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An Assemblage of Palaeolithic Hand-Axes from the Roman Religious Complex at Ivy Chimneys, Witham, Essex

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2011

Extract

This paper describes the context and nature of an assemblage of forty-four Palaeolithic hand-axes from a Roman religious site at Witham, Essex. The hand-axes are considered to have been derived from several sources, and it is suggested that the Romano-British occupants of the site deliberately selected them for their shape and placed them in the bottom of two large man-made depressions. In the light of stone axe finds on continental temple sites, and of classical Roman texts and traditions, the possibility arises that the Witham finds may have represented ‘thunderbolts’ in the worship of Jupiter or a local Celtic equivalent.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1987

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References

Notes

1 O.S. grid reference TL 811136. The excavations were directed by Robin Turner for Essex County Council and the Department of the Environment. The authors would like to thank Hazel Martingell and Margaret Tremayne, who illustrated the flints, and Roger Massey-Ryan and Margaret Matthews who prepared figs. 1 and 2. We are grateful to Martin Henig who kindly read and commented on the paper.

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