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Image: Bronze Age bracelets and neckrings with pot from Milton Keynes (FindID 509421)

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Description: A hoard of five late Bronze Age gold jewellery items and one copper-alloy fragment, found in a pottery vessel. The contents of the hoard are as follows: 1.) Neckring 1: a penannular ring of thick gold bar of elliptical cross-section, the whole ring is decorated with incised radial lines except for a plain strip along the rear face; there is more complex groove decoration near the terminals. 2.) Necking 2: a penannular ring of thick gold bar of elliptical cross-section, decorated near the terminal zones only, with bands of close-set grooves. 3.) Bracelet 1: a 'C'-shaped ring of elliptical cross-section; the butt ends are ground flat. 4.) Bracelet 2: a 'C'-shaped ring of elliptical cross-section; the opening is narrower than Bracelet 1; the butt ends are ground flat. 5.) Bracelet 3: a penannular ring of almost 'D'-shaped plan and with an octagonal cross-section. 6.) Bronze fragment: a tiny fragment of rod or wire 7.) Pottery vessel: an undecorated fineware bowl in a brown fabric with eroded traces of lightly burnished surfaces. Discussion: The information on the context of this find is very good thanks to the diligence of the finders, the efforts of the local archaeologists Paul and Charmian Woodfield and Brian Giggins, and the prompt action of Hayley Bullock of the British Museum's Department of Conservation and Scientific Research. As a result the Milton Keynes Hoard represents the first unequivocal association between a gold hoard and pottery for the British Middle to Late Bronze Age. This is of exceptional importance for helping synchronise the chronology of gold metalwork, which normally occurs in isolation, with the broader picture of social and economic development. Excluding the fragment of bronze, which is too small and undiagnostic, all objects in the hoard cab nee identified as Late Bronze Age types. The pot form belong to the Post Deverel-Rimbury tradition, and essentially to the early to middle phases of that tradition, which span the British Late Bronze Age, about 1150-800BC. The gold types represented can be accommodated within this date span, although it is not impossible that some of them first emerged a little earlier. The neckrings belong to a family distributed widely and thinly across the Atlantic regions of Europe, from Iberia to Ireland and Britain. Precise morphology and decorative schema are varied across this geographical range. Plain, expanded-terminal bracelets with round or oval band sections are a dominat form in the British/Irish Middle to Late Bronze Age. The two examples in this hoard are unusual only in their massive proportions, hitherto rarely seen. The third, faceted bracelet is again unusual in its precise form, but is clearly affiliated to lozenge sectioned, and other faceted bracelet types. Dimensions and Metal Content: 1.) Diameter: 143.5mm x 135mm; thickness of bar: 15.1mm x 11.4mm; weight 626.9g 2.) Diameter: 145.9mm x 134.5mm; maximum thickness of bar: 12.9mm x 10.0mm; weight 441.3g 3.) Diameter: 84.7mm x 65mm; minimum thickness of bar: 14.5mm x 10.8mm; weight 382.6g 4.) Diameter: 81.4mm x 68.5mm; minimum thickness of bar: 14.4mm x 11.2mm; weight 408.0g 5.) Diameter: 73.6mm x 62.5mm; minimum thickness of bar: 9.2mm x 7.0mm; weight 162.5g 6.) No measurements 7.) Diameter of body: 210mm; diameter of base: 100mm; height 100mm X-ray fluorescence analysis conducted at the British Museum indicated approximate gold contents as: 1.) 76 per cent 2.) 85 per cent 3.) 84 per cent 4.) 85 per cent 5.) 84 per cent
Title: Bronze Age bracelets and neckrings with pot from Milton Keynes
Credit: https://finds.org.uk/database/ajax/download/id/386810 Catalog: https://finds.org.uk/database/images/image/id/386810/recordtype/artefacts archive copy Artefact: https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/record/id/509421
Author: The British Museum, Ian Richardson, 2012-06-25 10:48:08
Permission: Attribution-ShareAlike License
Usage Terms: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0
License: CC BY-SA 2.0
License Link: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Attribution Required?: Yes

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