The Amesbury Archer
Early Bronze Age, about 2400-2200
BC
Found at Amesbury, Wiltshire,
England
On a Friday morning in May 2002, archaeologists
from Wessex Archaeology were excavating at Amesbury in advance of
building work for a new school. They were expecting Roman remains,
but were amazed to find instead a rich early Bronze Age
grave.
Most people at this
time were buried with just one pot and perhaps a copper knife, but
this man was buried with a huge number of objects, including three
copper knives, a stone for metalworking, two sandstone wristguards,
sixteen arrowheads, five Beaker pots, an antler tool, four
boars' tusks and two small gold hair or ear
ornaments.
Study of the
man's bones show that he was aged between 35 and 45. He had
suffered an accident a few years before his death that had ripped
his left knee cap off. As a result, he could not walk properly and
was in constant pain.
But
his teeth provided the biggest surprise. Measurement of the oxygen
isotopes in the man's teeth show that he did not grow up in
England, but somewhere in central Europe, perhaps Switzerland,
Austria or south Germany. What remains a mystery is why he came to
England and what he did here. The man was certainly important and
was in the vicinity of Stonehenge when the famous stone monument
was being built. Did he have something to do with its
construction?
From the
collection of Salisbury and South Wiltshire
Museum
Richard Hobbs, Treasure: Finding our past (London, The British Museum Press, 2003)