Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Excavations and fieldwork in and around Benin City in the years 1961–4 have established the outlines of an archaeological sequence. This sequence is based on radiocarbon dates for stratified deposits, on a statistical examination of pottery form and decoration, and on datable European imports. The sequence suggested by the evidence extends from about the thirteenth century A.D. to the present time, although the survival of locally found ground stone axes in Benin ritual indicates that the area may well have been inhabited since Late Stone Age times. There is evidence for the artistic use of copper and its alloys from at least the thirteenth century onwards, but it is not known how long it had already been in use. Smithed and chased tin bronzes were found in a thirteenth-century context, whereas cast leaded brass was found in use in a nineteenth-century context. There is little evidence for lost-wax casting in Benin in early times. The writer suggests that future archaeological work should make the origins and early development of the city a priority.
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10 Personal communication, cited with permission.
11 Department of Archaeology, University of Ibadan.
12 I am indebted to Lady Olwen Brogan for this information.
13 Examined by S. J. Freeth, Department of Geology, University of Ibadan.
14 Examined by S. O. Arigbede, Department of Anatomy, University of Ibadan.
15 Examined by S. P. Bohrer, Department of Radiology, University of Ibadan.
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18 Examined by J. F. Redhead, Department of Forestry, University of Ibadan.
19 Examined by M. Greeves, Shirley Institute, Manchester.
20 Analysis by A. Millett, University of Oxford Laboratory for Art and Archaeology.
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