Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T19:42:07.708Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Two bronze age cargoes in British waters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

Since the mid-1960s, significant advances have been made in the techniques and organization of archaeological research in British waters. However, the sites discovered and explored during the first decade of such work have dated without exception to the centuries after 1500 AD. The results from investigations such as those on the Mary Rose of 1545 (Rule, 1978) or the wrecks of the Spanish Armada (Martin, 1975) have clearly demonstrated the potential of such sites to shed light on periods and topics for which documentary sources are also available; nevertheless, the full archaeological significance of this new area of research remained unrealized through being limited to the post-medieval period. The discovery and study of two underwater bronze age sites in the past few years have thus changed the whole complexion of British maritime archaeology. The purpose of this note is to provide a brief interim account of the sites involved, and indicate a few of their implications for Bronze Age studies.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1980

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

BAKER, P. & BRANIGAN, K. 1978. Two bronze age swords from Salcombe, Devon, Int. J. Naut. ArchaeoL, VII,14951.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BLANCHET, J. C. & MOHEN, J. P.. 1977. Le depot du Bronze Final I de Saint-Just-en-Chaussee (Oise), Bull. Soc. Prihis. Francaise, LXXIV,47281. Google Scholar
BONNAMOUR, L. 1965. Les epees de Rixheim/Monza et leur repartition en France, Revue archeol. de I’Est, XVII,727.Google Scholar
BRIARD, J. 1965. Les dipots bretons et I’age du bronze atlantique (Rennes).Google Scholar
BRIARD, J., CORDIER, G. & GAUCHER., G. 1969. Depot de la fin du bronze moyen a Malassis, commune de Chery(Cher), Gallia Prthist., XII,3773. CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BRIARD, J. & VERRON, G. 1976. Typologie des objets de I’dge du bronze en France: Haches (2), Herminettes,Soc. Prehist. Franc, Commission du Bronze, IV (Paris).Google Scholar
BURGESS, C. B. 1969. Breton palstaves from the British Isles, ArchaeoL J., CXXVI,14953. CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BURGESS, C. B. 1970. The Bronze Age, Curr. ArchaeoL, 19,208–15. Google Scholar
BURGESS, C. B. 1976. The Gwithian mould and the forerunners of the South Welsh axes. In (eds) C. B. Burgess & R. Miket, Settlement and economy in the 3rd and 2nd Millennia BC, Brit. ArchaeoL Rep., 33, 6979. Google Scholar
BUTLER, J. J. 1963. Bronze Age connections across the North Sea, Palaeohistoria, IX,1286. Google Scholar
COOMBS, D. 1976. The Dover harbour bronze find—a bronze age wreck? ArchaeoL Atlantica, 1,1935. Google Scholar
ELGEE, F. & , H. W. 1933. The archaeology of Yorkshire (London).Google Scholar
FOX, C. 1938. Personality of Britain (Cardiff). Google Scholar
FRANCQUEVILLE, A. 1905. Bronzes de Picardie, L’Anthrop., XVI,371.Google Scholar
GAUCHER, G. « MOHEN, J. P. 1972. Typologie des objets de I’dge du bronze en France: Fasc. I, iptesSoc.Prehist. Franc, Commission du bronze, I (Paris).Google Scholar
GAUCHER, G. & ROBERT., Y. 1967. Les depots de bronze II Cannes-F-cluse, Gallia Prehist., X,169228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
HUNDT, H. J. 1958. Spatbronzezeitliches Doppelgrab in Frankfurt-Berkersheim, Germania, XXXVI,24461.Google Scholar
KUBACH, W. 1973. Westeuropaische Formen in einem Fruhurnenfelderzeitlichen Depotfund aus dem Rhein bei Mainz, Archdologisches Korrespondenz-blatt, III,299307.Google Scholar
LAMARRE, H. 1945. La cachette du fondeur de Longue-ville (Seine-et-Marne), Privue archiol., XXIII,98115.Google Scholar
MARTIN, C. 1975. Full fathom five. The wrecks of the Spanish Armada (London).Google Scholar
MILLOTTE, J. P., CORDIER, G. & ABAUZIT, P. 1968. Essai de typologie protohistorique: les haches a ailerons medians, Rev. Archeol. de I’Est, XIX,767. Google Scholar
MOHEN, J. P. 1972. Que savons-nous de I’age de bronze dans le Nord de la France?, Bull. Soc. Prdhist. Franfaise, LXIX,44464.Google Scholar
MOORE, C. N. 1976. Imported palstaves of French origin found in Hampshire, Proc. Hants. Field Club, XXXIII,11213.Google Scholar
MUCKELROY, K. 1978. Maritime archaeology (Cambridge). Google Scholar
MUCKELROY, K. & BAKER, P. 1979. The bronze age site off Moor Sand near Salcombe, Devon, Int. J. Naut. ArchaeoL VIII,189210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
1980. The bronze age site off Moor Sand, Devon; an interim report on the 1979 season, Int. J. Naut. ArchaeoL, IX, (forthcoming). Google Scholar
ROWLANDS, M. J. 1971. The archaeological interpretation or prehistoric metalworking, World Archaeol, III,21024.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ROWLANDS, M. J. 1973. Modes of exchange and the incentives for trade, with reference to later European prehistory, in (ed.) C. Renfrew, The explanation of culture change: models in prehistory (London),589600.Google Scholar
ROWLANDS, M. J. 1976. The organisation of middle bronze age metalworking, Brit. ArchaeoL Rep., 31. Google Scholar
RULE, M., 1978. The Mary Rose: Britain’s time capsule in the Solent (Portsmouth).Google Scholar
SABLOFF, J. A. & LAMBERG-KARLOVSKY, C. C. 1975. Ancient civilisation and trade (Albuquerque).Google Scholar
SANDARS, N. K. 1957. Bronze age culture in France (Cambridge).Google Scholar
SMITH, M. A. 1959. Some Somerset hoards and their place in the Bronze Age of southern Britain, Proc. Prehist. Soc, XXV,14487.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
WEBER, M. 1950. General economic history (Glencoe, USA).Google Scholar
WILLIAMS, A. 1937. Bronze implements from Swansea Archaeol Cambr., XCII,3334.Google Scholar