Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
Figure 5 S. Find No. 2. Emmerdennen (Drenthe), Tumulus | 1 of Bursch. 1. All amber; 2. Rock crystal; 3-4. Pottery. Scale 1:2. Tumulus plan re-drawn after Bursch. The three-riveted grooved ogival dagger from Annertol, necklacegraves andhoards in Drenthe, as the characteristic large disc and flattened-biconical forms are not presentin the Exloérmond find. The trapeze-shaped amber pendants are datable by reference to the Ammorican Tumulus grave of Kernonen-Plouvorm, with its eight examples. This lavishly furnished warrior’s grave contained, alongside typically Armorican Early Bronze Age furniture as well as various links with Wessex (cf. Gerloff, 1975: esp. p. 97), a wheel-headed pin of the earliest Central European variety (Type Speyer; Kubach, 1977: pp. 133-142, esp. p. 134, No. 130-7), which begins in the Lochham (Early Tumulus) phase; a related pin is in the Ségel-Wohlde period- hoard of Wildeshausen, Kr. Oldenburg in Northwest Germany (see under Find No. 12). Further comments: The British-type (though atypically large) basal-looped spearhead also found in the peat atExloérmond (Butler, 1963a: p. 99, fig. 28b, p. 109, No. 4) should belong chronologically to Burgess Group IX rather than to Group VII, and would thus have no connection with the hoard.
Discover breakthrough research and expand your academic network
Join for free