.
The Celtic helmet was discovered on Aug. 10, 2024 in research conducted by the Archaeological Museum in Warsaw with participation from the Faculty of Archaeology of the University of Warsaw, Dr. Bartłomiej Kaczyński, who led the excavations, told Fox News Digital in an email.
“The discovery is important because it is the first such early (IV BC) La Tène helmet found on Polish soil, and the second in history,” Kaczyński said, explaining that the first was found over 40 years ago in southern Poland and dated back to the 1st century B.C.
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The Ancient Celts were a widespread group of people who occupied Western and Central Europe. Monumental relics uncovered, like the ancient helmet, further solidify the presence of the Celts in northern Poland.
“Discovered in the northern part of Mazovia (northeastern Poland), it is a find completely isolated from the native lands of the Celts – southern Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic. Its presence, along with several dozen artifacts of La Tène provenance (tools, women’s ornaments, clasps for fastening clothes), testify to the presence of Celts at this site,” Kaczyński went on to say.
The reason for Celtic settlement in the north can be traced to amber, according to Kaczyński, which he described as a “desirable commodity in the Mediterranean world.”
The bronze helmet, originally lined with leather or fabric, was discovered in a charcoal pit, alongside four iron axes. The item likely belonged to a Celtic elite and served greater purpose than protection from harm in military battle.
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“Helmets, especially bronze ones, did not have a military function only – thin sheet metal did not protect against the impact of spearheads, axes and swords. Visible and shiny from a distance, it indicated the exceptional position of the owner – most likely wealthy or in power – a kind of tribal ‘crown.’ This shows that far beyond the Celtic world there was a group of Celts, with a leader, administrator, who fulfilled a specific function – most likely guarding the trade route.”
During 2024 research of Łysa Góra, the Celtic helmet was one significant find of nearly 350 that were found.
Among other artifacts unearthed include iron tools and jewelry such as bracelets, necklaces and earrings, Kaczyński said. Other artifacts found included “harness elements” that pointed to horse breeding in the area.
As for the Celtic helmet, the artifact was found in poor condition, so restoration efforts at the Museum Conservation Department of the PMA are currently underway, which Kaczyński estimates to take around six months.
Beginning in 2026, those who visit the State Archaeological Museum in Warsaw will be able to see the ancient item on display.
World
Video: Zelensky Warns World Leaders of Continued Russian Threats
new video loaded: Zelensky Warns World Leaders of Continued Russian Threats
transcript
transcript
Zelensky Warns World Leaders of Continued Russian Threats
The president of Ukraine called Russia’s push for more land “insane” in his speech to world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly in New York.
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There can be no just peace without Ukraine. And I thank every leader, every country that supports us in this, that understands us, that sees how Russia, a country more than 20 times larger than Ukraine in territory, still wants even more land — more land, which is insane — and is seizing it day by day while wanting to destroy its neighbor. I want peace for my people, real peace and just peace. And I am asking for your support from all nations of the world. We do not divide the world. I ask the same of you. Do not divide the world. Be United Nations, and that will bring us peace. Thank you. Slava Ukraini.
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World
Hungarian FM recalls strong Trump admin 'experience,' claims 'our hope is all' on former president
UNITED NATIONS, New York – Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjártó revealed in an interview with Fox News Digital that former President Donald Trump alone is his country’s “hope” for helping bring stability to a fraught and increasingly chaotic international security landscape.
“We do believe that actually the game changer here can be the U.S. presidential election, in case President Trump wins,” Szijjártó said, referring specifically to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. “Because knowing Trump, I think it’s absolutely possible – absolutely likely – that with two phone calls he can end this conflict.”
“No one else can do so,” he insisted. “I think only President Trump has the hope and our hope is all in President Trump to do this.”
When pressed on whether that could be understood as a preference for a second Trump administration, Szijjártó insisted that “We are not Americans, so we cannot say we prefer this or that.”
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“What we can definitely say is the following: Politics is based on experience, and we have a clear experience about the term of President Trump in office, and we have clear experience from the terms when the Democrats were there,” he said.
“From the aspect of the U.S.-Hungary relations and from the aspect of the global security situation, when it comes to the U.S.-Hungary relations, it’s obvious that during President Trump[‘s term] these relations have been on the top – best ever,” Szijjártó added.
Trump and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán have done little to hide their rosy friendship, with Trump invoking the Hungarian leader as a “strong man of Europe” who speaks well of the former president.
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Orbán proved this is a mutual dynamic when he chose to leave the NATO summit in Washington, D.C., earlier this year to instead meet with Trump in Mar-a-Lago in Florida to discuss foreign relations.
“Under President Trump, everything was under control,” Szijjártó said. “Since President Trump has left office, the whole global security situation is deteriorating, so, I mean, these are experiences.”
“If we base it on our experience, we say yes, from a perspective of U.S.-Hungary relations, I think President Trump would bring another impetus, freshness, dynamism to this relationship, and I think if President Trump is elected, I think the world has a good chance to become a more peaceful place compared to the current situation.”
Szijjártó argued that “if you look at an administration which is led by a president and vice president, and we didn’t hear too much initiatives from the vice president … means to me that the vice president was part of the structure 100%.” He noted that this comment came from a personal opinion “based on logic” and not the opinion of the Hungarian foreign minister.
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Hungary has attempted to pursue peace talks between Ukraine and Russia, positioning itself as a chief facilitator for resolving the conflict. Hungary assumed the presidency of the European Union as part of a rotating six-month structure.
Orbán seized on the opportunity to visit both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy within the first days after taking the seat, but European leaders moved quickly to stress that the role is purely ceremonial and that Hungary had no official capacity to represent Europe in any peace talks.
Szijjártó blasted those who criticized the Hungarian effort, claiming “those who have been criticizing us, the prime minister, the peace mission, have clearly been the pro-war politicians.”
“They just simply don’t like that there is a country, there is a government, there is a prime minister in Europe who speaks direct language, who speaks honestly and who is not a hostage of the liberal mainstream,” Szijjártó said. “Therefore, it is very unpleasant and inconvenient for them that we are there and that we act, that we speak, that we make actions.”
Szijjártó resisted the idea that Ukraine should join NATO, noting that “including Ukraine into NATO would put us in a totally exposed situation, security-wise, because it would mean that NATO could be easily dragged into a war against Russia at any time, and this is something that we don’t want.”
“Everyone knows that any kind of direct confrontation between NATO and Russia would mean an outbreak of Third World War immediately, and we have joined the NATO to enhance our security and not to make ourselves exposed,” he said.
World
Several Ukrainian cities hit in Russian overnight aerial attack
At least eight people were injured in Zaporizhzhia, and Ukrainian air defences battled additional missiles and drones over Kyiv for over five hours.
Several Ukrainian cities, including Zaporizhzhia, Ivano-Frankivsk, and Kyiv, were struck during a night of intense Russian shelling.
Russia launched six missiles and 78 Shahed drones at Ukraine overnight from Wednesday to Thursday, according to Ukraine’s air forces, which reported intercepting and destroying four missiles and 66 drones.
The attack on Zaporizhzhia injured at least eight people, including a 14-year-old boy, according to Governor Ivan Fedorov.
The State Emergency Service released a video of severely damaged residential houses with blown-out windows and shrapnel-pierced walls, reporting that 12 buildings were affected and 18 people evacuated.
“Launching strikes against the civilian population, and doing it at night, is the peak of Russian cynicism,” Fedorov wrote on his Telegram page. “Russia is a terrorist country. The world must stop this arbitrariness!!!” he added.
In a separate attack, the wreckage of a Russian drone damaged a critical infrastructure facility in Ivano-Frankivsk, causing a fire, but no one was injured.
The attack caused damage to power grids. Four central streets of the city and some of the adjacent ones remain without power. Power engineers are currently repairing the damage.
Some of the city’s educational institutions will have power outages for at least a day, while trolleybuses have stopped running on certain routes. The authorities plan to provide additional buses as replacements.
Russian missiles and drones target Kyiv for over five hours
Ukraine’s air defences also battled Russian missiles and drones over the capital Kyiv for over five hours, the Ukrainian Air Force said.
The attack injured at least two people, according to Ukraine’s Emergency Service. A nursery, a gas pipe and around 20 cars were damaged in the city, the Kyiv Military Administration said.
Long-range strikes have been a hallmark of Russia’s military campaign in Ukraine, now deep in its third year, often hitting civilian areas. Attacks on the electricity network have knocked out around 70% of Ukraine’s energy generation capacity, according to the United Nations, bringing blackouts as winter approaches.
Air defence systems are a critical need for Ukraine, and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was due to meet President Joe Biden in Washington on Thursday in an effort to ensure continuing US military support for his country.
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