Datei:Early Bronze Age, Complete decorated flat axehead (FindID 840547-609860).jpg

Originaldatei (6.666 × 5.000 Pixel, Dateigröße: 18,53 MB, MIME-Typ: image/jpeg)

Diese Datei und die Informationen unter dem roten Trennstrich werden aus dem zentralen Medienarchiv Wikimedia Commons eingebunden.

Zur Beschreibungsseite auf Commons


Beschreibung

Early Bronze Age: Complete decorated flat axehead
Fotograf
Birmingham Museums Trust, Teresa Gilmore, 2017-04-04 12:25:17
Titel
Early Bronze Age: Complete decorated flat axehead
Beschreibung
English: A complete flat axehead with a crescentic blade, of Early Bronze Age dating (c. 1875 BC to c. 1725 BC).

The axehead has a rectangular shape, with a crescentic blade. In profile, it is of a lentoid (pointed oval), with tapering edges. The butt is almost square. The sides of the axe gently expand in width from the butt, to a proto stop ridge, and then taper down to the blade. The edges of the axe have not been raised to form flanges; however a slight median bevel (proto stop ridge) is present on both faces of the axe. This has been formed from hammering and small oval shaped (dished) scars can be seen on both faces where the metal has been worked to form them. The ridge itself is not especially prominent, just forming a change of angle between the face of the butt and the face of the blade.

From the blade to the proto stop ridge, decoration, in the series of parallel linear lentoid lozenges. This form of decoration is known as rain-pattern and is common on the later decorated examples of the Migdale tradition. The decoration is best observed under a raking light. The side edges of the axe have an almost rope pattern, with two raised areas, suggestive of twisted rope. Beneath the rain pattern decoration the sides of the blade expand to produce a crescentic blade edge. The tips of the crescent shaped blade have been damaged through abrasion, as has the blade edge itself. No blade facet is present.

The axehead measures 155.1 mm in length, 92.9 mm wide (blade), 28.1 mm wide (butt), 2.2 mm thick (butt), 12.4 mm thick (stop ridge), 2.0 mm thick (blade). It weighs 425.9 g.

XRF surface analysis was carried out at Birmingham Museum Conservation Laboratory using a tabletop MIstral XRF machine.

<tbody></tbody>
Element (conc. %) Body Edge
Silver (Ag) 0.00 0.00
Gold (Au) 0.00 0.00
Copper (Cu) 38.77 81.58
Iron (Fe) 21.06 0.99
Zinc (Zn) 0.00 0.00
Mercury (Hg) 0.00 0.00
Lead (Pb) 1.64 0.95
Tin (Sn) 38.53 16.48

Flat axes decorated with this 'rain pattern' and with crescentic blades can be found during the Willerby metalwork phase, dating from c.1875-1725 BC(Roberts et al, 2013, 23, fig.2.2) of the Early Bronze Age, such as the Class 4 axe illustrated in 'The Circulation of Metal in the British Bronze Age: The Application of Lead Isotope Analysis' (Rohl & Needham 1998, 125, fig.26, no.53).

Schmidt & Burgess (1981) also illustrate developed flat axes with crecentic bades and similar 'rain-pattern' decoration from Ryal and Keighley in plates 28-29, nos.329 & 340, which are classified, respectively, as a Type Falkland developed flat axe, which is compared to an axe from Mount Pleasant in Dorset, dated to c.1900 BC, and a Type Scrabo Hill which is associated with similar axes in the Willerby Wold hoards from East Yorkshire, illustrated in plate 134, nos.D1 & D4.

Several similar flat axeheads have been recorded on the PAS database. They include: CORN-5F6661; DENO-4F12EB; SWYOR-F748BE; SWYOR-6D80EC; and WMID-798FF7.

Abgebildeter Ort (County of findspot) Staffordshire
Datum zwischen 1875 BC und 1725 BC
Inventarnummer
FindIdentifier: 840547
Anerkennung
The Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS) is a voluntary programme run by the United Kingdom government to record the increasing numbers of small finds of archaeological interest found by members of the public. The scheme started in 1997 and now covers most of England and Wales. Finds are published at https://finds.org.uk
Quelle https://finds.org.uk/database/ajax/download/id/609860
Catalog: https://finds.org.uk/database/images/image/id/609860/recordtype/artefacts Archivkopie in der Wayback Machine
Artefact: https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/record/id/840547
Genehmigung
(Weiternutzung dieser Datei)
Attribution License
Andere Versionen FindID 840547 has multiple images: 609854 609855 609856 609857 609858 609859 609860 609861 609862 609863 search
Objektposition52° 42′ 16,92″ N, 1° 46′ 33,35″ W Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.Dieses und weitere Bilder auf OpenStreetMapinfo

Lizenz

w:de:Creative Commons
Namensnennung
Diese Datei ist unter der Creative-Commons-Lizenz „Namensnennung 2.0 generisch“ (US-amerikanisch) lizenziert.
Namensnennung: Birmingham Museums Trust
Dieses Werk darf von dir
  • verbreitet werden – vervielfältigt, verbreitet und öffentlich zugänglich gemacht werden
  • neu zusammengestellt werden – abgewandelt und bearbeitet werden
Zu den folgenden Bedingungen:
  • Namensnennung – Du musst angemessene Urheber- und Rechteangaben machen, einen Link zur Lizenz beifügen und angeben, ob Änderungen vorgenommen wurden. Diese Angaben dürfen in jeder angemessenen Art und Weise gemacht werden, allerdings nicht so, dass der Eindruck entsteht, der Lizenzgeber unterstütze gerade dich oder deine Nutzung besonders.

Kurzbeschreibungen

Ergänze eine einzeilige Erklärung, was diese Datei darstellt.

In dieser Datei abgebildete Objekte

Motiv

52°42'16.9"N, 1°46'33.2"W

0,01 Sekunde

12,733 Millimeter

image/jpeg

Dateiversionen

Klicke auf einen Zeitpunkt, um diese Version zu laden.

Version vomVorschaubildMaßeBenutzerKommentar
aktuell10:00, 12. Dez. 2020Vorschaubild der Version vom 10:00, 12. Dez. 20206.666 × 5.000 (18,53 MB)Portable Antiquities Scheme, WMID, FindID: 840547-609860, bronze age, page 1307, batch count 4007

Die folgende Seite verwendet diese Datei:

Metadaten