The Danish king Valdemar IV’s army and the country yeomen of the Gutnish people engaged in combat on July 27, 1361, in the vicinity of Visby on the Swedish island of Gotland. The Danish army emerged triumphant. Historians now have a comprehensive understanding of medieval warfare and armor thanks to the Visby mass graves.
The Danes and Gotland residents engaged in a bloody medieval fight near the town of Visby on the Island of Gotland in 1361 CE, with the Danes coming out on top.
A decomposed human skeleton, estimated by witnesses to be around 10′ 9′′ (3.28 meters) tall, was discovered in November 1856 in East Wheeling, West Virginia, by laborers plow-ing a vineyard.
In 1833, troops excavating a pit for a powder magazine at Lompock Rancho, California, discovered a human skeleton standing twelve feet (3.6 meters) tall. The specimen included two rows of teeth and was surrounded by a large number of sculpted shells, slabs of porphyry, and mysterious symbols.
Several mummified human remains with reddish hair, estimated to be between 6′ 6′′ and over 8′ (2–2.5 meters) tall, were unearthed by the guano mining operation in Lovelock Cave, which is located 70 miles northeast of Reno, Nevada.