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Pitt Rivers Museum

1884.119.333

Copper hook-tanged weapon from Cyprus; probably Early or Middle Bronze Age in date. [Dan Hicks 30/04/2012]


1884.119.333

Digital asset copyright: Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford

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Collection type
Object
Description
Copper hook-tanged weapon from Cyprus; probably Early or Middle Bronze Age in date. [Dan Hicks 30/04/2012]
Long description
Tool or weapon. “Hook-tanged weapon. Two notches on the rounded shoulders of the blade end in faint grooves along the top f the pronounced midrib. The blade has straight sides and a sharp tip. Similar weapons with heart-shaped shoulders are predominantly of late EC and MC date.” [Description by Karageorghis, V., 2009, p. 115] [JFK 19/11/2009]
Geographical reference
Unknown
Date / Period
Date made: 2500-1600 BC Archaeological period: Bronze Age
Date collected
By 1874
Acquisition information
Donated: 1884
Materials and processes
Material Copper Metal, Process Cast
Dimensions
Length: max 425 mm
Object numbers
Accession number: 1884.119.333 Other numbers: Cypriot Archaeology 154 PR Cat other PR nos: 1484 PR Cat other PR nos: 2603 PR no.: 1484
Research and responses

At a sale at Sotheby's on 1st and 2nd May 1871, Pitt Rivers purchased two lots of metalwork. The sale was of material from the collections of General Luigi di Cesnola. It is possible but by no means certain that this object is from one of these lots. The lots were : Lot 18 'A Spear-Head with its socket ... 10in.' and lot 20 'Two Spear-Heads'. There does not appear to be a metal weapon or blade from Cyprus in the Pitt Rivers Collection which fits the measurements given but it is possible that the measurements were not exact. [MdeA 13 July 1999]

At a sale at Sotheby's on 3rd July 1871 Pitt Rivers purchased three lots of metalwork. The sale was the remainder the General Luigi di Cesnola's collection. It is possible but by no means certain that this object is from one of these lots. The lots were: Lot 62, Lot 63 and Lot 126 and consisted of 22 metal items - ten spear heads, a socketted spear, celts and other unlisted metal items.[MdeA 9 July 1999]

In 1999 samples from the PRM's collection of Cypriot archaeological metalwork were subjected to electron probe microanalysis with wavelength dispersive spectrometry by Peter Northover of the Department of Materials, University of Oxford. The sample from this object was given the sample number 'Cesnola 29' and subjected to three separate analyses, the mean results being as follows: Fe 0.33, Co 0.00, Ni 0.00, Cu 98.69, Zn 0.00, As 0.80, Sb 0.00, Sn 0.00, Ag 0.01, Bi 0.02, Pb 0.03, Au 0.04, S 0.08. For the full results of the analysis, see Peter Northover's unpublished report 'Analysis of Copper Alloy Metalwork in the Cesnola Collection, Pitt-Rivers Museum' (in RDF: Researchers: Northover). [JC 14 11 2008]

Email correspondence today with Peter Northover confirmed that, based on his metallurgical analysis, this object is most accurately described as 'impure copper', rather than 'copper alloy'. I have updated the description accordingly [Correspondence now placed on file in RDF: Researchers: Northover] [Dan Hicks 01/05/2012]

Associated publications
Published under catalogue number 154 on page 115 in Karageorghis, V., (2009) Cypriote Art in the Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford. A.G. Leventis Foundation. [JFK 09/10/2009]

Search terms: Tool, Weapon, Knife, Dagger