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Pot, knife and fire-steel

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from Newmill, Perthshire

Postcard of Pot, knife and fire-steel.
000-190-004-049-C
© National Museums Scotland

Pot, knife and fire-steel

This pot, of a type known as a beaker, the flint knife and the flint fire-steel (also known as a strike-a-light) were found in a grave at Newmill in Perthshire. The pot and type of grave suggest that the person buried may have been from the Netherlands.

The exterior of the pot was decorated with rows of chevrons made with a pointed tool or spatula pressed at an angle into the clay. The flint knife had been set into a haft and used to cut soft material.

The objects were found in a grave set within a penannular ring ditch. The body, which did not survive, had been placed in a coffin or container or organic material, set in a bath-shaped grave pit. The style of the grave resembles Dutch examples.


Record details

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Online ID: 000-190-004-049-C
Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
Project: 0098: National Museums Scotland
Project description | View all records in project
Ref: National Museums Scotland  X.1997.765
Date: 2500 - 2050 BC
Between 2500 and 2050 BC
Material: Ceramic
Dimensions:
What: Beaker
Subject:
Who:
Where: Netherlands
Scotland, Newmill
Event:
Description: Beaker with all over ornamentation, from a Dutch style grave at Newmill, 2500 - 2050 BC
References:
  • Clarke, D.V., Cowie, T.G., & Foxon, Andrew (eds). Symbols of power at the time of Stonehenge. Edinburgh: National Museums of Antiquities of Scotland, 1985, pp 82, 174, 268. 
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