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Tuesday, October 31, 2023

100 Years of Collecting: Amazing Archaeology (Prehistoric to Roman)

Our 100 Years of Collecting Online Exhibition spans thousands of years of human history. We’ve got a little bit of everything, from a prehistoric hand axe to a Prime Energy drink!

This month, we’re focusing on some of our amazing archaeology collection highlights. We’ve got so much we’ll post it over two parts.

For part 1, join us on a whistle-stop tour from prehistory through to the Romans:

Prehistoric tools and technology

Did you know that some of the oldest evidence of human life in Britain comes from Wakefield?

It includes this hand axe, on display at Wakefield Museum. 
It was originally made between 500,000 and 200,000 years ago when humans first settled in Britain.

A brown and yellow mottled flint hand axe. It is in a sort of teardrop shape.
A Palaeolithic hand axe - on display at Wakefield Museum


It might not look like much today, but flint hand axes like this were crucial multipurpose tools. They were useful for skinning and cutting up large mammals such as mammoths or Irish elk. They were a key invention for human evolution.

These earliest humans were forced out during a long period of Ice Ages and only occasional traces of them can be found today. Our hand axe was found at Lee Moor near Stanley in 1889.


15,000 years ago

The next people to settle in Britain came after the end of the last Ice Age, 15,000 years ago. They followed the migration of large mammals into Britain’s cold, dry climate and open landscapes.

As the climate warmed, trees and forests formed. These were better suited to smaller mammals. Humans had to adapt their hunting techniques and technologies. The new settlers began to use composite tools like harpoons. These harpoons used lots of tiny flints called microliths, moving on from the single large pieces of flint used for the hand axe. 

A series of small pieces of flint, in shades of pale grey and brown, and various sizes - but much smaller than the handaxe
A selection of microliths on display at Wakefield Museum

The Bronze Age - around 5,000 years ago

By 5,000 years ago, communities were working together to clear forests and begin farming. People were beginning to live in permanent settlements rather than moving around the landscape with the seasons. 

New technologies also reached Britain, like pottery and metalwork. Metal was helpful for the new styles of shafted axes needed to clear woodlands for farming. 

One of our beautiful bronze axe heads features in the Online Exhibition. It was found as part of the Smalley Bight Hoard.

Small bronze axe head, with three raised ribs running along the blade. Well preserved.
The bronze axe head - the loop would have helped fix it to a (probably wooden) handle.

You can see more on display at Wakefield Museum and Castleford Museum!

Burials: bronze and bones

As people settled into permanent homes, different social classes began to form. The emerging differences in wealth and power become visible in the archaeology.

People who had become wealthy and powerful began to bury their dead in individual graves. This was a change from the shared communal graves that had typically been used. Wealthy people were often buried with very expensive belongings.

Display case containing bronze age burial finds, some ceramic and some metal
Display case containing local Bronze Age burial goods at Castleford Museum

These very fine Bronze Age burial goods are on display at Castleford Museum. They include a bronze dagger and stone wrist guard. 

These came from burials in the landscape around Ferrybridge Henge, which was an important settlement for hundreds of years.

The most important finding from the Ferrybridge Henge is the incredible chariot burial from Ferry Fryston. Chariot burials are very rare, and this one was even more unusual because the chariot was buried whole alongside the rider.

The remains of an Iron Age chariot, displayed - 2 iron tires, 4 nave hoops, 2 linch pins and 2 horse bits
The Ferry Fryston chariot burial at Castleford Museum

Normally, chariots were taken to pieces before burial. To bury it whole meant digging a very large hole for it! 

This chariot is also unusual in that it couldn’t have actually been used for moving around. The wheels are different sizes and some of the bronze fittings were just for show - they are hollow and not nearly strong enough. 

However, it still taught us a lot about how chariots were made and how they worked.

A modern-day reconstruction of the chariot, with two large wheels connected to a square sided seat, and a long bar reaching out to be connected to two horses
A representation of what experts think the chariot would have looked like

Studying the bones of the body in the chariot has revealed that they belonged to a 30 to 40-year-old man. He would have been about 1.70 metres or 5 feet 7 inches tall. 

Modern archaeological scientific techniques have revealed even more about the burial. Radiocarbon dating has shown that the chariot was buried about 200BC, and isotope analysis tells us that the man buried in the chariot was not originally from the Castleford area.

You can see the chariot burial in all its glory at Castleford Museum!


Roman Castleford - just under 2,000 years ago

The Ferrybridge Henge area stopped being as important when the Ancient Romans came to Yorkshire.

In 71 AD the Romans built a fortress at York and a road linking it to another fortress at Lincoln. Around the same time, they built a fort at Castleford, where this road crossed the Aire.

The Roman army is known for marching great distances along the roads they built. This was possibly in part because of the hob-nailed sandals the soldiers wore. Examples of these sandals were found during excavations in Castleford. 

Some of the sandals were so well preserved that re-enactors use replicas based on them and call them ‘Castlefords’!

The remains of a leather ancient Roman sandal, remarkably preserved. It has straps going across the foot and around the ankle
The well-preserved remains of an Ancient Roman leather sandal found in Castleford

The Roman way of life was adopted by many people in the areas they conquered. However, the Romans also keenly took on elements of those local cultures, particularly their gods and spirits.

One example is the altar to Brigantia, the goddess of the defeated tribe on display in Wakefield Museum. 

We also have a stone dedicated to the nymphs, local water spirits of the Aire. It features in the Online Exhibition and is on display at Castleford Museum:

Remains of a carved dedication stone to the Nymphs, featuring two female heads
The stone dedicated to the nymphs, on display at Castleford Museum

More on Roman Castleford


We hope you enjoyed this trip back in time through our amazing archaeology!

Ready to carry on the adventure? Click here for Amazing Archaeology (Anglo-Saxons to English Civil Wars)

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