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NEW YORK UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES INSTITUTE OF FINE ARTS L BRARY I
BRITISH SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY IN EGYPT
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5 57-7g
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES INSTITUTE OF FINE ARTS L BRARY I
BRITISH SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY IN EGYPT
AND EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT TWENTY-SECOND YEAR,
1916
TOOLS AND WEAPONS ILLUSTRATED BY THE EGYPTIAN COLLECTION IN UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, LONDON, AND 2,000 OUTLINES FROM OTHER SOURCES. BY
W. M.
FLINDERS PETRIE, HON.
D.C.L.,
F.R.S.,
F.B.A.
;
LL.D., LITT.D., F.S.A. (Scot.), A.R.I.B.A., M.R.I.A.
MEMBER OF THE SOCIETY OF NORTHERN ANTIQUARIES MEMBER OF THE ITALIAN SOCIETY OF ANTHROPOLOGY MEMBER OF THE ROMAN SOCIETY OF ANTHROPOLOGY MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY EDWARDS PROFESSOR OF EGYPTOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON
LONDON BRITISH SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY IN EGYPT UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, GOWER STREET, W.C. AND
CONSTABLE &
CO. LTD.,
lo
ORANGE STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE,
W.C.
AND
BERNARD QUARITCH,
ii
GRAFTON STREET, NEW BOND STREET, 1917
W.
UToY rxD3D
PRINTED BY HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LONDON AND AYLESBURY.
h;tWYORK LIB:
Li
BB
Ln.,
ARCHAEOLOGY IN EGYPT AND EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT
BRITISH SCHOOL OF
GENERAL COMMITTEE
Mrs. Rt.
*Miss M. a.
Prof.
Walter Baily Henry Balfour Rev. Dr. T. G. Bonnev
Rt.
Rt.
Dechmont M. Burrows •Prof. J. B. Bury {Chairman) *SoMERS Clarke Edward Clodd Prof. Boyd Dawkins Dr. R.
Dill
*Miss Eckenstein Dr. Sir
Percy Gardner Hon. Sir G. T. Goldie
Gowland J. R. Green Hon. F.-M. Lord Grenfell
Prof. P. E.
Dr. A. C.
Haddon Haworth Rev. Dr. A. C. Headlam D. G. Hogarth Sir H. H. Howorth Baron A. von Hugel Dr. A. S. Hunt
His
Dr. Jesse
Northumberland. F. W. Percival
Prof.
Alan Gardiner •Prof. Ernest Gardner
Rev. Prof. Sir
Grace
Duke
the
of
Dr. Pinches
Dr. G.
W. Prothero
Dr. G.
Reisner
W. Richmond W. Ridgeway Mrs. Strong Lady Tirard Sir
W. Johns
Prof. F.
Macalister
Dr. R. VV.
*Dr.
Murray Newberry
Mrs. F. Ll. Griffith
Mrs. C. H.
Gregory Foster James Frazer
^
G.
*J.
Prof.
R. C. BOSANQUET Hon. Viscount Bryce of
Prof. Sir S.
Members)
Milne Robert Mono Prof. Montague Walter Morrison
Hon. John Abercromby
Prof.
{* Executive
Macan Mahaffy
E.
Towry Whyte
Henry Miers
Honorary Treasurer— *H.. Sefton-Jones Honorary Director Prof. Flinders Petrie
—
Honorary Secretaries— Mrs. Hilda Petrie and Percival Hart Bankers— The Anglo-Egyptian Bank.
Though will
in
last
winter the war hindered the continuance of excavations,
be resumed, so soon as the position
Government
service.
by various causes; and,
is
more
Meanwhile the volumes in
lieu of the usual
settled, with assistants
who
it
is
hoped they
are not required
on Lahun and Harageh are delayed
for 191 4
volumes on excavation
for 1915, subscribers
have
received a work on the scarabs in University College, with over 2,000 illustrations of objects
bearing royal and private names
The in the
;
and
for
191 6 the present
volume on Tools.
accounts of the British School are audited by a Chartered Accountant, and published
Annual Report.
Treasurer: H. Sefton-Jones.
ADDRESS THE HON. SECRETARY, BRITISH SCHOOL IN EGYPT, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE.
GOWER t
STREET, LONDON,
W.d
—
The
British School of
fund since
achieved
;
1914.
this
Hospitals,
We
in
Dr.
Elsie
Egypt has been making a
in
;^i,coo
raise
to
We
about a year.
maintain
to
Archaeology
undertook
now
are
the
Field
which
Hospitals,
W.
serving
are
subscriptions
usual
the
to
such are invested
School, as
Loan, and thus pass into the National Savings for the present. serving their country, but
when
to support their researches.
volumes of
volumes are
allies
the
(Hon.
London Units, Hilda Flinders Petrie). It is hoped that all subscribers make this the special War Work of our organisation. We have no hesitation
continuing to receive
the
Women's
H.,
will help to
in
Fund, and
Scottish
Serbian division of the Russian army in Rumania, and are greatly valued by our Sec. S.
war
for a
collection
Families
Officers'
collecting entirely for the
two
Inglis'
for
that sad duty
now
are
all
their subscriptions, ensure getting
The
be continued for the years of the War.
will
War
passed, they will again turn to the School
is
Meanwhile our supporters, by
catalogue, which
this
Our students
in
:
Amulets (previously issued by Constable). Scarabs, for 191
5.
Tools and Weapons,
Following volumes
will
Funeral Statuettes (Shabtis)
]
Weight Weights and Measures
J
be
Glass and Glazes (in colours)
a time
when
all
;
Beads
of this volume
instructed to retain
it
of College collections.
men
in public service,
;
(in colours)
;
offered
to
and the most
His
offer
work
resign
University
direct
also,
in
has been declined.
At
position
it
The
official
is
needful to state the
the beginning of the war the peace, but
until
duty of such position
two
;
;
produced.
is
Metal Vases
Egypt Games and Writing Materials and ten or twelve other subjects.
Prehistoric
;
Stone and
;
our energies are required for our defence,
conditions under which any historical writer
^
on Ornaments and Toilet Objects
Scarabs with designs and Button Seals
At
1916.
for
is
was
officially
the present catalogue
work of other volume has been left to be
enquiries, to take the
printing of this
produced entirely as deferred work, only taken up to level the output of the printers and plate-makers
;
thus equalising the conditions of labour, without employing more workers than
are otherwise needed. printers,
The
splendid early volunteering of over 250
shows that they do not hesitate
at
till
the firm of
complying with the national requirements.
delays in printing have necessarily occurred, and the one on Scarabs, can be issued
men from
it
after the war.
IV
is
doubtful
if
volumes beyond
Great
this,
and
.
CONTENTS INTRODUCTION
SECT.
PAGE
SECT. 1.
Limits of this work
2.
System of
3.
Detail of arrangement
this
I
work
I
....
Abbreviations
.
CHAPTER
2 3
I
THE PLAIN-BLADE AXE
(a)
4.
Difference of axe and adze
5.
Cypriote imports to Egypt
S
6.
Pillowy forms of axe
6
7.
Methods of copper working
6
8.
Flat cast axes
6
9.
Wide copper axes
S
6
10.
Plain blade of bronze
11. 12.
Round axes Axes with lugs
13.
Battle axes
14.
Scolloped axes
15.
Flanged axes
10
16.
Pole axes
10
17.
Edged batons
10
18.
Halberds
10
7
.
.
7
.
9
8
9
CHAPTER
II
THE SOCKETTED AXE 19.
Bronze axes
(o) II
.
20. Plain iron axes
II
21.
Deep socket axes
22.
Recurved blades
.
II
.
12
23. Circular sockets
12
24.
Long-back sockets
12
25.
Tubular sockets
12
26. Oriental 27. 28.
axes
Double axes ,,
„
13
in
use
ceremonial
13 13
CONTENTS
VI
CHAPTER
'
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
XI
SHEARS, CUTTERS, TOILET TOOLS,
THREAD WORK SECT.
134.
Shears (Q)
.
AND
Vll
\
TOOLS AND WEAPONS INTRODUCTION In touching such an immense subject as the history of tools and weapons, it is needful to accept I.
various limitations to the scope of the enquiry, as
otherwise it would be unmanageable. In the first place this account refers to Egypt, and only to other countries as illustrating that. material
is
ing types
given as completely as
and
dates,
The Egyptian
may
and photographs
be, regard-
of the speci-
University College, of which this is a dupUcates in other collections are not catalogue noticed, but only such specimens as amplify the
mens
at
;
subject.
From
other
countries
comparisons are
merely an index of outlines, to show varieties of types and their geographical range, but without any attempt to give all the minor variations of form or place. The sources and dating of each form
have been the main object in view. Other countries being only taken here in relation to Egypt, it was not within the scope to notice types which were unknown in Egypt. Thus the great series of the flanged and socketted axes, the very varied forms of sword, the pointed halberds, the British looped spear heads, are all unnoticed. These have been so well and fully studied in special
papers and books already, that there is the less need to say more about them. Stone implements are not touched on here, as the abundance of such from Egypt would require a volume to themselves. No doubt they are the but the parents of many of the metal forms of metal complex question of the reflex influence ;
forms upon the later stone working, makes it desirable to treat the metal quite apart, and then to apply the results to the study of the stone implements.
The main object being the relations of Egypt, most attention has been given to Mediterranean forms, rather than to the northern material which is
less
significant.
has not been thought needful to copy details of ornament, or damages, which do not affect the nor have precise details comparison with Egypt of localities always been given, as the district or country is all that is required here. As every outUne has the reference to the original source placed below it, there will be no difficulty in turning to the primary publication for further information. Such are the hmits which it has seemed necessary to place upon this attempt to unify the early
it
This being only a secondary
publication as regards materials outside of Egypt,
;
history of most of the tools and weapons of the last
The enormous mass
material renders selection needful,
unless a
of
life-
time could be given to the subject. All previous pubUcations have looked only to one country or one civilisation, or else handled only one type. There has been no corpus for reference to comparative types of various lands and their transmission,
or of various ages
change.
In
default of
and
their history of
such a corpus this volume
serve for general reference, though I am well aware that it can only be called materials for a
may
Much here has been gleaned tools. from the museums, particularly in Greece and Italy, which I have not found hitherto pubabout a quarter of the outHnes are directly lished cases in museums. from much neglected. 2. Hitherto tools have been Weapons have been ardently collected, but the historical evolution of tools has scarcely been touched. Even when the best samples of Greek tools have been presented to a national museum, they have been thrown away by the head of the Department, who remarked that they were ugly, and he did not care for them. We read of ninety camel loads of excellent steel picks being discovered at Khorsabad, but how they have vanished is unhistory
of
directly
;
recorded.
The aim here has been to regard the purpose of each form, the mode of its use, the reasons for its changes, the connections of its variations with It is only differences of climate and conditions.
I
!
few thousand years.
^^\h,| ynoii-
INTRODUCTION
by
looking at tools and weapons from the point of view of the actual user, that we can understand them, and put them in their place as forming an important support to the general history of civilisation.
At
the distinctions of tools and weapons
first
The same form might
hai-dly existed.
purposes, with more or less success
may out
see penknives ruined
still
of
bottles.
specialising of
Civilisation
men and
is
;
serve
much
many we
as
by levering corks marked by the
materials
;
and
after the
adoption of specific forms for different uses, it is them in the terms we employ. Even in standard works we may find no discrimination is made between the sword for slashing needful to distinguish
and the rapier for thrusting, or between the knife and dagger, or the axe and adze. In
the
classifying
material
here,
the genetic
connection of changes has been followed, where it was distinct but, in confused instances, simple differences which can be quickly seen may make ;
more practicable hues of division. Thus the spear forms are best arranged by the broad spear used for slashing, the straight cut-or-thrust spear, and the narrow pike only for thrusting. To some extent these belong to differences of clothing and
but they are not necessarily Unes of there is a great variety of forms from one place and age, only the Umits of the of climate,
descent.
Where
variation are given here, as limiting types. 3. As regards the detail of the materials, the scale of reduction of the figures has been unified.
Of all classes of objects which are not too large, the photographs are on a scale of one half, and the outhnes (being only secondary pubhcation) on a scale of one quarter. Where forms are taken from small figures, ancient or modern, they are generally one-twentieth of the full natural size, as it would be inexact to expand a rather vague figure to the size of the accurate outhnes. Such smaller figures are obvious among those of the uniform larger scale.
Where no
scale is known, the letters N.S. For unilateral forms such as axes
are appended.
and knives, direction,
it is
desirable to place
preferably
that
in
them
wlfich
all in one they would
by the right hand. So far as possible the axis of the handle has been placed upright, so as to display the direction of the cutting naturally be used
edge
would be well if all pubhcations would keep to these points, which are necessary in any comparative study ;— uniform scale, uniclearly.
It
form
vertical
direction,
axe-heads recently tion,
set
handles.
out in a
In a group of
museum
for exhibi-
they are mounted without any uniformity,
how far they resemble one another, or anything elsewhere. In the order of the outlines the different metals have been followed, so far as types would permit. There is always a presumption that the copper, bronze, iron, and brass tools succeeded in that and
to realise
it is difficult
some individual evidence of The objects of each metal have therefore been placed together, and marked thus as a class while exceptions brought in, by dating or by type, are separately marked with the order, unless there is
dating to the contrary.
;
name of the metal. The place names
are stated in a form for easy
Where
recognition of their meaning.
known,
it is
stated
;
if
the
a site
site is obscure,
is
well
the dis-
The purpose is to enable once see at from the plates the range of distribution. Further detail is often given in the text, or can always be found by looking out the reference. The list of abbreviations used for reference is given on the next page. Where more than one reference is stated to an outline, the first is the direct source, and the other references are to examples that are merely similar. The dates of Egyptian objects are given in dynasties, in order to avoid the confusion caused by various arbitrary reductions of the Egyptian dates in years. " Egypt" only is stated, as the place-names may not be familiar to all readers the exact place is given by the title of the book quoted, or in the text. For facility of reference the page is stated rather than the plate number and in series, the year rather than the volume number. In the Mykenjean obj ects at Athens, the Roman numerals are those of the circle graves of Schliemann. Many of these objects are unpubUshed. Having to refer both to photographs and to outlines there is unavoidably some irregularity in the numbering. Whether the plate numbers or the text number should be continuous, has been decided by the convenience of reference in each case. In many cases the outhne pages have cross references to the photographs or scattered figures. Usually the photographs and the outhnes of the same series are placed facing even if other plates intervene, such can always be held upright, so as to get a view of plates which should be compared together. A main consideration has been the trict or region is stated.
any reader to
;
;
;
—
ABBREVIATIONS one view
possibility of seeing in
comparison. Hence many plates are crowded in order to include the whole of one type. A few
have been passed on to an end plate to avoid breaking up the subjects by mixing them on
figures
subject of the dates of the introduction
and
British
Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana
B.R. B.T.
Abh.K.BayernRom.Alterthum,i840 Bayeux Tapestry, ed. F. R. Fowke,
C.A.
1875, 1898 Caillaud (F.),
use of different metals has not been followed here.
What
known from Egypt
C.C.
has been made to follow the movements of types as indicating the movements of
CD. CM. CN.
Egypt, 191 5,
p.
is
12.
No attempt
There is not enough yet known, to come to any safe conclusions from such arguments. Sometimes the distribution of a type may be referred to races.
historically
same
known movements
period, which
is
of peoples at
premature to deduce hisAll that can be said is that strong negative evidence may be drawn from proved dissimilarities, which contradict supposed direction of trade,
Curie
A Roman
(J.),
21
18 II
frontier post,
21
.
D. A.
Delgado (Rada
de I'Espagne, 1886 y),
Museo Espanol de
Antiguedades, 1872-80.
D.C
Dussaud
D.G.
Mer £g^e. 2nd edit. 1914 Davies (N. de G.), Rock Tombs of Deir el Gebrawi, i
D.L.
Dechelette
it is
tory from types of tools.
lines of connection.
.
the fort of Newstead, 1911
;
and
I
le
Cartailhac (E.), Ages prehistoriques
but at present in our great ignorance of distribution of types, of the dating of objects, of the extent
123 60
les
CS.
the
a legitimate use of history
Recherches sur Arts et Metiers, 1837 Chantre (E.), Recherches dans Caucase, 1885 Carapanos(C.), Dodone, 1878 Cairo Museum
.
.
stated in Ancient
is
Museum
B.M. B.P.
plates.
The
.... .... .... ....
material for
all
Les Civilisations PreheI16niques dans le Bassin de la (R.),
.
.
.
(J.),
La
II
.
Collection Mil-
Ion,
D.M.
ologie,
ABBREVIATIONS EMPLOYED A.
Archaeologia (Society of Antiquaries,
A. A.
London), i860 The American Antiquarian
A.A.iii.
Ayrton
A.C.
Athens, Central
(E. R.),
Abydos
iii.
.
.... Museum
AL.
Pro Alesia
AN.
L'Anthropologie, Paris
A. P.
Athens, Polytechnic
A.R.
A.V.
Anger, Graberfeld zu Rondsen AspeUn (J. R.), Antiquites Nord Finno-Ougrien, 1877-84, i-v Cabinet of Antiquities, Vienna
A.W.
Mitt. Anthrop. Gesell.
B.
Bologna
B.A.
Bissing (F.
A.S.
ischer
Museum W.
.
Museum
.
.... ....
von),
Wien
.
B.B.
Bertholon, Berberie Orientale
BERL.
Berlin
B.F.
Bologna Fonderia (great group of fragments found together) Bathurst(W. H. ), Roman Antiquities .
B.L.
at
Lydney Park,
1879
E.B. 12
38 I
Gloucestershire,
(J.),
1908
—
.... Manuel
d'Archd-
Deramin (A.), Weapons of War, 1870 Evans (J.), Ancient Bronze Implements of Great Britain, 1881
E.D.
Engelhardt (C), Denmark in the Early Iron Age, 1866
F.
Florence, Archaeological
F.M.
Foote(R.
I
.
21
logue
28
quities,
I
F.T.
13
G.A.
I
G.C
Feldhaus
B.),
of
Museum
.
1901
Prehistoric
20
.....
(F. M.),
Technik der Vor-
I
G.P.
Gross
I
G.R. G.T.
Papa GiuUo Museum, Rome Gross (V.), La Tene, 1883
G.W.
Gardner Wilkinson (J.), Manners and Customs of the Ancient Egyp-
H.M.
Hoernes (M.), Natur- und UrgeschichtedesMenschen, 1909
37
Naples, 1870
3
50
(V.),
tians, ed.
16 18
Anti-
.
G.M. G.N.
28
19 2
Madras Museum, Cata-
the
zeit, 1914 Garstang (J.), El Arabah, 1901 Gozzadini (G.), Mors de Cheval, 1875 Garstang (J.), Mahasna, 1902 Gargiulo (R.), Musee National de
Kin Theban-
Grab fund, 1905
Museum
D.W. 100
1914
1913 Dechelette
....
Les Protohelvetes, 1883
1878
.
....
4 8 II
18 I
9
3
33
—
ABBREVIATIONS EMPLOYED riGORES
H.U. I.S.
Hempe\
m
....
Alterthiinier
(J.),
.
Ungarn, 1905 Bryan Fausset and Roach Smith, Inventorium Sepulchrale, 1856 Korte (G.) and Brunn (E.), vol. i, .
K.U.
Rilievi delle
....
Urne Etrusche, 1870,
1890, 1896
L.A.
Lissauer
der
Alterthiimer
(A.),
Bronzezeit in der Provinz Westpreussen, 1891
L.B.
Layard
(A. H.), Discoveries in the
ruins of Nineveh and
Babylon,
1853
L.N.
Denkmaler Lee (J. E.), Isca Silurum, 1862 Layard (A. H.), Monuments of Nine-
L.N.R.
Layard
M.
mains, 1849 Die Alterthiimer
L.D. L.I.
Lepsivis (R.),
.....
veh, 1849
(A. H.),
....
Nineveh and unserer
Vorzeit
nischen
its
.
.
Re-
heid-
Romische-
.
Germanische Central Museum in Mainz, L. Lindenschmidt, 18581911
M.A. M.A.F. M.B.
.
Monumenti
.
.
.
.
Antichi, 1889-1914
Mission Archeologique Frangaise.
Randall-Maciver
M.C.
Rosellini,
M.D.
Morgan i
Monumenti
(J. de),
1895,
and Woolley
(D.),
Buhan, 1901
(C. L.),
.
FouillesaDahchour,
1903
ii
.
Civile
.
M.E. M.LC. M.LS.
Martha (J.), L'Art £trusque, 1889 Montehus (O. ), I taUe Centrale
M.J.
Miiller, Juellinge
M.K.
Montehus
Montelius
(O.),
Itahe Septentrionale
Fundet Alteren
(O.),
Kultur-
perioden.
M.K.A.
M.KG.
Much (M.), 1889— Woolley
Kunsthistorischer Atlas,
(C.
L.),
and D. Randall-
Maciver, Karanog, 1900
M.L.
Munro
M.M.
Europe, 1890 Martin (F. R.), L'Age de Bronze au Musee de Minoussinsk, 1893
M.P.
Morgan
M.R.
Metaux, 1896 Randall-Maciver (D.),
(R.),
The Lake DwelHngs
(J. de),
L'Age de
of
la Pierre et
les
El Amrah,
1902
M.R.R,
Rosellini,
Monumenti
Religiose
;
THE PLAIN BLADE AXE handle.
Schafer (H.), PriesterGraber(Abusir),
S. A.
1908 S.A.N.
5
Memoires de
Roy. des Anti-
la Soc.
du Nord
quaires
.
.
.
....
de Sarzec (E.), Decouvertes en Chaldee, 1889
S.D.
—
S.F.
Bulletin
S.H.
France von Sacken
S.M.
Seager (R.
S.P.
Siret (L.), Premiers ages
S.S.
Espagne, 1887 Schuchhardt (C), Schliemann's Ex-
-19 Graberfeld von .11
.
.
.
(E. F.),
Hallstatt, 1868
.
.
.
.
Explorations in the Island of Mochlos, 1912 B.),
.
.
....
Schlemm
S.V.
(J.),
3
...
18
Worterbuch zur Vor-
1908 Virchow (R. ), Graberfeld von Koban, 1883 der
Anthopologie,
fiir
Berliner etc.
Ges.
.
.
V.M.
Viollet-le-Duc,
W.M.
Wells
W.P.R.
Pitt-Rivers (L. F.), Excavations in
.... .... .... ....
Mobilier Fran^ais,
Museum
Cranbourne Chase, cuts,
1887
Z.A.
Zeitschrift
Z.B.
Zannoni
Z.E.
Zeitschrift
fiir
(A.),
vol.
.
Ethnologic, Berlin
Photographs Miscellaneous
.
.
.
.
•
and C), Flet Menselyk Bedryf, Amsterdam, 1694
Luiken
1694.
5
41 7
Wood-
i,
Aegyptische Sprache La Fonderia di Bo-
logna, 1888 fiir
1858-75
I
3
3
19 7 31
(J.
.
CHAPTER THE PLAIN BLADE AXE
:
.
the adze has one face longer or
usually ground on one side.
wood
slip off
TO
;
the adze
The axe
and
to drive
to take a thin
is
usually has a short
;
attachment to the handle, as it was never struck in deeply. The axe is thick in order to bear shock and carry weight the adze is thinner, strength not being required. Those various differences were not all developed fully at first. In the stone ages a single tool seems to have served for many uses root-grubbing, breaking branches or skulls, and throwing at animals, were probably all done with one handy weapon. The growth of civilisation is means, until
of
men and
of
we now have dozens
of varied forms In the classification of the present material, as the axe is the earlier type, it has been credited with any forms that are not distinctive, and the adze is only accredited with forms
hammer
or of chisel.
unsuited for axes. 5. In Egypt, the adze long preceded the axe metal was scarce, and to squander a pound of it for a single tool would have been extravagant. It is only at the close of the prehistoric age, after the incoming of the dynastic people, and within a generation of Mena and the ist dynasty, that copper began to be freely used (A 7, 8, pi. i). Now, simultaneously with this, we find the adze
greatly increased in size (Z xv, xvi, 8, 66, 67, contrast ^"^^ the larger adze with the early forms 60-65)
was of a new form, widely splaying. This form resembles that found in Cyprus (Z 7) more closely than any other. As it would be absurd to suppose copperless
I
it
a larger mass.
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