Iron Age Britain

Celtic Art

Late Iron Age, Deal, Kent ¦ Snailwell, Cambridgeshire.

An interconnected spiral motif in the guise of snakes with their tails’ in each others’ mouths.

Miranda could see Quintin squinting at his artwork and knew that he was about to say something that would probably be ridiculous. ‘What is it,’ she asked, reluctantly.

‘You know about Minoan double axes?’

‘Oh no!’ sighed Miranda.

‘What?’ asked Quintin.

‘This design was found on a sword scabbard from an Iron Age grave in Kent!' replied Miranda. 'It has been dated to about 300 BC. Slap bang in the middle of the British Iron Age. What on Earth could be Minoan about it?’

iron age sword scabbard design

‘Well, nothing really, I suppose. Except, well, if you look at the circular designs as stylised serpents biting each others’ tails, then you have this interconnected spiral motif partly made up of these snakes with their tails’ in each others’ mouths, and in the centre of each circle, the ones defined by the two snakes, is a shape that looks, well, just a little bit like some distant recollection of a double axe, don’t you think?’

Miranda had a good look at the computer's interpretation of Quintin’s line drawing. ‘Let's stick with this,’ she said at last and passed Quintin a watercolour sketch she had made of a bracelet found in a late Iron Age grave at Snailwell in Cambridgeshire. ‘This was buried a decade or so before the Roman Invasion of Britain,’ she said. ‘Others like it have been found from the first and second centuries AD in Scotland and Wales. Definitely a snake bracelet.’

snake bracelet

references

La Tčne culture - Wikipedia

British Iron Age - Wikipedia

Celtic Art - British Museum Publication by Ian Stead, beautifully illustrated, available from the British Museum website, navigation tag Shop online, (recommendation: Search the shop by keying in: 'Ian Stead')

Serpent (symbolism) - Wikipedia

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