Tuesday Times Tables: The Idyllic Iron Age
When the Romans
invaded Britain they found a country divided into tribal territories, some of
which offered staunch resistance to the Roman advance. But this was not always
the case. The Dobunni, who controlled the Cotswolds and northern Somerset,
capitulated to the Romans and may have even surrendered before the army entered
the South West. The goddess Sulis-Minerva, who was worshipped at the Temple in
Bath, was a combination of Roman and British mythology and may have been a Roman
tribute to the peaceful locals.
Bath has a relatively
high concentration of nearby Iron Age hillforts, defensive structures that
dominate the skyline, and yet remarkably few weapons, limited to a handful of
iron spearheads. Instead, the artefacts that we have found in the area are more
suggestive of a peaceful and pastoral landscape. The hillforts perhaps acted as
meeting places or food distribution centres, with the lower slopes covered with
cultivated fields and farmsteads.
The ramparts of Little Solsbury Hillfort |
Carbonised grains of Emmer wheat, an early form of domesticated wheat and very important in Iron Age life, was found in a hearth in the Little Solsbury hillfort. The wheat could be made into porridge, and sherds of the courseware pots it was cooked in have also been found.
There are also
indications of cloth making. Spindle whorls made of stone and bone were used to
spin the fleece of local sheep into yarn. A large lump of Bath limestone with a
hole drilled through it was used to weigh down threads on a loom to create
woollen textiles. A fine bone pin would push the weft threads together to
create a tighter concentration and a finer cloth.
Iron Age coin showing horse and wheel on reverse (BATRM1980.316) |
The
archaeology around Bath shows there was a preoccupation with ritual and belief.
Two bronze spoons were deposited in a stream in Weston. They are decorated with
beautiful curvilinear designs. Pairs of spoons like these are found
infrequently across Britain and always in ritual contexts, in water or burials.
Coins like the one pictured were discovered in the Sacred Spring at the Roman
Baths, and indicate the importance of the waters before the arrival of the
Romans. Many were minted by the local Dobunni tribe, but others were from the
tribe south of Bath and may show tribal interactions were good-natured in the
area.
These artefacts were brought
out for visitors to investigate Iron Age Bath as a landscape of domesticity and
mystery as part of our programme of Tuesday Times Tables, so join us next week to find out how they continue!
Jim
Volunteer
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