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Fiskerton: An Iron Age Timber Causeway with Iron Age and Roman Votive OfferingsField, N.Fiskerton, located in the Witham valley of Lincoln, is one of only a handful of excavated sites in Europe to reveal the Iron Age practice of ritually destroying special and elite objects by placing them in a body of water. This volume reports on the 1981 excavations on the bank of the River Witham and provides fascinating insights into this important aspect of Iron Age religion and culture. A remarkable group of Iron Age and Roman artefacts was found in association with a wooden causeway in use from at least 457 to 321BC, including bronze and iron weapons and tools (some decorated with ornamental motifs), bone tools, stone tools, jewellery and pottery. The Iron Age finds are earlier than those from similar watery sites such as La Tène in Switzerland and Llyn Cerrig Bach in Wales, and the precise dating of the Fiskerton causeway by dendrochronology establishes it as one of the earliest known structures in Europe belonging to the La Tène culture. This report provides detailed descriptions of the Iron Age, Roman and Medieval artefacts and the human and animal bones found at the site. The authors compare the Fiskerton evidence with other British, Irish and European examples of ritual or votive deposition in water; they discuss the construction and the appearance of the causeway; and they examine the significance of Fiskerton as a religious site, especially in terms of its topographical context, as a river crossing and as a boundary or liminal area between mainland Britain and the former island of Lindsey. 226p, 21 tbs, 143 b/w figs, 9 col pls (Oxbow Books 2003) Review Quotes"the wealth of information that the Fiskerton volume presents,...make[s] it a worthy occupant of the bookshelf on votive depositional sites." Fokke Gerritsen "The book is full of interest, at times provocative and exciting," Bryony Coles "a remarkable book in several ways...The importance of new work underway in the valley is clear." Mike Pitts "a fine piece of fieldwork...Here is a site that would handsomely reward further large-scale excavation." Current Archaeology (194) (2004) Related Titles
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