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Hoard from Ayton East Field

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

This hoard was found in a pit dug into the top of an oval cairn. The burial cairn, constructed of limestone rubble, was first opened by A.D. Conyngham in 1848. Surviving records suggest that the hoard was found with a burial. The surviving finds comprise three flint axes and a flint adze, five lozenge-shaped arrowheads, a polished flint knife and two flakes, an antler 'macehead' and two boar-tusk blades. The custom of burying individuals with prestigious grave-goods had begun by 3000 BC. The earlier Neolithic practice was of burial in communal tombs, with few objects placed with the dead. In this later period, individuals of some status in the community were buried with selected items of their personal property. This must indicate a more ranked society, where access to such 'special' objects became restricted to the few.

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  • Title: Hoard from Ayton East Field
  • Physical Dimensions: Length: 63.00mm; Width: 24.00mm; Thickness: 2.00mm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Registration number: 1879,1209.1947
  • Place: Found/Acquired Ayton East Field
  • Period/culture: Neolithic
  • Material: flint
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Donated by Greenwell, William
British Museum

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