File:Boughton Malherbe Horad (FindID 457499).jpg
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Summary
[edit]Boughton Malherbe Horad | |||
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Photographer |
Kent County Council, Jen Jackson, 2011-12-07 12:10:44 |
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Title |
Boughton Malherbe Horad |
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Description |
English: A Late Bronze Age carp's tongue complex hoard consisting of 352 objects.
At 352 objects and fragments, the Boughton Malherbe hoard is the third largest Bronze Age hoard ever found in Britain behind the Langton Matravers hoard, Dorset, with 777 objects and fragments dating to the Llyn Fawr metalwork phase (c. 800-600 BC) (Roberts et al.: in prep.) and the Isleham hoard, Cambridgeshire, with over 6500 objects and fragments dating to the Wilburton metalwork phase (c. 1150-1000 BC) (Britton 1960; Colquhoun and Burgess 1988: pls. 152.B-157.A; Malim et al.: 2010). The Boughton Malherbe hoard comprises: 75 copper alloy weapon fragments
136 copper alloy tools and tool fragments
42 copper alloy ornamentation (including personal dressage and animal harnessing)
71 copper alloy production objects and fragments
The hoard from Boughton Malherbe belongs to the carp's tongue complex, the terminal metalworking tradition of the final phase of the Atlantic Bronze Age which had its centre in northwest and northern France, and is now dated c. 950-800 BC. In Britain the complex appears to be intrusive or specialised, occurring alongside the indigenous Ewart Park metalwork tradition in southeast England, and is largely represented by hoards of fragmented bronze objects. The dating of these hoards within this phase is problematic but are held to indicative of the latter part, c. 875-800 BC (Brandherm and Burgess 2008: 151). Savory (1948) was the first to identify 'the sword-bearers' of carp's tongue type as Atlantic, and its accompanying suite of bronze objects as largely indigenous of northwest Europe rather than of central European origin, as earlier researchers believed (Evans 1930). Briard (1965: chap. XII) and Burgess (1968: 17-19, figs. 13-14, app. V) described in detail the full extent of this complex, in northwest France and southern England respectively. Despite the very great number of carp's tongue hoards in these regions (Brandherm and Burgess 2008: 155-162, lists. 7-11, 16, 21), what is or is not a carp's tongue hoard, in Britain at least, is far from unproblematic, despite the comprehensive lists of bronze types associated with these hoards provided by Briard (1965) and Burgess (1968). It would be inaccurate, however, to define each of these types in Britain specifically as a carp's tongue type. Some are, on account of being identical to examples found in France, whilst some are indigenous copies of such foreign bronzes, and others are wholly indigenous Ewart Park types. There has been some considerable difficulty in distinguishing one from the other, particularly in the case of socketed axes (Butler and Steegstra 2001/2002: 279-282), which has resulted in many an indigenous hoard being mis-associated with this complex (e.g. Isle of Harty, Kent: Smith 1956; Worthing, Sussex: Smith 1957). Based on a study conducted by one of the authors (SM) of commonly recurring types in hoards from France and Britain, a limited number of essential or 'primary' carp's tongue types has been identified, and it is their presence that denotes a hoard belonging to the carp's tongue complex in Britain. These are the classic carp's tongue sword of Type Nantes (Brandherm and Burgess 2008: 136, 143-146, fig. 1.d-f), the lozenge sectioned pommel pieces (Burgess 1968: fig. 13.25) that would have likely capped the terminal of such swords, bugle shaped objects (ibid.: fig. 13.20-22), which appear to have acted as a strap fitting for the scabbard of these swords, and finally the hogs backed knife (ibid.: fig. 13.10), which may themselves have once have been sword blades now remodelled. These primary types clearly constituted a coherent weapon assemblage, so reminiscent of that known from the preceding Atlantic Wilburton-Brécy-Hío phase, c. 1075-950 BC, that stretched from southern England into France and as far south as Iberia (Coombs 1988: figs. 1-4). On the basis of the presence of one or more of these primary types, there are some 55 carp's tongue hoards in Britain. All of these are from England, with the majority, almost 90%, from the southeast. The greatest concentration of these hoards, some 21 examples, is in Kent and includes that from Boughton Malherbe. The majority of these hoards are found in the northeast of Kent, along the mouth of the Thames estuary, and are mirrored by a similarly dense concentration in southeast Essex. These hoards, whilst greater in number than those of the preceding Atlantic Wilburton phase, have a much more restricted distribution within England and in Western Europe as a whole (Coombs 1988: figs. 1-4; Brandherm and Burgess 2008: fig. 5). The extent of the carp's tongue complex in England, however, can be extended beyond the southeast on the basis of the distribution of single finds. Whilst these are not many, as evidenced by the small number of unassociated carp's tongue swords of Type Nantes (Colquhoun and Burgess 1988: pls. 98-100, nos. 669-674, 692-695), the distribution of these and other types extends the complex into the Upper Thames Valley and further west into southern Wales, Devon and Cornwall (Pearce 1983). The hoard at Boughton Malherbe contains all four of these primary types:
The number of carp's tongue sword fragments alone in this hoard is more than double that known from the only other significant hoard of this complex in England, at Grays Thurrock I, Essex (Turner 2010: vol. 2, 3-51), which contained 16 examples. Of the 46 carp's tongue hoards that contain the eponymous sword type, only 5 of these contained more than 10 fragments. These primary types usually occur alongside a larger series of secondary or tertiary types (Burgess 1968: fig. 13, app. V: b, d, g-t), most commonly represented by a wide range of socketed axes, including the variant wing- or pellet- decorated South-eastern type, different forms of knives and razors, rings and bracelets of myriad form, casting debris and tin-rich ingots, and decorated plaques which, along with various other types present in these hoards, may once have decorated the scabbards of our carp's tongue swords. However, unlike the primary weapons complex types, these tertiary types need not be foreign imports, and frequently occur as regionally produced local types tailored to match the carp's tongue types more commonly found on the Continent. This is particularly evident amongst the socketed axes. The majority of these tertiary types are represented at Boughton Malherbe, including:
Carp's tongue hoards also often contain an eclectic admixture of decorative pieces, ornamentation in the form of rings and bracelets, pins, and various pieces of sheet metalworking, both plain and decorated, and occasionally bronze vessel fragments. This often fragmented admixture of material is usually referred to as bric-a-brac (Burgess 1968: 39). The purpose of much of this material is often not clear, and much appears to be intrusive, yielding from central Europe. This bric-a-brac is not as commonly occurring in the English hoards as it is in France (Briard 1965: chap. XII) but is heavily represented at Boughton Malherbe:
Manufacturing debris and paraphernalia, as at Boughton Malherbe, are also usually present:
It is not yet at all clear how economically or socially specialised an industry the carp's tongue complex was in northern and northwest France, where all hoards can be characterised as carp's tongue. In northwest France there are approximately 80 hoards (Briard 1965; Brandherm and Burgess 2008), of which 70 contain the primary weapons types. Although the contents of many of these hoards are difficult to confirm, approximately 13 of these hoards contain all four primary weapon types. In England, however, the complex is contemporary with hoards of the indigenous Ewart Park tradition, and represents only 16% of the total known for this phase, which number upwards of 339 hoards (Maraszek 2006), and continues to grow rapidly. From its contents it is obvious that the hoard from Boughton Malherbe in Kent is not an English carp's tongue hoard. Indeed, it is the only hoard in which we find all four of the primary weapons complex types together. This hoard is instead a proper carp's tongue hoard, comparable in size and content to those found in northwest and northern France. This fact raises one of the hardest questions to answer about the complex, in respect of whether or not it was active in southern England as a local manufacturing industry (Needham 1990: 73-74), producing metalwork types associated with the complex, or if its presence in England is represented almost entirely by carp's tongue types imported as scrap (Savory 1948: 164). A two-way traffic in scrap between southern England and France has always been envisaged (Burgess 1968: 19), on the basis of fragmented Ewart Park swords and English socketed axe types found in French carp's tongue hoards. However, it is noteworthy that fragments of both Type Nantes and Ewart Park swords that refit are generally only ever found in France (e.g. Coffyn, Gomez and Mohen 1981: pls. 2.16, 3.1-2, 4.1, 5.19). The much smaller number of sword fragments of both these types in English carp's tongue hoards and the absence of any refits suggests that the direction of scrap was very much one-way and lends credence to the notion that upon its arrival in England these larger scrap piles were broken down into smaller assemblages and redistributed (Needham 1990: 132-133). Here we find a plausible explanation for the qualitative difference between so many of our English carp's tongue hoards and that from Boughton Malherbe, being largely intact and yet to be redistributed into smaller stock piles and mixed with local Ewart Park types. Given the unfinished condition of some Ewart Park swords found in the French hoards, and the fact that the fragments can be refitted, suggests that this type was also being manufactured there. Consequently, many of our Ewart Park sword fragments found in English hoards may actually be of French origin. Finally, whilst the presence of socketed axes, such as south Welsh axes of Type Stogursey (Schmidt and Burgess 1981: 239-241), in these French hoards might also hint at two-way traffic, it is more likely that these axes made their way to France by other exchange mechanisms, at an earlier date in the phase. In the case of Stogursey axes, this is suggested by their distribution in France (Eluère 1979: fig. 5), which mirrors the westerly distribution of the type in England. Their presence in these carp's tongue hoards suggests a final return journey home, as obsolete scrap. It may be then that the largest carp's tongue hoard ever found in England may lead us to conclude that the carp's tongue complex in England was actually far smaller and more restricted than their hoards suggests. Conclusion The objects qualify as Treasure under the stipulations of the Treasure Act (1996) (Designation Order 2002). References Boulud-Gazo, S. 2011. The discovery of a new Tachlovice sword at Pont-sur-Seine, Aube, France. In M. Uckelmann and M. Mödlinger (eds), Warfare in Bronze Age Europe: Manufacture and Use of Weaponry. Oxford: BAR International Series No. 2255, 131-152 Brandherm, D and Burgess, C. 2008. Carp's-Tongue problems. In F. Ferse, B. Knoche, J. Graefe, M. Hohlbein, K. Schierhold, C. Siemann, M. Uckelmann and G. Woltermann (eds), Durch die Zeiten... Festschrift für Albrecht Jockenhövel zum 65. Geburtstag. Rahden: Marie Leidorf, 133-168. Briard, J. 1965. Les dépôts bretons et l'âge du Bronze atlantique. Rennes: Travaux du Laboratoire d'Anthropologie Préhistorique. Britton, D. 1960. The Isleham Hoard, Cambridgeshire. Antiquity, 34, 279-82 Burgess, C. 1968. The later Bronze Age in the British Isles and north-western France. Archaeological Journal 125: 1-45. Butler, J and Steegstra, H. 2001/2002. Bronze Age metal and amber in the Netherlands (III : 2): Catalogue of the socketed axes, part A. Palaeohistoria 43/44: 263-319. Coffyn, A., Gomez, J. and Mohen, J-P. 1981. L'Apogée du bronze atlantique: Le dépôt de Vénat. Paris : Picard. Colquhoun, I and Burgess, C. 1988. The Swords of Britain. Prähistorische Bronzefunde IV/5. Munich: Beck. Coombs, D. 1988. The Wilburton Complex and Bronze Final II in Atlantic Europe. In P. Brun and C. Mordant (eds), Le group Rhin-Suisse-France orientale et la notion de civilisation des Champs d'Urnes : Actes du Colloque de Nemours 1986. Nemours : Memoires du Musée de préhistorie d'Ile-de-France 1, 575-581. Eluère, C. 1979. Le dépôt de bronzes de Maintenon (Eure-et-Loir) et les haches à douille à décor de nervures verticales de types britanniques. Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française 76 (4): 119-128. Evans, E. 1930. The sword-bearers. Antiquity 4 (14): 157-172. Malim, T. et al. 2010. The environmental and social context of the Isleham hoard. Antiquaries Journal 90, 73-130. Maraszek, R. 2006. Spätbronzezeitliche Hortfundlandschaften in atlantischer und nordischer Metalltradition. Halle: Landesmuseum für Vorgesch. Needham, S.P. 1990. The Petters Late Bronze Age Metalwork: an Analytical Study of Thames Valley Metalworking in a Settlement Context. London: British Museum Occasional Paper 70. Pearce, S. 1983. The Bronze Age metalwork of south western Britain. Oxford: BAR British series, no. 120. Roberts, B.W. et al. in prep. Collapsing Communities or Lavish Offerings? Understanding massive metalwork deposition at Langton Matravers, Dorset during the Bronze Age-Iron Age transition. Savory, H. N. 1948. The 'sword-bearers.' A reinterpretation. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 6: 155-176. Smith, M. A (ed). 1956. Isle of Harty hoard, Isle of Sheppey (Kent). Inventaria Archaeologica, 3rd Set: GB18. Smith, M. A (ed). 1958. Forty Acre Brickfield hoard, Worthing (Sussex). Inventaria Archaeologica, 6th Set: GB37. Turner, L. 2010. A Re-Interpretation of the Later Bronze Age metalwork Hoards of Essex and Kent. Oxford: BAR British Series No. 507. Steven Matthews (University of Groningen) Jessica Leedham (Volunteer) Mafalda Raposo (Volunteer) Ben Roberts (Bronze Age Curator) 12.9.11 |
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Depicted place | (County of findspot) Kent | ||
Date | between 875 BC and 800 BC | ||
Accession number |
FindID: 457499 Old ref: KENT-15A293 Filename: Boughton Malherbe hoard.jpg |
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Credit line |
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Source |
https://finds.org.uk/database/ajax/download/id/359464 Catalog: https://finds.org.uk/database/images/image/id/359464/recordtype/artefacts archive copy at the Wayback Machine Artefact: https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/record/id/457499 |
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Permission (Reusing this file) |
Attribution-ShareAlike License version 4.0 (verified 22 November 2020) | ||
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Software used | Adobe Photoshop 7.0 |
File change date and time | 15:21, 6 December 2011 |
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