| 56 |
Dates for Beaker people in Brit. are at present estimated at c. 1900-1500 B.C.: C.B.A. BA Conference (Dec.
1960); N.C.B.I. 374-6, fig. 64; BA Barrow, 165, fig. 56;
see also I.O.A. (1955), 29-42. |
| 57 |
Antiquity, v. 424-6; Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scot. lxviii.
155-61; Dawn, 330. |
| 58 |
N.C.B.I. passim. |
| 59 |
Danube, 188-201; Dawn, 222-8. |
| 60 |
Prehist. Communities, 93, 96. |
| 61 |
Three beakers found nr. Thames in Surr. confirm the
Thames-side distribution: Ham (L.M. unpublished);
'West Hall Rd., Kew Gdns.' (Antiq. Jnl. xii. 170, pl.
xxxiii (2b)); Oatlands Park, Walton-on-Thames (Surr
Arch. Col. xxxv. 5-6, pl. i (b)). |
| 62 |
B.A.P. i. 52-63; Arch. News Letter, vi (1), 15; P.P.S.
xxiii. 74-77. |
| 63 |
V. G. Childe, New Light on the Most Ancient East;
Dawn. |
| 64 |
B.A.P. i. 52-63; Prehist. Communities, 94, 112-18;
Dawn, 330-1. Some continental Beaker people apparently
had smiths with them: Dawn, 223. For a restatement of the
case for the Beaker people being the first metal-workers
in Brit. Isles see P.P.S. xxiii. 100-3. |
| 65 |
Prehist. Communities, 98. |
| 66 |
P.P.S. xviii. 204-7. |
| 67 |
Ibid. xvi. 130, 158; Archaeologia, xxxiv. 255. |
| 68 |
Danube, 191. |
| 69 |
Prehist. Communities, 98-99. They are thought to
have built some at least of the henge sanctuaries: ibid.
101-10; N.C.B.I. 354. |
| 70 |
Dawn, 222-3. |
| 71 |
Prehist. Communities, 91. |
| 72 |
P.P.S. vi. 112-32. |
| 73 |
P.P.S. xxiii. 59; B.A.P. i. 17, pls. ii-xxi; Danube, 194;
Antiquity, ix. 348. |
| 74 |
S. Piggott, 'Abercromby and after: the Beaker Cultures of Britain Re-Examined', Culture and Environment,
(ed. I. LL. Foster and L. Alcock), 53-91. |
| 75 |
B.A.P. i. 18. Subsequent researches have revised
Abercromby's chronological system, but his lettering is still
used, although now in an illogical order. A suggested new
nomenclature appears in BA Barrow, 120-1. |
| 76 |
Prehist. Communities, 92. |
| 77 |
B.A.P. i. 19-45; Antiquity, v. 415-26. |
| 78 |
B.A.P. i. 47-48, 50-51. |
| 79 |
Ibid. 22-23; P.P.S. iv. 56; BA Barrow, 120-1. |
| 80 |
Prehist. Communities, 93; L.P.A. 8. |
| 81 |
P.P.S. iv. 56, fig. 1. |
| 82 |
Ibid.; B.A.P. i. 43, pl. ii; Antiquity, v. 415; 'Hondern
eeuwen Nederland', Antiquity and Survival, ii (5-6), 119,
fig. 26. |
| 83 |
BA Barrow, 121. |
| 84 |
B.A.P. i. 18. |
| 85 |
Ibid. 18, 32. |
| 86 |
Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scot. lxviii. 155-7; P.P.S. xxiii. 84;
Antiquity, xxxv. 47. |
| 87 |
B.A.P. i. 18, 32; Antiquity, v. 415-26. |
| 88 |
P.P.S.E. Anglia, vi. 340-55. For examples of the
daggers see illustration on p. 41. |
| 89 |
Another battle-axe, apparently of Beaker type, is in
G.M.: G.M. Catalogue (1908), 4, no. 30. |
| 90 |
For discussion of continental affinities of British 'A'
beaker assemblages and the evolution of 'A' beaker styles
in Britain see Danube, 200-1; Prehist. Communities, 94;
Dawn, 330; Archaeologia, lxxv. 83-84, figs. 4-8; lxxxv.
53, 85; BA Barrow, 137-8; P.P.S.E. Anglia, vi. 350-1;
E. Sprockhoff, Die Nordische Megalithkultur (Handbuch
der Urgeschichte Deutschlands), ii (Berlin, 1938), Taf.
21 (4), 31 (1, 7, 9); B.A.P. i. 9, 10, 13; P.P.S. xxiii. 82-84;
ii. 210 (modified by I.O.A. (1955), 29-42). For Dutch
beakers see Palaeohistoria, iv. 5-46. |
| 91 |
Flint daggers found only since the publication of
P.P.S.E. Anglia, vi. 340-55 are included. |
| 92 |
Proc. Soc. Antiq. ii. 350; I.O.A. (1955), 32, fig. 1 (5). |
| 93 |
Proc. Inter. Cong. Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences
(Rome, 1965), ii. 319-23. |
| 94 |
Ex inf. Dr. C. Burgess. |
| 95 |
Arch. Jnl. lxxxvi. 82-84. |
| 96 |
Ibid. 84, pl. vii (B2). |
| 97 |
Archaeologia, lxii. 340-1; but see E.D.S. 185; Eng.
Prehist. Pottery (V. & A. Mus. 1952), pl. 6. |
| 98 |
Archaeologia, lxii. 340-1, pl. xxxvii (2); B.A.P. i. 23. |
| 99 |
Arch. Jnl. lxxxvi. 84, pl. vii (B1). See illustration facing p. 52. |
| 1 |
Ibid. 84. |
| 2 |
P.P.S. ii. 189, fig. 3 (1). |
| 3 |
Antiquity, xxxix. 220. Analysis indicates that the
metal came from central Europe. |
| 4 |
Arch. Jnl. lxxxvi. 92, pl. vi (A1). |
| 5 |
Arch. Jnl. lxxxviii. 153, fig. 14 (6); B.A.P. i. 96, 156, pl.
xxx (21); Antiq. Jnl. iv. 149-50, fig. 1, pl. xxviii (1); I.O.A.
(1955), 29-42, esp. p. 36. |
| 6 |
Archaeologia, lxix. 11, fig. 8. |
| 7 |
Ibid. 11; B.A.P. i. pl. ix (80); P.P.S. xxv. 45. |
| 8 |
G.M. Catalogue (1908), 124, no. 167. |
| 9 |
P.P.S. ii. 19-51, fig. 11. |
| 10 |
Sprockhoff, Nordische Megalithkultur, Taf. 33 (1, 4). |
| 11 |
P.P.S. iv. 68, fig. 7. |
| 12 |
Archaeologia, lxii. 336; Antiq. Jnl. iv. 149-50, pl.
lxxxviii (153), fig. 14 (6); I.O.A. (1955), 36. |
| 13 |
Evans, Stone Implements, 194. |
| 14 |
A.M.L. 87. |
| 15 |
B.A.P. i. 10, 51. |
| 16 |
Ibid. pl. vii (37); Archaeologia, lxix. 11, fig. 8. Cf.
Antiquity, v. 415, pl. 2 (Netherlands). |
| 17 |
Archaeologia, lxxxix. 102. |
| 18 |
Ibid. lxix. 9-10, fig. 8. |