Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2015
There is perhaps no branch of archaeology of more fundamentalimportance than the study of the rise and development of agricul ture, seeing that it has been the governing factor in the Natural History of Man from the time of its introduction down to the Industrial Era. But the study of the evidence from Britain is not enough; hence Professor Hatt’s full and clear exposition of the Danish evidence is of special importance to British archaeologists, seeing that the rich discoveries preserved in the peat-bogs of Denmark can supply details that are missing in the British picture, or at least suggest to us directions in which future research may profitably be pursued. Professor Hatt’s wide knowledge and balanced judgment-not to mention his delightful personality-have won the confidence and respect of those British archaeologists who have had the privilege of knowing him, and his recent book on Danish agriculture is far too important to be left in the relative obscurity of the Danish language. Hence a brief summary of its principal contents is attempted here.
2 Johnson, C.P., in The Useful Plants of Great Britain, pp. 218–222, gives a full account of the uses and recent cultivation of the different varieties of olygonum.Google Scholar
3 ibid. pp. 216–7.
4 ibid. pp. 27–8.
5 ibid. p. 53.
6 ibid. pp. 22–4.
7 ibid. pp. 54–7.
8 See the article on ‘The Origin of Cultivated Plants’ by Watkins, A.E. in ANTIQUITY, 1933, 7, 73–80.Google Scholar
9 This custom is referred to in Leviticus, XIX, 19.
10 See the article on ‘Dogs’ by Max Hilzheimer in ANTIQUITY, 1932, 6, 411–9.Google Scholar See also Proc. Prehist. Soc, 1938, 469–70.Google Scholar
11 See the article on ‘Sheep’ by Max Hilzheimer in ANTIQUITY, 1936, 10, 195–206.Google Scholar
12 See ANTIQUITY, 1938, 12, 81 and photo.Google Scholar
13 In Britain the long-horned group is as characteristic of the Neolithic, as the short-horned group is of the Early Iron Age.
14 A British specimen of the same type from Kingley Vale, Sussex, is illustrated in the present writer’s Archaeology of Sussex (1937), p. 200, fig. 56.Google Scholar
15 See the article on the ‘Horse’ by Max Hilzheimer in ANTIQUITY, 1935, 9, 133–9.Google Scholar
16 The horse seems also to have been unknown to the British Neolithic A folk in southern England. It is noteworthy that it did not reach Egypt till the Hyksos period (1780–1580 B.c.).
17 See the article on ‘The Origin and Early Diffusion of the Traction-plough’ by Bishop, C.W. in ANTIQUITY, 1936, 10, 261–81.Google Scholar
18 Acta Archaeologica, 7, 244–280.Google Scholar
19 Perhaps these two types correspond to Hesiod’s ροτρον αύ τόγυον and ροτρον πηκ τόν (Works and Days, 433).
20 An amusing sidelight on the alleged antiquity of this plough is contained in the title of the original publication :‘Die älteste Pflug der Welt : in Deutschland’ (Natur und Volk, 1934, 64, 83–91.Google Scholar
21 Aarbeger for nordisk Oldkyndighed, 1936, 130–144; French summary, xviii–xix.Google Scholar
22 Antiq. Journ., 1933, 13, 455–436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
23 Seebohm, F., The English Village Community (1915), 60–6.Google Scholar
24 Acta Archaeologica, 1932, 3, 209–30.Google Scholar
25 Original description by Chr. Blinkenberg in Aarbager for nord. Oldk., 1898, 141–56.Google Scholar
26 See ANTIQUITY, 1930, 4, 184–6; 1935, IX, 64–5.Google Scholar
27 Discussed in a review in ANTIQUITY, 1934, 8, 237–9.Google Scholar
28 ANTIQUITY, 1932, 6, 393–8.Google Scholar
29 ‘Hede’, that enters into so many of these place-names, corresponds to our ‘Heath’.
30 ANTIQUITY, 1937, 11, 162–73.Google Scholar
31 See forthcoming article in ANTIQUITY.
32 ANTIQUITY, 1937, 11, 147.Google Scholar
33 Proc. Prehist. Soc., 19938.Google Scholar