Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2015
I was first led to question the soundness of ‘the Iron Currency Bar’ theory when investigating the early history of iron-making in the Forest of Dean—the district from which it is generally accepted that these bars emanated. If the ‘Currency Bar’ theory is wellfounded, the inference is unavoidable that the Celtic tribes who used this form of currency were a race endowed with a very low mentalitybut this inference is not supported by recent archaeological research.
1 FromBritish Museum Guide to Early Iron Age Antiquities, 2nd ed., 1925, p. 165, where illustrations of bars of 1, 2, and 4 units are given.Google Scholar
2 Proc. Soc. Antiq. Ser. 2, 20, 1905, p. 185.Google Scholar
3 Ibid. p. 190.
4 Proc. Soc. Antiq. Ser. 2, 27, 1914–15, p. 108 Google Scholar
5 Les Helvètes à La Tène, p. 35.
6 Quoted by Mr Reginald Smith. Proc. Soc. Antiq. Ser. 2, 20, 1905, p. 108.Google Scholar
7 I have translated áρϒòν as ‘unworked’ on the ground that iron is never described as ‘bright’ in Greek writings. Its usual attribute is ‘black’, ‘gray’ or ‘violet’. The description, however, ‘bright or glittering’ would not be altogether inappropriate if applied to meteoric iron.
8 ‘utuntur aut aere aut nummo aureo aut aliis ferreis ad certum pondus examinatis pro nummo’.
Aureo, aeneo
aliis α and 2 MSS of β, taleis 2 MSS of β,
anulis I MS of α, pro nummo α, omitted by β.
(Signed) A.E.H., 3 Nov. 1932.
9 Proc. Soc. Antiq., Ser. 2, 27, 1914–15, pp. 76–95;Google Scholar British Museum Guide to the Early Iron Age, 2nd ed., 1925, pp. 162–4.Google Scholar
10 The Celt,the Roman and the Saxon, 6th ed., p.403.
11 Man. d’Arch. 3, p. 265.Google Scholar
12 Nihlén, J. Studier rorände äldre svensk järntillverkning, etc. (Stockholm, 1932).Google Scholar
An English translation of this important work is greatly to be desired.
13 Jour. Royal Asiatic Society, 1915, pp. 213–30.Google Scholar
14 op. cit. (in text, p. 62), p. 218.Google Scholar
15 Trans. Worcs. Naturalists’ Club, 1918–22, pp. 103–4.Google Scholar
16 op. cit., p. 207.Google Scholar