Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T13:02:15.901Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

I. Swords and Sequence in the British Bronze Age

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2011

Get access

Abstract

British and continental archaeologists alike have long been beholden to J. D. Cowen for his interpretation of the bronze sword in Europe. His identification in 1951 of Hemigkofen and Erbenheim types among South German Griffzungenschwerter, his recognition that these forms were basic to all subsequent sword development in the British Isles, and his dating of them to the Hallstatt A (Ha A) Urnfield phase have remained crucial in any interpretation of the British Late Bronze Age. All will regret that his illness and death prevented his intended presentation of the complete sword series from this country, illuminated as it would have been by his perception. A corpus of British bronze swords is, however, known to be in preparation elsewhere. Meantime, an archive of Cowen papers and photographs has been deposited in the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. The present study based on these (though not always following Mr. Cowen's classifications) attempts a preliminary discussion of the earlier swords he assembled from Britain (excluding Ireland), about which relatively little has yet been published. The work stems from the generosity of Mr. Cowen and his family, in opening the archive for research.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1982

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bailey, N. J., 1964. Statistical Methods in Biology.Google Scholar
Boardman, J., 1964. The Greeks Overseas.Google Scholar
Breuil, H., 1900. ‘L'Āge du bronze dans le bassin de Paris’, L'Anthropologie, xi, figs, on pp. 511, 516.Google Scholar
Brewis, W. Parker, 1924. ‘The bronze sword in Great Britain’, Archaeologia, XXIII, 253–65.Google Scholar
Briard, J., 1965. Les dépôts bretons et l'âge du bronze Atlantique. Rennes.Google Scholar
Briscoe, G. and Furness, A., 1955, ‘A hoard of Bronze Age weapons from Eriswell, near Mildenhall’, Antiq. J. XXXV, 218–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
British, Museum, 1920. Bronze Age Guide.Google Scholar
Britton, D., 1960. ‘The Isleham hoard, Cambridgeshire’, Antiquity, XXXIV, 279–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Britton, D., and Longworth, I. H., 1968. Late Bronze Age finds in the Heathery Burn cave, Co. Durham, Inventaria Archaeologica (GB), 9th Set.Google Scholar
Brown, M. A. and Blin-Stoyle, A. E., 1959. ‘A sample analysis of British Middle and Late Bronze Age material using optical spectrometry’, Proc. Prehist. Soc. XXV, 188208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunn, W. A. von, 1954. Steinpackungsgräber von Köthen. Berlin.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunn, W. A. von, 1968. Mitteldeutsche Hortfunde der jüngeren Bronzezeit (Römisch-Germanische Forschungen 29).Google Scholar
Burgess, C. B., 1968a. Bronze Age Metalwork in Northern England, c. 1000–700 B.C. Newcastle upon Tyne.Google Scholar
Burgess, C. B., 1968b. ‘The later Bronze Age in the British Isles and north-western France’, Arch. J. CXXV, 145.Google Scholar
Burgess, C. B., 1974. ‘The Bronze Age’ in British Prehistory: a New Outline (ed. Renfrew, Colin), pp. 198222.Google Scholar
Burgess, C. B., 1976. ‘The Gwithian mould and the forerunners of South Welsh axes’, in Settlement and Economy in the Third and Second Millennia B.C. (ed. Burgess, C. and Miket, R.) (B.A.R. 33), pp. 6979.Google Scholar
Burgess, C. B., 1979. ‘A find from Boyton, Suffolk, and the end of the Bronze Age in Britain and Ireland’, in Bronze Age Hoards (ed. Burgess, C. and Coombs, D.) (B.A.R. 67), pp. 269–83.Google Scholar
Burgess, C. B., Coombs, D. and Davies, G. D., 1972. ‘The Broadward Complex and barbed spearheads’, in Prehistoric Man in Wales and the West (ed. Lynch, F. and Burgess, C.), pp. 211–83.Google Scholar
Butler, J. J., 1965. ‘Bronze Age connections across the North Sea’, Palaeohistoria, IX, 1286.Google Scholar
Clarke, E. D., 1821. ‘An account of some antiquities found at Fulbourn in Cambridgeshire’, Archaeologia, XIX, 5661.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coles, J. M., 19591960. ‘Scottish Late Bronze metalwork: typology, distributions and chronology’, Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scot, XCIII, 16134.Google Scholar
Coles, J. M., Coutts, H. and Ryder, M. L., 1964. ‘A Late Bronze find from Pyotdykes, Angus, Scotland’, Proc. Prehist. Soc. XXX, 186–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colquhoun, I. A., 1979. ‘The Late Bronze hoard from Blackmoor, Hampshire’, in Bronze Age Hoards (ed. Burgess, C. and Coombs, D.) (B.A.R. 67), pp. 99115.Google Scholar
Coombs, D., 1975. ‘Bronze Age weapon hoards in Britain’, Arch. Atlantica, I, 4981.Google Scholar
Cowen, J. D., 1933. ‘Two bronze swords from Ewart Park, Wooler’, Arch. Aeliana, ser. 4, X, 185–98.Google Scholar
Cowen, J. D., 1951. ‘The earliest bronze swords in Britain and their origins on the continent of Europe’, Proc. Prehist Soc. XXVII, 195213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowen, J. D., 1952a. ‘Bronze swords in northern Europe’, Proc. Prehist. Soc. XVIII, 129–47.Google Scholar
Cowen, J. D., 1952b. ‘A bronze sword from Folkestone’, Arch. Cantiana, LXV, 90–2.Google Scholar
Cowen, J. D., 1956a. ‘Eine Einführung in die Geschichte der bronzenen Griffzungenschwerter in Süddeutschland und den angrenzenden Gebieten’, Bcr. Röm.-Germ. Komm. XXXVI, 52155.Google Scholar
Cowen, J. D., 1956b. ‘Les origines des épées de bronze du type à langue de carpe’, Cronica del IV Congreso Internacional de Cincias Prehistoricas y Protohistoricas (Madrid, 1954), 639–42.Google Scholar
Cowen, J. D., 1967. ‘The Hallstatt sword of bronze: on the continent and in Britain’, Proc. Prehist. Soc. XXXIII, 377456.Google Scholar
Crawford, O. G. S. and Wheeler, R. E. M., 19201921. ‘The Llynfawr and other hoards of the Bronze Age’, Archaeologia, LXXI, 133–40.Google Scholar
Dale, W., 19131914. (Notes on a hoard of scrap bronze found near Andover), Proc. Soc. Antiq. London, XXVI, 32.Google Scholar
Davies, D. G., 1967. ‘The Guilsfield hoard: a reconsideration’, Antiq. J. XLVII, 95108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davies, D. G., 1979. ‘Hatfield Broad Oak, Leigh, Rayne, Southchurch …’, in Bronze Age Hoards (ed. Burgess, C. and Coombs, D.) (B.A.R. 67), pp. 149–72.Google Scholar
Doran, J. E. and Hodson, F. R., 1975. Mathematics and Computers in Archaeology. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Edwardson, A. R., n.d. Bronze Age Metalwork in Moyses Hall Museum, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk. Bury St. Edmunds.Google Scholar
Eogan, G., 1964. ‘The later Bronze Age in Ireland in the light of recent research’, Proc. Prehist. Soc. XXX, 268351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eogan, G., 1965. Catalogue of Irish Bronze Swords. Dublin.Google Scholar
Evans, J., 1881. The Ancient Bronze Implements, Weapons and Ornaments of Great Britain and Ireland.Google Scholar
Fell, C. and Coles, J. M., 1965. ‘Reconsideration of the Ambleside hoard …’, T.C.W.A.A.S., n.s. LXV, 3847.Google Scholar
Fox, C., 1923. Archaeology of the Cambridge Region.Google Scholar
Grace, R., 1944. ‘Additions to the Bronze Age hoard from Broad Oak, Sturry, Kent’, Antiq. J. XXIV, 148–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, C. F. C., 1955. Grave groups and hoards of the British Bronze Age, Inventaria Archaeologica (GB), 1st Set.Google Scholar
Hawkes, C. F. C., 1969. ‘Las relaciones atlanticas del mundo tartesico’, in Tartessos y sus problemas: V symposium internacional de prehistoria peninsular, pp. 185–97. Barcelona.Google Scholar
Hawkes, C. F. C. and Smith, M. A., 1955. Bronze Age hoards in theBritish Museum, Inventaria Archaeologica (GB), 2nd Set.Google Scholar
Hawkes, C. F. C. and Smith, M. A., 1957. ‘On some buckets and cauldrons of the Bronze and Early Iron Ages’, Antiq. J. XXXVII, 131–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hencken, H., 1956. ‘Carp's tongue swords in Spain, France and Italy’, Zephyrus, VII, 125–78. Salamanca.Google Scholar
Hodges, H. W. M., 1956. ‘Studies in the Late Bronze Age in Ireland, 2’, Ulster J. Archaeology, XIX, 2956.Google Scholar
Hughes, M. J., 1979. ‘British Middle and Late Bronze Age metalwork: some reanalyses’, Archaeometry, XXI, pt. 2, 195202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, W., 1934. ‘A bronze sword found near Garstang, Lanes.’, Antiq. J. XIV, 178–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jessup, R. F., 1943. ‘A Bronze Age hoard from Sturry, Kent’, Antiq. J. XXIII, 55–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jolowicz, R. V., Blin-Stoyle, A. E. and Humphreys, C. C., 1959. (A sample analysis of British Middle and Late Bronze Age material using spectrometry: data), Archaeometry, 2, supplement, 1–24 and (readings) 117.Google Scholar
Kierkebusch, I., 1962. ‘Bronzeschwert Funde aus dem Rheinland’, Bonner Jahrbuch, CLXII, 293–98.Google Scholar
Kilian, K., 1972. ‘Zum Beginn der Hallstattzeit in Italien und im Ostalpenraum’, Jahrb. Röm. Germ. Zentralmuseums Mainz, XVII (1970), 6383.Google Scholar
Kossack, G., 1959. Südbayern während der Hallstattzeit (Römisch-Germanische Forschungen 24).Google Scholar
Lawrence, G. F., 1929. ‘Antiquities from the middle Thames’, Arch. J.. LXXXVI, 6998.Google Scholar
Müller-Karpe, H., 1959. Beiträge zur Chronologie der Urnenfelderkultur nördlich und sudlich der Alpen (Romisch-Germanische Forschungen 22).Google Scholar
Northover, J. P., 1980. ‘The analysis of Welsh Bronze Age Metalwork’, in H. N. Savory, Guide Catalogue of the Bronze Age Collections. Nat. Mus. Wales.Google Scholar
Pellicer, M., 1962. Excavaciones en la necrópolis púnica ‘Laurita’ delcerro de San Cristobel. Madrid.Google Scholar
Rowlands, M. J., 1976. The Production and Distribution of Metalwork in the Middle Bronze Age in Southern Britain (B.A.R. 31).Google Scholar
Savory, H. N., 1958. ‘The Late Bronze Age in Wales: some new discoveries and new interpretations’, Arch. Cambrensis, CVII, 357.Google Scholar
Savory, H. N., 1965. ‘The Guilsfield hoard’, Bull. Board of Celtic Studies, XXI, 179206.Google Scholar
Schauer, , P., 1971. Die Schwerter in Suddeutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz (Prāhistorische Bronzefunde IV,2). Munich.Google Scholar
Smith, M. A., 1956. Grave-groups and hoards in the British Museum, Inventaria Archaeologica (GB), 3rd set.Google Scholar
Smith, M. A., 1957. Bronze Age hoards and grave-groups from the N.E. Midlands, Inventaria Archaeologica (GB), 4th Set.Google Scholar
Smith, M. A., 1959. ‘Some Somerset hoards and their place in the Bronze Age of southern Britain’, Proc. Prehist. Soc. XXV, 144–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tackenberg, K., 1970 Jüngere Bronzezeit in NW Deutschland: I, die Bronzen. Hanover.Google Scholar
Varndezell, G. L., 1979. ‘The Andover hoard&head’, in Bronze Age Hoards (ed. Burgess, C. and Coombs, D.) (B.A.R. 67), pp. 93–7.Google Scholar
Waterbolk, H. T. and Butler, J. J., 1965. ‘Comments on the use of metallurgical analysis in prehistoric studies’, Helinium, V, 227–51.Google Scholar