Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T14:27:52.099Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Adorning the Living but Not the Dead: Understanding Ornaments in Britain c. 1400–1100 cal BC

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2014

Ben Roberts*
Affiliation:
1 Department of Prehistory and Europe, British Museum, Great Russell St, London WC1B 3DG

Extract

The purpose of this paper is to evaluate whether the presence of gold and bronze ornaments in Britain during the centuries c. 1400-1100 cal BC constitutes an ‘ornament horizon’ and to analyse the roles that these objects played in prehistoric communities. To achieve this, a comprehensive ornament database was compiled and the evidence for ornament production, forms, distribution, modes of adornment, and depositional practices was analysed. This revealed the existence of an earlier bronze ornament tradition concentrated in the coastal areas and along the major rivers of southern and eastern England and a later gold ornament tradition throughout Britain. The ornaments were designed to adorn the neck, wrist, and fingers and, with the exception of a quantity of elaborate bronze pins, are not thought to relate to clothing. These were high visibility objects that would have been widely recognised by the networks of communities participating in the intensive movement of objects, people and practices that occurred throughout northwest Europe and beyond. The ornaments were probably worn for substantial periods of an individual's life before being separated from their wearers. Though the ornaments were circulated, repaired, and probably recycled, there does not appear to have been a substantial delay in their deposition. The excavation of the ornaments in diverse and frequently elaborate arrangements such as in ditches and in settlements, on hills and in rivers, and accompanying cremation burials or other metal objects implies localised reworkings of the more widespread practices of structured deposition.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 2004

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

Aldhouse-Green, M. 2004. Crowning glories: languages of hair in later prehistoric Europe. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 70, 299325Google Scholar
Aldhouse-Green, S.H.R. & Northover, J.P. 1994. The discovery of three Bronze Age gold torques in Pembrokeshire. Archaeologia Cambrensis, 143, 3745Google Scholar
Annable, K. & Simpson, D. 1964. Guide Catalogue of the Neolithic and Bronze Age Collections in Devises Museum, Devises. Devises: Wiltshire Archaeological SocietyGoogle Scholar
Armbruster, B. & Louboutin, C. 2004. Parures en or de l'Age du Bronze de Balingherm et Guînes (pas-de-Calais): les aspects technologiques. Antiquitiés Nationales 36, 133–46Google Scholar
Barber, M. 2001. A time and place for bronze. In Brück, (ed.) 2001 161–9Google Scholar
Barber, M. 2003. Bronze and the Bronze Age: metalwork and society in Britain c. 2500–800 BC. Stroud: TempusGoogle Scholar
Barrett, J.C. 1994. Fragments from Antiquity: an archaeology of social life in Britain. Oxford: BlackwellGoogle Scholar
Beck, C., & Shennan, S. 1991. Amber in Prehistoric Britain. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Bender Jørgensen, L. 1991. North European Textiles until AD 1000. Århus: University PressGoogle Scholar
Billiard, C, Eleure, C. & Jezegou, M.P. 2005. Dècouverte de torques en or de l'age du bronze en mer en Manche. In Bourgeois, & Talon, (eds), 2005, 287302Google Scholar
Blanchet, J-C. 1984. Les Premieres Métallurgists en Picardie et dans le Nord de la France: Chalcolithique, Age du Bronze et Debut du Premier Age du Fer. Paris: Memoires de la Societe Prehistorique Françhise 17Google Scholar
Bourgeois, J. & Talon, M. (eds). 2005. L'âge du Bronze du nord de la France dans son contexte européen. Paris: APRAB.Google Scholar
Bradley, R. 1981. ‘Various styles of urn’: cemetaries and settlement in southern England c. 1400–1000 bc. In Chapman, R., Kinnes, I. & Randsborg, K. (eds), The Archaeology of Death, 93104. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. 1984. The Social Foundations of Prehistoric Britain. London, LongmanGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. 1998. The Passage of Arms. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. 2000. An Archaeology of Natural Places. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. 2005. Ritual and Domestic Life in Prehistoric Europe. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. 2007. The Prehistory of Britain and Ireland. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Bridgford, S. 2000. Weapons, Warfare and Society in Britain: 1250–750 BC. Unpublished PhD dissertation: Sheffield UniversityGoogle Scholar
Brück, J. 1999. Houses, lifecycles and deposition on Middle Bronze Age settlements in southern England. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 65, 122Google Scholar
Brück, J. 2000. Settlement, landscape and social identity: the Early-Middle Bronze Age transition in southern England. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 19(3), 273300Google Scholar
Brück, J. (ed.). 2001. Bronze Age Landscapes: tradition and transformation. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Burgess, C. 1974. The Bronze Age. In Renfrew, C. (ed.), British Prehistory: a new outline, 165222. London: DuckworthGoogle Scholar
Burgess, C. 1980a. The Age of Stonehenge. London: DentGoogle Scholar
Burgess, C. 2004. Forty-five years' researches in the chronology and ordering of the British Bronze Age: a personal memoir. In Gibson, A. & Sheridan, A. (eds.), From Sickles to Circles: Britain and Ireland at the time of Stonehenge, 339–66. Tempus: StroudGoogle Scholar
Butler, J.J. 1963. Bronze age connections across the sea. Palaeohistoria 9, 1286Google Scholar
Butler, J.J. & Smith, M.A. 1956. Razors, urns, and the British Middle Bronze Age. Bulletin of the Institute of Archaeology London 12, 2052Google Scholar
Clarke, D., Cowie, T., & Foxton, A 1985. Symbols of Power at the time of Stonehenge. Edinburgh: HMSOGoogle Scholar
Coles, J. 1963. The Hilton (Dorset) Gold Ornaments. Antiquity 37, 132–4Google Scholar
Coles, J. 1963/1964. Scottish Middle Bronze Age bronzework. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 97, 82156Google Scholar
Colquhoun, & Burgess, C. I. 1988. The Swords of Britain. Prahistorische Bronzefunde 4, 5Google Scholar
Cowie, T.G. 1994. A Bronze Age gold tore from the Minch. Hebridean Naturalist 12, 1921Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B. 1970. Bronze Age settlement at Chalton, Hants (Site 78). Antiquaries Journal 50, 113Google Scholar
Dacre, M. & Ellison, A. 1981. A Bronze Age urn cremation cemetery at Kimpton, Hampshire. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 47, 147203Google Scholar
Davies, E. 1929. The Prehistoric and Roman Remains of Denbighshire. CardiffGoogle Scholar
Davies, E. 1949. The Prehistoric and Roman Remains of Flintshire. CardiffGoogle Scholar
Davis, R. 2006. Basal-Looped Spearheads Typology, Chronology, Context and Use. Oxford: British Archaeological Report S1497.Google Scholar
Dunkin, D. 2001. Metalwork, burnt mounds and settlement on the West Sussex coastal plain: a contextual study. Antiquity 75, 261–2Google Scholar
Drewett, P. 1982. Later Bronze Age downland economy and excavations at Black Patch, East Sussex. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 48, 321400Google Scholar
Eluère, C. 1982. Les Ors Prèhistoriques. Paris: PicardGoogle Scholar
Ellison, A. 1980. Deverel Rimbury urn cemeteries: the evidence for social organisation. In Barrett, J. & Bradley, R. (eds), Settlement and Society in the British Later Bronze Age, 115–26. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 83Google Scholar
Ellison, A. 1981. Towards a socio-economic model for the Middle Bronze Age in southern England. In Hodder, I., Isaac, G. & Hammond, N. (eds), Pattern of the Past: studies in honour of David Clarke, 413–48. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Ellison, A. 1987. The Bronze Age settlement at Thorny Down: pots, post-holes and patterning. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 53, 385–92Google Scholar
Eogan, G. 1964. The later bronze age in Ireland in the light of recent research. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 30, 268351Google Scholar
Eogan, G. 1967. The associated finds of gold bar tores. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 98(2), 129–75Google Scholar
Eogan, G. 1983. Ribbon tores in Britain and Ireland. In Clark, D.V.. & O'Connor, A. (eds), From the Stone Age to the ‘Forty-five’: studies presented to R B K Stevenson, 87126. Edinburgh: John DonaldGoogle Scholar
Eogan, G. 1994. The Accomplished Art: gold and gold-working in Britain and Ireland during the Bronze Age (c. 2300–650 BC). Oxford: Oxbow Monograph 42Google Scholar
Eogan, G. 1995. Ideas, people and things: Ireland and the external world during the later Bronze Age. In Waddell, J. & Twohig, E. Shee (eds), Ireland in the Bronze Age, 128–35. Dublin: Stationary OfficeGoogle Scholar
Fontijn, D. 2002/2003. Sacrificial landscapes: cultural biographies of persons, objects and natural places in the Bronze Age of southern Netherlands, c. 2300–600 cal BC. Annalecta Praehistoria Leidensia 33–4Google Scholar
Fontijn, D. 2007. The significance of ‘invisible places’. World Archaeology 39(1) 7083Google Scholar
Gabillot, M. 2003. Dépots et production métallique du Bronze moyen en France nord- occidentale. Oxford: British Archaeological Report S1174Google Scholar
Gosden, C. & Marshall, Y. 1999. The cultural biography of objects. World Archaeology 31(2), 169–78Google Scholar
Green, H S, Guilbert, G & Cowell, M, 1983. Two gold bracelets from Maesmelan Farm, Powys. The Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies 30, 394–8Google Scholar
Gray, H., St. G. 1909. Gold tore found at Yeovil. Somerset Archaeological & Natural History Society 55, 6684Google Scholar
Gwilt, A., Kucharski, K., Silvester, R., & Davis, M. 2005. Late Bronze Age hoard from Trevalyn Farm, Rossett, Wrexham: with some observations on hoarding practice and gold bracelet weights. Studia Celtica 39(1), 2761Google Scholar
Hawkes, C.F.C. 1932. The Towednack gold hoard. Man 32, 222–39Google Scholar
Hawkes, C.F.C. 1942. The Deverel urn and the Picardy pin: a phase of Bronze age settlement in Kent. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 8, 2647Google Scholar
Hawkes, C.F.C. 1954. Archaeological theory and method: some suggestions from the Old World, American Anthropologist 56, 613–29Google Scholar
Hughes, M. & Champion, T. 1982. A Middle Bronze Age ornament hoard from South Wonston, Hampshire. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 48, 487–9Google Scholar
Huson, S. 1999. Bronze Age bracelet from Cranleigh. Surrey Archaeological Collections 86, 203Google Scholar
Jockenhövel, A. 1980. Die Rasiermesser in Westeuropa. Präehistorische Bronzefunde 8, 3Google Scholar
Jockenhövel, A. 1991. Räumliche Mobilität von Personen in der mittleren Bronzezeit im westlichen Mitteleuropa. Germania 69, 4962Google Scholar
Kristiansen, K. 1974. Glerupfundet. Et depotfunde med kvindesmykker fra bronzealderens femte periode. Hikuin 1, 738Google Scholar
Ladle, L., & Woodward, A. 2003. A Middle Bronze Age house and burnt mound at Bestwall, Wareham, Dorset: an interim report. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 69, 265–78Google Scholar
Lang, J., Meeks, N.D. & McIntyre, I. 1980. The metallurgical examination of a Bronze Age tore from Shropshire. Historical Metallurgy 14(2), 1720Google Scholar
Laux, F. Bemerkungen zu den mittelbronzezeitlichen Lüneburger Frauentrachten vom Typ Deutsch Evern. In Lorenz, H. (ed.), Studien zur Bronzeit: Festschrift für Wilhelm Albert v. Brunn: 251–75. Mainz: v. ZabernGoogle Scholar
Lawson, A.J. 1979. A Late Middle Bronze Age hoard from Hunstanton, Norfolk. In Burgess, C. & Coombs, D. (eds), Bronze Age Hoards: some finds old and new, 4292. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 67Google Scholar
Lawson, A.J. 2000. Copper-alloy torc. In Allen, M. & Gardiner, J. (eds), Our Changing Landscape; an intertidal survey of Langstone Harbour, Hampshire, 158. York: Council for British Archaeology Research Report 124.Google Scholar
Lohof, E. 1994. Tradition and change: the mortuary rituals during the late Neolithic and Bronze Age in the Northeastern Netherlands. Archaeological Dialogues 1(2), 98118Google Scholar
Louwe Kooijmans, L., Broeke, P. van den, Fokkens, H. & Gijn, A. van. (eds). 2005. The Prehistory of the Netherlands. Amsterdam: University PressGoogle Scholar
Maryon, H. 1938. Technical methods of the Irish Smiths in the Bronze and Early Iron Ages. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 44, 205Google Scholar
Meeks, N.D. & Varndell, G. 1994. Three Bronze Age tore fragments from Woodham Walter, Essex. Essex Archaeology & History 25, 12Google Scholar
Megaw, J.V.S., Thomas, C. & Wailes, B. 1961. The Bronze Age settlement at Gwithian, Cornwall. Proceedings of the West Cornwall Field Club 2(5) 200–15Google Scholar
Meukens, L. 2004. A Matter of Elites, Specialists and Ritual? Social and symbolic dimensions of metalworking in the North-west European Bronze Age. Unpublished M.A. Thesis. University of LeidenGoogle Scholar
Moore, C. & Rowlands, M. 1972. Bronze Age Metalwork in Salisbury Museum. Sailsbury: Salisbury & South Wiltshire MuseumGoogle Scholar
Muckleroy, K. 1981. Middle Bronze Age trade between Britain and Europe: a maritime perspective. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 47, 275–97Google Scholar
Nebelsick, L. 2000. Rent asunder: ritual violence in Late Bronze Age hoards. In Pare, C. (ed.), Metals make the World go round: the supply and circulation of metals in Bronze Age Europe, 160–75. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Needham, S.P. 1989. The bronze hoard. In P.Ellis (ed.), Norton Fitzwarren hillfort: a report on the excavations by Nancy and Phillip Langmaid between 1968 and 1971. Proceedings of the Somerset Archaeological & Natural History Society 133, 2939Google Scholar
Needham, S.P. 1990. The Penard-Wilburton succession: new metalwork finds from Croxton, Norfolk and Thirsk, Yorkshire. Antiquaries Journal 70, 253–70Google Scholar
Needham, S.P. 1996. Chronology and periodisation in the British Bronze age. Acta Archaeologica 67, 121–40Google Scholar
Needham, S. 2000a. The development of embossed goldwork in Bronze Age Europe. Antiquaries Journal 80, 2765Google Scholar
Needham, S.P. 2000b. Power pulses across a cultural divide: cosmologically driven acquisition between Armorica and Wessex. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 66, 151207Google Scholar
Needham, S.P. 2001. When expediency broaches ritual intention: the flow of metal between systemic and buried domains. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 7(2), 275–98Google Scholar
Needham, S.P. 2002. Copper alloy objects. In Rudling, (ed.) 2002, 183–5Google Scholar
Needham, S.P. 2004. Migdale-Marnoch: sunburst of Scottish metallurgy. In Shepherd, I. & Barclay, G. (eds), The Neolithic and Early Bronze Age of Scotland in their European context, 217–45. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of ScotlandGoogle Scholar
Needham, S.P., Bronk Ramsay, C., Coombs, D., Cartwright, C., & Petitt, P. 1997. An independent chronology for British Bronze Age metalwork: the results of the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Programme. Archaeological Journal 154, 55107Google Scholar
Northover, J.P. 1989. The gold tore from St. Helier, Jersey. Annual Bulletin Society Jersiaise 25(1), 112–37Google Scholar
Northover, J.P. 1993. Bronze Age gold in Britain. In Morteani, G. & Northove, J.P.. (eds), Prehistoric Gold in Europe; Mines, Metallurgy and Manufacture, 515–31. New York: KluwerGoogle Scholar
O'Connor, B. 1980. Cross Channel Relations in the Later Bronze Age. Oxford: British Archaeological Report S91Google Scholar
O'Connor, B. 1991. Bronze Age metalwork from Cranbourne Chase: a catalogue. In Barrett, J.C., Bradley, R. & Green, M., Landscape, Monuments and Society: the archaeology of Cranborne Chase, 231–41. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Parham, D., Needham, S., & Palmer, M. 2006. Questioning wrecks of time. British Archaeology 91, 42–7Google Scholar
Pearce, S.M. 1983. The Bronze Age Metalwork of Southern Britain. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 120Google Scholar
Pearce, S.M. & Padley, T. 1977. A Bronze Age find from Tredarvah, Penzance. Cornish Archaeology 16, 2541Google Scholar
Pendleton, C. 1999. Bronze Age Metalwork in Northern East Anglia: a study of its distribution and interpretation. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 120Google Scholar
Pendleton, C. 2001. Firstly, lets get rid of ritual. In Brück, (ed.), 2001, 170–8Google Scholar
Piggott, C.M. 1946. The Late Bronze Age razors of the British Isles. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 12, 121–41Google Scholar
Piggott, C.M. 1949. A Late Bronze Age hoard from Blackrock in Sussex and its significance. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 15, 107–21Google Scholar
Pryor, F. 2005. Flag Fen: life and death of a prehistoric landscape. Stroud: TempusGoogle Scholar
Roberts, B.W. & Ottaway, B.S. 2004. The use and significance of socketed axes during the late Bronze Age. European Journal of Archaeology 6(2) 119–40Google Scholar
Rohl, B. & Needham, S. 1998. The Circulation of Metalwork in the British Bronze Age: the application of lead isotope analysis. London: British Museum Occasional Paper 102Google Scholar
Rowlands, M. 1971a. A group of incised decorated armrings and their significance for the Middle Bronze Age of Southern Britain. British Museum Quarterly 25, 183–99Google Scholar
Rowlands, M. 1976. The Production and Distribution of Metalwork in the Middle Bronze Age in Southern Britain. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 31Google Scholar
Rudling, D. (ed.). 2002. Downland Settlement and Landuse: the archaeology of the Brighton Bypass. London: ArchetypeGoogle Scholar
Savory, H.N. 1958. The Late Bronze Age in Wales: some new discoveries and new interpretations. Archaeologica Cambrensis 107, 363Google Scholar
Savory, H.N. 1977. A hew hoard of Bronze Age gold ornaments from Wales. Archaeologia Atlantica 2, 3753Google Scholar
Savory, H. 1980. Guide Catalogue of the Bronze Age Collections. Cardiff: National Museum of Wales.Google Scholar
Sheridan, A. & Davis, M. 1998. The Welsh ‘Jet Set’ in prehistory: A case of keeping up with the Joneses? In Gibson, A. & Simpson, D. (eds), Prehistoric Ritual and Religion, 148–62. Stroud: TempusGoogle Scholar
Sheridan, A. & Davis, M. 2002. Investigating jet and jet-like artefacts from prehistoric Scotland: the National Museums of Scotland project. Antiquity 76, 812–25Google Scholar
Sheridan, A. & Shortland, A. 2004. ‘… beads which have given rise to so much dogmatism, controversy and rash speculation’: faience in Early Bronze Age Britain and Ireland. In Shepherd, I. & Barclay, G., (eds), Scotland in Ancient Europe: the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age of Scotland in their European Context, 263–82. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of ScotlandGoogle Scholar
Smith, M.A. 1955. The limitations of inference in archaeology. Archaeological Newsletter 6(1), 17Google Scholar
Smith, M.A. 1959a. Some Somerset hoards and their place in the Bronze age of southern Britain. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 25:144–87Google Scholar
Smith, M.A. (ed.) 1959b. Middle Bronze Age hoards from Southern England. Inventaria Archaeologica 7, 4247Google Scholar
Sørensen, M.L.S. 1997. Reading dress: the construction of social categories and identities in Bronze Age Europe. Journal of European Archaeology 5(1), 93114Google Scholar
Stone, J-F 1941. The Deverel-Rimbury settlement on Thorny Down, Winterbourne Gunner, S. Wilts. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 7, 114–33Google Scholar
Taylor, J.J. 1980. Bronze Age Goldwork of the British Isles. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Taylor, R.J. 1982. The hoard from West Buckland, Somerset. Antiquaries Journal 62, 1317Google Scholar
Taylor, R.J. 1993. Hoards of the Bronze Age in Southern Britain: analysis and interpretation. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 228Google Scholar
Timberlake, S. 2002. Ancient prospection for metals and modern prospection for ancient mines: the evidence for Bronze Age mining within the British Isles. In Bartelheim, M., Pernicka, E. & Krause, R. (eds), The Beginnings of Metallurgy in the Old World, 327–57Google Scholar
Treasure Annual Report 19981999. London: Department of Culture, Media and SportGoogle Scholar
Treasure Annual Report 2001. London: Department of Culture, Media and SportGoogle Scholar
Treasure Annual Report 2003. London: Department of Culture, Media and SportGoogle Scholar
Treasure Annual Report 2004. London: Department of Culture, Media and SportGoogle Scholar
Treherne, P. 1995. The warriors beauty: the masculine body and self-identity in Bronze Age Europe. Journal of European Archaeology 3(1), 105–44Google Scholar
Van der Noort, R. 2006. Argonauts of the North Sea: a social maritime archaeology for the 2nd millennium BC. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 72, 267–87Google Scholar
Varndell, G. 1986. The Sculthorpe Tore. Antiquaries Journal 66, 386–7Google Scholar
Varndell, G. 1997. A Bronze Age gold tore from Sudbrook, Lines. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 16(1), 73–7Google Scholar
Wels-Weyrauch, U. 1989. Mittelbronzezeitliche Frauentrachten in Südendeutschland. InDynamique du Bronze Moyen en Europe Occidentale: 117–34. Strasbourg: Actes du 113e Congres national des Sociétiés savantsGoogle Scholar
Woodward, A. 2002. Beads and Beakers: heirlooms and relics in the British Early Bronze Age. Antiquity 76, 1040–47Google Scholar
Worrell, S. 2002. Recent metalwork discoveries in Hampshire. Hampshire Studies 57, 8995Google Scholar
Yates, D. 2007. Land, Power and Prestige: Bronze Age field systems in southern England. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Yorke, B. 2002. The life cycle of Bronze Age metalwork from the Thames. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 21(1), 7792Google Scholar