A linch pin (shown from three angles) from an Iron Age chariot that were discovered at the Burrough Hill Iron Age Hillfort in Leicestershire, England More than 2,000 years ago, pieces of an Iron Age chariot were burnt and buried, perhaps as a religious offering. Now, archaeologists have discovered the bronze remains of this sacrifice.
Digging near Melton Mowbray in Leicestershire, England, an archaeology team discovered a trove of bronze chariot fittings dating back to the second or third century B.C. The remains were discovered at the Burrough Hill Iron Age
Hillfort, a fortified hilltop structure that was once surrounded by
farms and settlements. Though humans lived in the area beginning around
4000 B.C., it was used most heavily between about 100 B.C. and A.D. 50,
according to the University of Leicester.
"This is the most remarkable discovery of material we made at Burrough
Hill in the five years we worked on the site," University of Leicester
archaeologist Jeremy Taylor said in a statement. "This is a very rare discovery and a strong sign of the prestige of the site."
Burnt offering
Taylor co-directs the field project at Burrough Hill,
which is used to train archaeology students. It was four of these
archaeology students who first found a piece of bronze near an Iron Age
house within the Burrough Hill fort. More bronze pieces were found
nearby.
The pieces are the
metal remains of a chariot that once belonged to a warrior or noble,
according to university archaeologists. They include linchpins with
decorated end caps, as well as rings and fittings that would have held
harnesses. One linchpin is decorated with three wavy lines radiating
from a single point, almost like the modern flag for the Isle of Man, a
British dependency in the Irish Sea. The Isle of Man's flag is decorated
with an odd symbol called a triskelion, or three half-bent legs
converging at the thigh.
"The atmosphere at the dig on the day was a mix of 'tremendously
excited' and 'slightly shell-shocked,'" Taylor said. "I have been
excavating for 25 years, and I have never found one of these pieces —
let alone a whole set. It is a once-in-a-career discovery."
The pieces were found upon a layer of chaff, which may have provided
fuel for the burning ritual. The chariot pieces were put into a box and
then covered with cinder and slag after being set on fire. This may have
been a ritual marking the dismantling or closing of a home at the fort,
or it could have honored the change of seasons, University of Leicester
archaeologists suspect.
Bronze and iron
Alongside the chariot pieces, the researchers found a set of iron
tools, which were placed around the parts before they were burned.
"The function of the iron tools is a bit of a mystery, but given the
equestrian nature of the hoard, it is possible that they were associated
with horse grooming," Burrough Hill project co-director John Thomas said in a statement. "One
piece, in particular, has characteristics of a modern curry comb, while
two curved blades may have been used to maintain horses' hooves or
manufacture harness parts."
The pieces will be on display temporarily at the Melton Carnegie Museum in Melton Mowbray from Oct. 18 to Dec. 13.
"Realizing that I was actually uncovering a hoard that was carefully
placed there hundreds of years ago made it the find of a lifetime,"
University of Leicester student Nora Battermann, who was one of the four
students to make the find, said in a statement. "Looking at the objects
now that they have been cleaned makes me even more proud, and I can't
wait for them to go on display."
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