It is believed he did but no one can be sure. it is a story that the neck ring was a present to the goddess of spring
in a peat bog in Denmark
The Tollund Man was found in a peat bog on the Jutland Peninsula in Denmark.
The Tollund Man is the unusually well-preserved body of an adult male who was about 30-40 years old when he died around 300 BC. He was found in a peat bog near Silkeborg, Denmark in 1950. Although blackened by the peat, much of his external skin and especially his face was preserved, along with his bones. The internal organs had desiccated but the stomach contents could be examined. The left side of his body showed more decomposition than the right side. He was 161 cm tall (5 ft 3 in) when he was discovered. Only his head was able to be kept from disintegration after removal from the bog, and it was subsequently attached to a replica of the body.
The consensus is that Tollund Man died by hanging, after ingesting an hallucinogen, as a sacrifice. One proposal is that this was a sacrifice to Nerthus, goddess of fertility in Denmark.
Maybe he was a traitor and then they hung him on a tree branch - or he could of been a coward and drowned in a fen/swamp under piles of sticks.
There were rings around his neck, which proves he was hung.
The Tollund Man was found in Tollund Bog in Denmark. That's why he is referred to as the Tollund Man.
A noose made of leather cord was found around the neck of the Tollund Man, a bog body dating back to the Iron Age. The noose was used to strangle him as a form of ritual sacrifice.
How did the tollund man live?
i think its because he was found in a small village called tollund
Tollund Man lived in Tollund, Denmark
The Tollund Man's cap was made of sheepskin and wool.
The Tollund Man was discovered when two men, Viggo and Emil Hojgaard, were digging peat. They first found his head, then they called the police, who then dug up his entire body, and to this day, it is still talked about.
The Tollund Man got his name from the bog where he was found, near the village of Tollund in Denmark. Tollund Man is a well-preserved bog body dating back to the Iron Age, discovered in 1950.
Tollund Man, a bog body found in Denmark, had a noose around his neck at the time of his death, indicating he was likely hanged. Examination of his body also revealed that he had a broken collarbone. These injuries suggest a violent and possibly ritualistic death.
The Tollund Man was likely murdered, as his body showed signs of a violent death, such as a noose around his neck. The circumstances surrounding his death suggest that he was a victim of sacrifice or ritual killing rather than being executed as a punishment.
I think that the Tollund man was sacrificed because he was found with robes and a iron ring around his neck, normally when a person has died they would put iron rings around their neck for offering to the spring goddess, also the seeds found in his stomach was only found in spring and the robes on his neck and his swollened tongue was sure that he had been hanged, normally in his time people hanged other people for sacrifice.