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A Late Bronze Age Hoard from Blackrock in Sussex and its Significance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2014

Extract

The hoard of bronzes from Blackrock near Brighton, was first published in 1916, and later received treatment by Curwen in his Archaeology of Sussex. The obviously foreign elements in the hoard have not been clearly recognised in the past, and in view of their significance it is desirable that a more detailed description of the finds should be put on record, and that some attempt should be made to fit them into the existing pattern of the Late Bronze Age of the British Isles.

The following objects (all of bronze) were found in the hoard:

  • I. Three ‘Sussex Loops.’

  • II. Two plain armlets.

  • III. Eight unlooped palstaves.

  • IV. Rapier blade with three rivet holes.

  • V. Dirk handle.

  • VI. Decorated spiral finger-ring.

Unfortunately the exact locality and conditions of finding cannot be determined with certainty, but there is good reason to believe that the discovery was made at Blackrock, about two miles to the east of Brighton. There is little doubt that all these objects were found together, and that they comprised the whole hoard.

Of these objects, the Sussex loops can be fairly closely dated in the British Bronze Age, and the bronze dirk handle and decorated spiral finger-ring are imports from Schleswig-Holstein or North Germany. The origin of the other objects is less certain, but it is immediately clear that a study of this hoard may be of value in cross-dating between our own Bronze Age and that of the Northern Countries.

First we will discuss the ‘Sussex Loops’ and their chronological position in the British Isles.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1949

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References

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page 107 note 2 The hoard is at present on loan to the Brighton Museum. I should like to record my thanks to my husband for his drawings of the bronzes, and to Mr Cowen and Professor Hawkes for much help and criticism, most generously given during the preparation of this paper.

page 108 note 1 Archaeology of Sussex, 175.

page 109 note 1 At Stump Bottom.

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page 112 note 1 Bracelets meant to steady the wrists of the young Druidess or other sacred damsell, upon whose thumbs the divining rod was to be balanced by the point of the diamond, while from the hole underneath depended a plummet’. S.A.C., 11, 226Google Scholar.

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page 112 note 5 Devizes Museum Catalogue, II, B.16.

page 112 note 6 I am grateful to Mr T. Lord of the Pig Yard Club Museum, Settle, for allowing me to publish this.

page 112 note 7 Kindly drawn for me by Miss Clare Fell, who points out that the method of constructing the side plate is one which must have been familiar to makers of Class III native spearheads. Whether these two pins were native attempts at copying an unfamiliar type of pin, or whether the decorative side plate of the more southerly examples was a development from the simpler ones it is not possible to say.

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page 116 note 1 Kersten, , Zur Altesten Nordischen Bronzezeit (1938),Google Scholar Pl. XIV, 1.

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page 120 note 1 B.M. Bronze Age Guide, 52.

page 120 note 2 I am grateful to Professor Hawkes for kindly handing over his notes to me. He examined the Ramsgate armlets with Sprockhoff in 1932.

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