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A Carved Stone Head from Steep Holm
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
Abstract
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- Copyright © Miranda Green 1993. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies
References
1 I wish to thank Stan and Joan Rendell and Terry Gore for providing me with this background information on the discovery of the Steep Holm head, and for allowing me both to study and to publish it.
2 I am grateful to Mr Stephen Howe, of the Department of Geology, National Museum of Wales, for examining the stone.
3 Grateful acknowledgement is here made to John Morgan of the School of History and Archaeology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, for supplying me with photographs of the head.
4 The stone was examined by medieval specialists Dr Mark Redknap of the National Museum of Wales and Dr Alan Lane, University of Wales College of Cardiff. Both were unconvinced of a possible Dark Age or medieval attribution. Celtic and Romano-British scholars (Professor W.H. Manning, Dr Glenys Lloyd-Morgan, Dr Anne Ross) are happy to agree with a date within the pagan Celtic period.
5 Britannia xiv (1983), 320Google Scholar; R. Legg, The Steep Holm Guide (1985), 21; Antiqu. Journ. lxvii (1987), 375–6, 385Google Scholar; S.D., and Rendell, J.N., ‘The Priory of St. Michael’, in Steep Holm: a Survey, Somerset Archaeological and Natural History Society (1981), 11–13.Google Scholar
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7 Musée Archéologique de Senlis: A. Ross, Pagan Celtic Britain (1967), pl. 14b.
8 Ross, op. cit. (note 7), pl. 21a.
9 M.J. Green, The Gods of the Celts (1986), 31, fig. 12.
10 G.C. Boon, ‘The Shrine of the Head, Caerwent’, in G.C. Boon and J.M. Lewis (eds), Welsh Antiquity (1976), 163–75, fig. I.
11 Livy X. 26; XXIII. 24; Diodorus Siculus v. 29,4; Strabo iv. 4,5.
12 F. Benoit, L'Art primitif meditérranéen dans la Vallée du Rhône (1955).
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17 Ross, A., ‘A Celtic three-faced head from Wiltshire’, Antiquity xli (1967), 53–6.Google Scholar
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19 P. MacCana, Celtic Mythology (1983), 97–8.
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21 Green, M.J., ‘Celtic symbolism at Roman Caerleon’, Bull. Board Celtic Studies xxxi (1984), 251–8.Google Scholar