Non-ferrous metalworking in Iron Age Scotland, c.700BC to AD800
Item Status
Embargo End Date
Date
Authors
Heald, Andrew
Abstract
This thesis discusses the evidence for non-ferrous metalworking, particularly casting, during the
Scottish Iron Age (arra 700BC to AD 800). The wider goal is to offer a fuller understanding of the
role that the production of bronze, silver and gold objects played in Iron Age society. Following an
outline of the theoretical and methodological framework adopted throughout the study the evidence
for the different stages involved in non-ferrous metalworking is discussed. Detailed catalogues,
descriptions and scientific analysis of the material and its context are given, together with discussion
of typology, technology, provenance and chronology. The corpus is then reviewed within three case
studies, chronologically divided into the Early, Middle, and Late Iron Age. The aim of each study is
to analyse the role and meaning of non-ferrous working, the smiths and the objects in specific
regions at different periods. In the process, metalworking is contextualised within wider themes and
frameworks for Iron Age society. 1bis study suggests that non-ferrous metalworking was a
fundamental concern to important individuals, a prized asset not open to all. The practice played a
crucial role in the creation and maintenance of different social and political trajectories at various
times and places throughout Iron Age Scotland.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

