Record

Necklace

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from Mount Stuart, Bute, Inner Hebrides

Postcard of Necklace.
000-100-035-705-C
© National Museums Scotland

Necklace

This jet necklace was found in a cist burial at Mount Stuart on Bute in the Inner Hebrides. The wealthy woman was also buried with a pot containing an offering of food or drink, a small object of bronze, a pin and an awl, sometime between 2050 and 1700 BC.

The necklace was made of at least 100 spindle-shaped beads (some now fragmentary), four trapezoidal spacer plates, two triangular end-plates, and a triangular toggle. Many of the beads are very worn, but the toggle is not. It was probably a replacement.

The only significant source of good quality jet occurs around Whitby in Yorkshire, although jet-related substances such as cannel coal and lignite are known from several places in Scotland. Jet was used in the Bronze Age for high status objects.


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Online ID: 000-100-035-705-C
Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
Project: 0098: National Museums Scotland
Project description | View all records in project
Ref: National Museums Scotland  X.EQ 101
Date: Between 2050 and 1700 BC
Material: Jet plates and beads
Dimensions:
What:
Subject:
Who:
Where: Scotland, Bute, Isle of Bute, Mountstuart
Event:
Description: Necklace of seven plates and ninety nine beads of jet, from a Bronze Age burial at Mountstuart, Isle of Bute
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 213, 289. 
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