Showing posts with label fabric production. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fabric production. Show all posts

Monday, July 29, 2024

Must Farm pile-dwelling settlement - Part 2

 

Food

The extraordinary preservation of material at Must Farm provides a unique opportunity to examine food that was being stored, processed, and possibly eaten shortly before the fire. The food and drink mixtures from Must Farm are exceptional in prehistoric Brit­ain. They represent the remains of porridges, stews, brewing mashes, doughs, and sugary or oily liquids, all of which were being stored or potentially even eaten or drunk at the time the settlement burnt down.

Residue of food in one of the Must Farm bowels
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

A coarseware bowel found beneath Structure 5 was half full of a thick porridge-like mix of roughly ground wheatmeal. The wooden spatula used to stir this porridge was still leaning against the inner edge of the bowl.

Meat was very evidently an important dietary component. Animal remains included large and small mammals, fish, birds, reptiles and amphibia. Pig/wild boar, followed by sheep/goat, red deer, and fish (pike and perch) were the main animal foodstuffs.

The considerable evidence for fish consumption at Must Farm is unparalleled in British later prehistory, partly because of the exceptional preservation and the recovery methods employed. Evidence for Late Bronze Age fishing practices is provided by fragments of knot­ted net – possibly fishing net – that were associated with a possible ceramic net weight, in Structure 4.

Fish were often eaten either raw or only partially cooked and the fish bones were commonly consumed along with the flesh: fish bones, scales, and teeth (including fish heads) were a regular feature of human excrement.

Two other noteworthy foodstuffs from the settle­ment are milk and honey/beeswax. Organic pot residues of these were widespread suggesting that their use was relatively com­mon.

Cattle are barely represented at Must Farm representing less than 4% of the animal remains in total. Although pigs were clearly an important dietary component, there is little evidence to suggest that they were being raised and slaughtered at the settlement.

Items of pottery from Must Farm
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

The occupants of Must Farm processed emmer wheat into meal and flour and used these ingredients for making stews, dumplings, and bread. They used ceramic bowels to eat their porridge, mixed their dough in wooden ‘dough’ troughs and carried their drink­ing water in buckets.

Overall, the evidence from Must Farm makes clear that later prehistoric food practices in Britain are more complex and more varied than has previ­ously been recognized. As the Must Farm researchers point out, the food-related evi­dence is outstanding and allows us to imagine not only the food tastes of Must Farm’s occupants’ but also the ‘recipes’ they used. We learn about the food harvested, made, stored, and consumed.

Fabric Production

Must Farm has produced extraordinary evidence of fibre processing and fabric production. All the fabrics from the Must Farm pile-dwelling were made from plant fibres, predominantly flax, although lime bast was also used.

Illustration of one of the Must Farm textiles showing the weave and thread direction
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

Processed flax fibre was in turn spun and spliced into thread, which was then wound onto wooden dowels or into balls. The site produced at least 8 spindle whorls, 36 dowels or bobbins wound with thread, a number of balls of thread, as well as a cone of thicker cord.

One of the finest examples of textiles was found in Structure 1. This large, fine piece of folded cloth was woven from threads of around 0.3 mm in diameter and must have been made by a highly experienced weaver.

Artefact distributions, suggest that different stages of textile production were performed across buildings. For example, flax was probably processed in Structure 1, with the spinning of fibres into yarn carried out across Structures 2, 4 and 5 (if not all buildings). This was then finally woven into textile on the warp-weighted loom located back in Structure 1.

Wider Connections

The beads, appear to have travelled distances, possibly from Iran, Egypt, Switzerland, and Ireland. The site’s location on a waterway networked into the North Sea made it easier for its inhabitants to acquire objects from further afield.

Socketed bronze axe
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

Nine logboats, ranging in date from the late Early Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age, were found in the Must Farm chan­nel, upstream of the pile-dwelling. Wooden trackways or causeways may have provided a connection between the river and fen-edge.

Comparison with other settlements

The Iron Age Glastonbury ‘Lake Village’ in Somerset is comparable to Must Farm, in terms of size, location and economy. Unlike Must Farm, Glastonbury Lake Village could only be reached by canoe. This limited means of access would have provided an enhanced level of protection.

Glastonbury and Must Farm both represent villages rather than just one or two family groups. A minimum of five structures were in use at the same time at Must Farm. Glastonbury Lake Village was more extensive and accommodated forty roundhouses. At its peak it has been estimated that there were thirteen houses in use.

The Must Farm roundhouses were raised up above the water on tall piles while the lake village settlement was raised above the water by adding large amounts of brushwood and logs, and clay directly to the wet peat. This material was par­tially retained by lines of upright posts, both within the settlement and forming a palisade around the exterior.

The remains of a wooden bucket that contained scrap bronze
associated with Structure 4
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

At Glastonbury, the village was located on a sig­nificant water transport route, as was Must Farm. Glastonbury relied on the neighbouring dryland for the basis of its food economy, despite the exploitation of wetland resources. The same was true at Must Farm.

Late Bronze Age sites in Ireland such as Ballinderry crannog No. 2, Co. Offaly and Rathtinaun, Co. Sligo, are still amongst the richest settle­ment sites from the period, in terms of artefacts despite the discovery, in the last decade, of significantly more ‘dryland’ settlements in Ireland.

Late Bronze Age crannogs or lake-dwellings have produced evidence for livestock (animal bones) and food production (saddle querns), as well as domes­tic pottery, wooden finds, and basketry. Some sites have produced evidence of high-status goods, such as socketed axes, bronze rings, swords, and spearheads, and amber and lignite.

For example, Late Bronze Age wetland settlements, like Rathtinaun, Co. Sligo, have produced evidence for industrial or metalworking activities, such as layers of burnt stone, clay mould fragments, saddle querns in large numbers, and evidence for large hearths and fires.

Abandonment of Settlement

The summer/early autumn end date for the settlement is indicated by the 3–6 month old lambs killed in the fire. The rarity of fruit stones and seeds (sloes, cherries, hazel nutshell) suggests much of the settlement’s occupation was during the spring/early summer months when such fruit was absent.

There seems to have been little effort by the occupants of Must Farm to return and recover precious frag­ments of their lives, despite the obvious material wealth that had been lost. Retrieving precious items in the aftermath of the fire may there­fore have been taboo.

The abandonment of wetland settlements is likely to have been a complex social process. The death of a person strongly associated with the dwelling such as a tribal leader or shaman, can result in abandonment and the dwelling may even be burnt down.

Conclusion

In the mid-9th century BC, a disaster happened to a small community when fire swept through their palisade-enclosed pile-dwelling settlement, built only a year earlier across a narrow sluggish river channel in a wetland landscape.

The fire caused the collapse of the structures, and as the floors burnt through, the contents of the buildings and walkways came crashing down into the shallow muddy waters below and were buried by river borne silts. The occupants escaped with their lives and in a matter of hours, they lost their homes and possessions, as well as their means of subsistence: tools, food stores, livestock.

A wooden artefact from Must Farm - exact use unknown
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

The Must Farm settlement gives us a rare glimpse of life in the Bronze Age. There were live lambs inside the buildings at the time of the fire, beside rushes and flax harvested in late summer and willow withies cut when the leaves had fallen in the winter.

The Bronze Age settlement at Must Farm, with its remarkable survival of a wide range of evidence, provides a unique opportunity to think about how people understood their worlds. The anthropolo­gist, Clifford Geertz, considered that the important questions we should ask of any society are: who do people think they are; what did they think they were doing, and to what end did they think they were doing it?

In the words of Volume 1 contributor Aidan O’Sullivan:

“… the objects found at Must Farm – beads from Iran, Switzerland, Ireland; amber long circulating from the Baltic regions; a bucket and other bronze fragments from Ireland – all hint at far-flung water-borne connections. But for all that, most of the objects recovered, including pottery, wooden bowls, platters, buckets and troughs, balls of thread and woven, twined and knotted fabrics of flax and lime bast indicate that they were doing ordinary, routine things; living in houses, chatting, sleeping, cooking and eating, raising children, storing stuff, making clothes, managing resources, presumably all the time, feeling that they were ‘at home’.”

The people who inhabited Must Farm possessed a deep-rooted familiarity with erecting structures in the wet: knowledge of piling and of which timbers to cut at what lengths; knowledge of how to support heavy roofs, elevated floors, and hearths above an active waterway.

The skill displayed by the architecture sug­gest that this was not the first or only pile-dwelling to be founded in the wetland. As construction could have required labour input from beyond the resident group, this building knowledge may have been widely available in the local community, sug­gesting wetland living was commonplace.

For more information see:

“Must Farm pile-dwelling settlement: Vol. 1. Landscape, architecture and occupation.” (2024). Edited by Mark Knight, Rachel Ballantyne, Matthew Brudenell, Anwen Cooper, David Gibson & Iona Robinson Zeki

“Must Farm pile-dwelling settlement: Volume 2. Specialist reports.” (2024). Edited by Rachel Ballantyne, A. Cooper, D. Gibson, Mark Knight & I Robinson Zeki

Both volumes are freely accessible via the Must Farm website

https://www.mustfarm.com/bronze-age-settlement/

Friday, May 31, 2024

Must Farm pile-dwelling settlement - Part 1

 

Close-up of post-excavation plan showing the positions of Structures 1,2,4 and 5
(c) Must Farm Website

Introduction

In previous posts I have written about the Must Farm Bronze Age settlement in Cambridgeshire, in Britain. Now that the results of post-excavation analysis have been published, it is an opportune time to revisit this amazing archaeological site.

Must Farm pile dwelling settlement, Vols 1 and 2, highlight the wonderful and, in many ways, unparalleled archaeology of the Must Farm pile-dwelling settlement. It provides an account of life in a damp but extremely well-connected setting on the northwest fringes of Europe nearly 3000 years ago.

Must Farm is the most completely preserved prehistoric settlement in Britain and has been called Britain’s Pompeii. It has provided a unique insight into the lives of people towards the end of the Bronze Age. The excavation of the Must Farm settlement challenges many of our ideas about the material worlds that people inhabited, shedding new light on aspects of architecture, food, woodland management, landscape change, and wetland living.

A 3D model of one of Must Farm's large storage vessels
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

The settlement comprised a palisade enclosing five stilt-raised houses. It was built in the mid-9th century BC and destroyed by fire less than a year after construction. The occupants escaped but the remains of all five buildings and their artefact-rich contents collapsed into the riverbed. It is currently the only Late Bronze Age pile-dwelling settlement known in Britain.

Five Structures

The technique of pile-driving would have been well-known to the fen-dwellers, but this method of construction is not common in other wetland settlements on the British mainland. Each roundhouse consisted of a circular space with a hearth, the household’s primary source of light, at its centre. Archaeologists believe that the hearth may have been suspended above the floor by a clay-built ‘plate’ or ‘box’ set beneath a clay-lined hood or flue.

Standing at the threshold, the interior space to the right would have been furnished for food preparation; that to the left, for textile production. At the ‘back left’ young lambs may have been kept beside a quiet area to the ‘back right’ reserved for sleeping. Wattle partitioning may have separated different areas within the roundhouses. The presence of slender split and mortised timbers may indicate simple items of furniture.

The rectangular form of Structure 4 is unusual for the period but not unknown. The size and shape of this building results from it being secondary to the original pile-dwelling layout, squeezed between the existing roundhouses and palisade walkway.

The positioning of beads at the site seems to indicate that some would have
formed composite necklaces of amber, glass, stone and jet.
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

The buildings contained a similar set of artefacts (pots, buckets, troughs, loom weights, spindle whorls, bobbins, axes, gouges, sickles, querns, beads, seed caches etc.). A prime example is the number and combination of axes, gouges, and sickles in the metalwork collection with each structure equipped with a similar toolkit.

The resources utilized in the construction of the site itself point to a substantial work force behind the felling, moving and erection of timbers, particularly for the palisade. To undertake work of this scale, the residents may have drawn on shared labour from the wider com­munity.

The framework of the roof was comprised of mostly alder and ash poles used as radial rafters that bridged the outer and inner rings of vertical posts. The roofing material comprised a combination of turf, possible thatch, and clay.

The floor consisted of lightweight wattle interwo­ven around radial floor joists made of slender alder poles. It was supported underneath by a mass of alder poles, driven into the riverbed at an angle and bowed over to form an arch. An intermediate ring of short vertically driven ash and alder stakes provided additional support to the floor.

In the middle of the settlement, there was a particularly well-preserved central walkway. This structure was over 5.9m long, made of a continuous, metre-wide, hazel hurdle panel, founded on small-diameter stakes, and supported by poles which were tied into the floors of the adjacent build­ings.

Image showing palisade posts
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

Wood and Woodworking

The wood used to construct the Must Farm Settlement was sourced from a range of habi­tats and floated up or down the river. Less buoyant green oak logs may have been rafted together with ash and other more buoyant species to facilitate their movement.

The felling season for the trees used was between September and March in a single winter. At the time of the pile-dwelling’s construc­tion and occupation, the main species were oak and hazel, together with less evident ash, lime, beech, and elm. Ash wood was used in large quantities and was readily available and accessible nearby.

Axe or adze was most commonly used to fell or shape wood. There was no evidence of the use of saws. Gouges or chisels were also occasion­ally employed in the building process. The jointing technol­ogy used for the bulk of the structures was functional, consisting of axe cut, with somewhat rough mor­tise holes. The level of skill displayed suggests that the people involved were non-specialist woodworkers.

Most of the wood was used in an unchanged form with the bark still intact. This included the piles of the main structures and the palisade as well as the lighter sections such as roof rafters and floor supports.

Fifteen two-piece wooden buckets, made from hollowed-out alder logs with a separate base, are thought to have been used to store or transport liquids such as water or milk. A collection of bronze objects was found in one of these containers.

Other wooden artefacts involved in textile production include 40 wooden bobbins, 36 of which still had threads or fibres wrapped around them. Wooden hafts or handles belonging to several bronze tools and weapons were also recovered.

Late Bronze Age socketed axe complete with handle
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

Nine axe hafts of ash, oak and field maple were identified, three with the bronze socketed axe-heads still attached. Nine spear shafts or fragments of shafts, mainly of ash, were also found, two inserted in spear heads.

Perhaps, one of the more exciting artefacts found at Must Farm was an almost complete cartwheel made of alder planks together with fragments of a second, from Structure 3. An alder yoke designed to harness a single animal was also found in this building.

Household Equipment

At Must Farm, culinary equipment (pots, querns, troughs, and buckets); tools (sickles, gouges, axes) and textile-related items (loom weights, spindle whorls, plant fibre bundles and sticks of yarn), were consistently situated on the eastern side of buildings.

Various pots during the pottery re-fitting exercise
Photo: (c) Must Farm Website

Four of the five main buildings included a mix of jars, bowls, and cups, finewares and coarsewares, most of which were grouped within the eastern side of each building which may have been the ‘kitchen’ area.

Culinary tools include querns, stirrers and scoops, and chopping/serving boards. Fragments were found from at least six possible quernstones, three of which are traditional saddle querns.

Pottery is one of the most common categories of find from the Late Bronze Age. Some 128 individual vessels were identified, including at least 38 jars, 49 bowls and 12 cups. Most of the jars were medium or large, with capacities in the region of 4–6 litres and 10–19 litres, respectively.

The collection of at least 49 glass beads is unparalleled in a British context. All but one of these were monochrome, probably originally blue, green or turquoise in colour. In contrast, the bead necklaces were present in significant numbers only in the two larger roundhouses (Structures 1 and 5) while dogs were present only in Structure 5.

In Part 2, I shall look at food, wood and woodworking, fabric production, wider connections, the comparison with other settlements and abandonment.

For more information see:

“Must Farm pile-dwelling settlement: Vol. 1. Landscape, architecture and occupation.” (2024). Edited by Mark Knight, Rachel Ballantyne, Matthew Brudenell, Anwen Cooper, David Gibson & Iona Robinson Zeki

“Must Farm pile-dwelling settlement: Volume 2. Specialist reports.” (2024). Edited by Rachel Ballantyne, A. Cooper, D. Gibson, Mark Knight & I Robinson Zeki

Both volumes are freely accessible via the Must Farm website

https://www.mustfarm.com/bronze-age-settlement/