Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T06:11:45.810Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Use and Significance of Socketed Axes During the Late Bronze Age

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

Ben Roberts*
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge, UK
Barbara S. Ottaway*
Affiliation:
University of Exeter, UK

Abstract

The widespread employment and acceptance of use-wear analysis on materials such as flint and bone has not been accompanied by a parallel development in archaeometallurgy. This article explores its potential and problems through the investigation of socketed axes in eastern Yorkshire, in England and south-east Scotland during the late Bronze Age. Experimental work on modern replications of socketed axes was compared with wear traces on prehistoric socketed axes. The results indicate that prehistoric socketed axes had been used as multi-purpose tools, but that the nature and extent of their uses before deposition varied considerably. By combining use-wear analysis with contextual information on socketed axes in the late Bronze Age landscape, ideas concerning their significance can be explored.

L'approbation des analyses de traces d'utilisation sur des matériaux comme le silex et les os et leur emploi courant ne sont pas allés avec un développement parallèle en archeo-métallurgie. Dans cet article, nous voulons étudier le potentiel et les problèmes inhérents en examinant les haches à douille dans le Yorkshire de l'est et l'Ecosse du sud-est pendant l'âge du bronze récent. Les traces de travail expérimental sur des répliques modernes sont comparées avec les traces d'usure sur les haches préhistoriques. D'après les résultats obtenus, les haches préhistoriques ont été utilisées comme outils polyvalents, mais la nature et l'ampleur de leur utilisation avant déposition varient considérablement. En combinant les analyses de traces d'utilisation avec les informations contextuelles sur les haches à douille dans l'environnement de l'âge du bronze, nous sommes en mesure d'examiner les idées relatives à leur signification.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

Die Gebrauchspurenanalyse an Silex und Knochenwerkzeugen ist weitverbreitet und akzeptiert. Um diese Akzeptanz auch auf Metallartefakte auszudehnen, wurden weitgehende Forschungen an spätbronzezeitlichen Beilen aus Yorkshire und Schottland unternommen. Versuchserien mit experimentell hergestellten Beilen ermöglichten den Vergleich dieser Gebrauchsspuren mit jenen an prähistorischen Beilen. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass die vorgeschichtlichen Bronzebeile als Mehrfach-Werkzeuge benutzt wurden und dass die Art und der Gebrauch der Beile, sehr unterschiedlich war.

Diese Ergebnisse der Gebrauchsspurenanalyse, kombiniert mit Information der ursprünglichen Umgebung der Beile, führten zu interessanten Einblicken, z. B. in Bezug auf regionale Differenzierung, die in diesem Beitrag vorgelegt werden.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2003 Sage Publications 

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

Ashmore, Patrick, 1994. Neolithic and Bronze Age Scotland. London: Batsford.Google Scholar
Barker, Graeme, ed., 1981. Prehistoric Communities in Northern England: Essays in Social and Economic Reconstruction. Sheffield: University of Sheffield.Google Scholar
Barrett, John and Richard, Bradley, eds, 1980. Settlement and Society in the British Later Bronze Age. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 83).Google Scholar
Barrett, John and Robert, Gourlay, 1999. An early metal assemblage from Dail na Caraidh, Inverness-shire, and its context. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 129:161187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, Richard, 1998. The Passage of Arms. Second edition. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Bradley, Richard, 2000. An Archaeology of Natural Places. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bradley, Richard and Ken, Gordon 1988. Human skulls from the River Thames, their dating and significance. Antiquity 62:503509.Google Scholar
Brewster, Thomas C.M., 1963. The Excavation of Staple Howe. Malton: East Riding Archaeological Research Committee.Google Scholar
Bridgford, Sue, 1997. The first weapons devised only for war. British Archaeology March 1997:7.Google Scholar
Bridgford, Sue, 2000. Weapons, warfare and society in Britain 1250-750 BC. Unpublished PhD dissertation: Sheffield University.Google Scholar
Brück, Joanna, 1995. A place for the dead: the role of human remains in late Bronze Age Britain. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 61:245277.Google Scholar
Burgess, Colin, 1968. Bronze Age Metalwork in Northern England. Newcastle: Oriel.Google Scholar
Challis, Anthony and Harding, Dennis, eds, 1975. Later Prehistory from the Trent to the Tyne. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 20).Google Scholar
Champion, Timothy, 1990. Review of The Passage of Arms by Richard Bradley. Antiquaries Journal 70:479481.Google Scholar
Champion, Timothy, 1999. The later Bronze Age. In John, Hunter and Ian, Ralston (eds), The Archaeology of Britain: 95112. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Coles, John, 1959–60. Scottish late Bronze Age metalwork: typology, distributions and chronology. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 93:16134.Google Scholar
Coles, John, 1979. Experimental Archaeology. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Ehrenberg, Margaret, 1981. Inside socketed axes. Antiquity 55:214218.Google Scholar
Fontijn, David, 2002. Sacrificial landscapes: cultural biographies of persons, objects and ‘natural’ places in the Bronze Age of the southern Netherlands, c. 2300–600 BC. Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia 3334.Google Scholar
Gräslund, Bo, ed., 1990. The Interpretative Possibilities of Microwear Studies. 7th international conference on lithic use-wear analysis, Uppsala 1989. Uppsala: Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis.Google Scholar
Harding, Anthony, 1976. Bronze agricultural implements in Bronze Age Europe. In Gale de, G. Sieveking, Ian, H. Longworth and Wilson, K.E. (eds), Problems in Economic and Social Archaeology: 517521. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Harding, Dennis, ed., 1982. Later Prehistoric Settlement in South-East Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Harding, Jan and Robert, Johnson, eds, 2000. Northern Pasts: Interpretations of Later Prehistory of Northern England and Southern Scotland. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 302).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayden, Brian, 1979. Lithic Use-Wear Analysis. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Hodges, Henry, 1957. Studies in the late Bronze Age in Ireland. Ulster Journal of Archaeology 20:5163.Google Scholar
Jensen, Jørgen 1973. Ein neues Hallstattschwert aus Dänemark. Beitrag zur Problematik der jungbronzezeitlichen Votivfunde. Acta Archaeologica 43:115164.Google Scholar
Kienlin, Tobias, 1995. Flanged axes of the North-Alpine region: an assessment of the possibilities of use-wear analysis on metal artefacts. Unpublished MSc dissertation. Sheffield University.Google Scholar
Kienlin, Tobias and Barbara, Ottaway, 1998. Flanged axes of the North-Alpine region: an assessment of the possibilities of use-wear analysis on metal artefacts. In Claude, Mordant, Michel, Pernot and Valentin, Rychner (eds), L'Atelier du bronzier en Europe du XXe au VIIIe siècle avant notre ère: 271286. Paris: CTHS (Documents préhistoriques 10).Google Scholar
Kristiansen, Kristian, 1978. The consumption of wealth in Bronze Age Denmark: a study in the dynamics of economic processes in tribal societies. In Kristian, Kristiansen and Carsten, Paludan-Müller (eds), New Directions in Scandinavian Archaeology: 158191. Copenhagen: National Museum of Denmark.Google Scholar
Levy, Janet, 1982. Social and Religious Organisation in Bronze Age Denmark: An Analysis of Ritual Hoard Finds. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (International Series 124).Google Scholar
Manby, Terry, 1980. Bronze Age settlement in Eastern Yorkshire. In Barrett, John and Richard, Bradley (eds), Settlement and Society in the British Later Bronze Age: 307376. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 83).Google Scholar
Mathieu, James R. and Daniel, A. Meyer, 1997. Comparing axe heads of stone, bronze and steel: studies in experimental archaeology. Journal of Field Archaeology 24:333350.Google Scholar
Megaw, J., Vincent, S. and Derek, D.A. Simpson, eds, 1979. Introduction to British Prehistory: from the Arrival of Homo Sapiens to the Claudian Invasion. Leicester: Leicester University Press.Google Scholar
Needham, Stuart, 1996. Chronology and periodisation in the British Bronze Age. In Klavs, Randsborg (ed.), Absolute Chronology - Archaeological Europe 2500-500 BC. Acta Archaeologica 67:121140.Google Scholar
Needham, Stuart, Christopher, Bronk Ramsay, David, Coombs, Caroline, Cartwright, and Paul, Petitt, 1998. An independent chronology for British Bronze Age metalwork: the results of the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator programme. Archaeology Journal 154:55107.Google Scholar
Ottaway, Barbara, 2003. Experimental Archaeometallurgy. In Stollner, T., Korlin, G., Steffens, G. and Cierny, J. (eds), Man and Mining: Studies in Honour of Gerd Weisgerber on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday: 341348. Bochum: Der Anschnitt (Beiheft 16).Google Scholar
Rynne, Etienne, 1983. Why ribs inside socketed axes? Antiquity 57:4849.Google Scholar
Sands, Robert, 1997. Prehistoric Woodworking: the Analysis and Interpretation of Bronze and Iron Age Toolmarks. London: University College London.Google Scholar
Schmidt, Peter K. and Colin, B. Burgess, 1981. The Axes of Scotland and Northern England. Munich: Beck (Prähistorische Bronzefunde IX, 7).Google Scholar
Semenov, S.A., 1964. Prehistoric Technology: An Experimental Study of the Oldest Tools and Artefacts from Traces of Manufacture and Wear. London: Cory, Adams & Mackay.Google Scholar
Sheridan, Alison, 1999. Drinking, driving, death and display: Scottish Bronze Age artefact studies since Coles. In Anthony, F. Harding (ed.), Experiment and Design: Archaeological Studies in Honour of John Coles: 4959. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Spindler, Konrad, 1994. The Man in the Ice. London, Weidenfield & Nicolson.Google Scholar
Spratt, Donald, and Colin, Burgess, eds, 1985. Upland Settlement in Britain: the Second Millennium BC and After. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 143).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swiss, A. and Barbara, Ottaway, in press. Investment or Investment: casting and using a bronze mould. In Peter, Northover and Chris, Salter (eds), Founders, Smiths and Platers. Oxford.Google Scholar
Taylor, Maisie, 1992. Flag Fen: the wood. Antiquity 66:476498.Google Scholar
Taylor, Robin, 1993. Hoards of the Bronze Age in Southern Britain. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (British Series 228).Google Scholar
Van Gijn, A.L., 1995. The wear and tear of flint: principles of functional analysis applied to Dutch Neolithic assemblages. Analecta Praehistoria Leidensia 22.Google Scholar
Vaughan, Patrick, 1985. Use-wear Analysis of Stone Tools. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Wright, Edward, 1990. The Ferriby Boats: Seacraft of the Bronze Age. London: Routledge.Google Scholar