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Gundestrup cauldron

The Gundestrup cauldron is a richly decorated silver vessel, thought to date from between 200 BC and 300 AD,[1][2] or more narrowly between 150 BC and 1 BC.[3] This places it within the late La Tène period or early Roman Iron Age. The cauldron is the largest known example of European Iron Age silver work (diameter: 69 cm (27 in); height: 42 cm (17 in)). It was found dismantled, with the other pieces stacked inside the base, in 1891, in a peat bog near the hamlet of Gundestrup in the Aars parish of Himmerland, Denmark (56°49′N 9°33′E / 56.817°N 9.550°E / 56.817; 9.550).[4][5] It is now usually on display in the National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen, with replicas at other museums; during 2015–16, it was in the UK on a travelling exhibition called The Celts.[6]

The Gundestrup Cauldron; exterior plates b, g, e
Gundestrup
class=notpageimage|
Discovery site in Denmark
Another view; exterior plates d, e, c, f
Another view; from left, exterior plates b, f, a

The cauldron is not complete, and now consists of a rounded cup-shaped bottom making up the lower part of the cauldron, usually called the base plate, above which are five interior plates and seven exterior ones; a missing eighth exterior plate would be needed to encircle the cauldron, and only two sections of a rounded rim at the top of the cauldron survive. The base plate is mostly smooth and undecorated inside and out, apart from a decorated round medallion in the centre of the interior. All the other plates are heavily decorated with repoussé work, hammered from beneath to push out the silver. Other techniques were used to add detail, and there is extensive gilding and some use of inlaid pieces of glass for the eyes of figures. Other pieces of fittings were found. Altogether the weight is just under 9 kilograms.[7]

While the vessel was found in Denmark, it was probably not made there or nearby; it includes elements of Gaulish and Thracian origin in the workmanship, metallurgy, and imagery. The techniques and elements of the style of the panels relate closely to other Thracian silver, while much of the depiction, in particular of the human figures, relates to the Celts, though attempts to relate the scenes closely to Celtic mythology remain controversial. Other aspects of the iconography derive from the Near East.[8]

Hospitality on a large scale was probably an obligation for Celtic elites, and although cauldrons were therefore an important item of prestige metalwork, they are usually much plainer and smaller than this. This is an exceptionally large and elaborate object with no close parallel, except a large fragment from a bronze cauldron also found in Denmark, at Rynkeby;[9] however the exceptional wetland deposits in Scandinavia have produced a number of objects of types that were probably once common but where other examples have not survived. It has been much discussed by scholars, and represents a fascinatingly complex demonstration of the many cross-currents in European art, as well as an unusual degree of narrative for Celtic art,[10] though we are unlikely ever to fully understand its original meanings.

Discovery edit

 
The central medallion of the base plate, from a replica

The Gundestrup cauldron was discovered by peat cutters in a small peat bog called Rævemose (near the larger Borremose bog) on 28 May 1891.[11] The Danish government paid a large reward to the finders, who subsequently quarreled bitterly amongst themselves over its division.[4][5] Palaeobotanical investigations of the peat bog at the time of the discovery showed that the land had been dry when the cauldron was deposited, and the peat gradually grew over it. The manner of stacking suggested an attempt to make the cauldron inconspicuous and well-hidden.[4] Another investigation of Rævemose was undertaken in 2002, concluding that the peat bog may have existed when the cauldron was buried.[1]

The cauldron was found in a dismantled state with five long rectangular plates, seven short plates, one round plate (normally termed the "base plate"), and two fragments of tubing stacked inside the curved base.[1][2][4][5] In addition, there is a piece of iron from a ring originally placed inside the silver tubes along the rim of the cauldron.[1][2] It is assumed that there is a missing eighth plate because the circumference of the seven outer plates is smaller than the circumference of the five inner plates.[1][2][4][5]

A set of careful full-size replicas have been made. One is in the National Museum of Ireland in Dublin,[12] and several are in France, including the Musée gallo-romain de Fourvière at Lyon and the Musée d'archéologie nationale at Saint-Germain-en-Laye.

Reconstruction edit

Since the cauldron was found in pieces, it had to be reconstructed. The traditional order of the plates was determined by Sophus Müller, the first of many to analyze the cauldron. His logic uses the positions of the trace solder located at the rim of the bowl. In two cases, a puncture mark penetrating the inner and outer plates also helps to establish the order.[2][4][5] In its final form, the plates are arranged in an alternation of female-male depictions, assuming the missing eighth plate is of a female.[13] Not all analysts agree with Müller's ordering, however. Taylor has pointed out that aside from the two cases of puncturing, the order cannot be determined from the solder alignments. His argument is that the plates are not directly adjacent to each other, but are separated by a 2 cm gap; thus, the plates in this order cannot be read with certainty as the true narrative, supposing one exists.[1][2][4][5][13] However Larsen (2005: 16, fig. 12) indicates, not only did his study vindicate the order for the inner plates established, by Muller, Klindt-Jensen, and Olmsted, but the order of the outer plates is also established by the rivet holes, the solder alignments, and the scrape marks.

Metallurgy edit

 
Inside panel A with the famous horned figure
 
Inside panel D with bull-slaying, replica

The Gundestrup cauldron is composed almost entirely of silver, but there is also a substantial amount of gold for the gilding, tin for the solder and glass for the figures' eyes. According to experimental evidence, the materials for the vessel were not added at the same time, so the cauldron can be considered as the work of artisans over a span of several hundred years. The quality of the repairs to the cauldron, of which there are many, is inferior to the original craftsmanship.[1][2][4][5]

Silver was not a common material in Celtic art, and certainly not on this scale. Except sometimes for small pieces of jewellery, gold or bronze were more usual for prestige metalwork.[14] At the time that the Gundestrup cauldron was created, silver was obtained through cupellation of lead/silver ores.[2] By comparing the concentration of lead isotopes with the silverwork of other cultures, it has been suggested that the silver came from multiple ore deposits, mostly from Celtic northern France and western Germany in the pre-Roman period. The lead isotope studies also indicate that the silver for manufacturing the plates was prepared by repeatedly melting ingots and/or scrap silver. Three to six distinct batches of recycled silver may have been used in making the vessel.[1][2] Specifically, the circular "base plate" may have originated as a phalera, and it is commonly thought to have been positioned in the bottom of the bowl as a late addition, soldered in to repair a hole.[5] By an alternative theory, this phalera was not initially part of the bowl, but instead formed part of the decorations of a wooden cover.[5]

The gold can be sorted into two groups based on purity and separated by the concentration of silver and copper. The less pure gilding, which is thicker, can be considered a later repair, as the thinner, purer inlay adheres better to the silver. The adherence of the overall gold is quite poor. The lack of mercury from the gold analysis suggests that a fire-gilding technique was not used on the Gundestrup cauldron. The gilding appears to have instead been made by mechanical means, which explains the function of closely spaced punch marks on the gilded areas.[1][2]

An examination of lead isotopes similar to the one used on the silver was employed for the tin. All of the samples of tin soldering are consistent in lead-isotope composition with ingots from Cornwall in western Britain. The tin used for soldering the plates and bowl together, as well as the glass eyes, is very uniform in its high purity.[1][2]

Finally, the glass inlays of the Gundestrup cauldron have been determined through the use of X-ray fluorescence radiation to be of a soda-lime type composition. The glass contained elements that can be attributed to calcareous sand and mineral soda, typical of the east coast of the Mediterranean region. The analyses also narrowed down the production time of the glass to between the second century BC and first century AD.[1][2]

Flow of raw material edit

 
Exterior plate d

The workflow of the manufacturing process consisted of a few steps that required a great amount of skill. Batches of silver were melted in crucibles with the addition of copper for a subtler alloy. The melted silver was cast into flat ingots and hammered into intermediate plates.[1] For the relief work, the sheet-silver was annealed to allow shapes to be beaten into high repoussé; these rough shapes were then filled with pitch from the back to make them firm enough for further detailing with punches and tracers. The pitch was melted out, areas of pattern were gilded, and the eyes of the larger figures were inlaid with glass. The plates were probably worked in a flat form and later bent into curves to solder them together.[4]

It is generally agreed that the Gundestrup cauldron was the work of multiple silversmiths. Using scanning electron microscopy, Benner Larson has identified 15 different punches used on the plates, falling into three distinct tool sets. No individual plate has marks from more than one of these groups, and this fits with previous attempts at stylistic attribution, which identify at least three different silversmiths.[1][2][4][5] Multiple artisans would also explain the highly variable purity and thickness of the silver.[1][2]

Origins edit

 
Interior plate B, replica

The silverworking techniques used in the cauldron are unknown from the Celtic world, but are consistent with the renowned Thracian sheet-silver tradition. The scenes depicted are not distinctively Thracian, but certain elements of composition, decorative motifs, and illustrated items (such as the shoelaces on the antlered figure) identify it as Thracian work.[4][5]

Taylor and Bergquist have postulated that the Celtic tribe known as the Scordisci commissioned the cauldron from native Thracian silversmiths. According to classical historians, the Cimbri, a Teutonic tribe, went south from the lower Elbe region and attacked the Scordisci in 118 BC. After withstanding several defeats at the hands of the Romans, the Cimbri retreated north, possibly taking with them this cauldron to settle in Himmerland, where the vessel was found.[4][5]

According to Olmsted (2001) the art style of the Gundestrup cauldron is that utilized in Armorican coinage dating to 75-55 BC, as exemplified in the billon coins of the Coriosolites. This art style is unique to northwest Gaul and is largely confined to the region between the Seine and the Loire, a region in which, according to Caesar, the wealthy sea-faring Veneti played a dominant and hegemonic role. Agreeing with this area of production, determined by the art style, is the fact that the "lead isotope compositions of the [Gundestrup] cauldron plates" mostly included "the same silver as used in northern France for the Coriosolite coins" (Larsen 2005: 35). Not only does the Gundestrup cauldron enlighten us about this coin-driven art style, where the larger-metalwork smiths were also the mint-masters producing the coins, but the cauldron also portrays cultural items, such as swords, armor, and shields, found and produced in this same cultural area, confirming the agreement between art style and metal analysis. If as Olmsted (2001) and Hachmann (1990) suggest, the Veneti also produced the silver phalerae, found on the Isle of Sark, as well as the Helden phalera, then there are a number of silver items of the type exemplified by the Gundestrup cauldron originating in northwest France, dating to just before the Roman conquest.

Nielsen believes that the question of origin is the wrong one to ask and can produce misleading results. Because of the widespread migration of numerous ethnic groups like the Celts and Teutonic peoples and events like Roman expansion and subsequent Romanization, it is highly unlikely that only one ethnic group was responsible for the development of the Gundestrup cauldron. Instead, the make and art of the cauldron can be thought of as the product of a fusion of cultures, each inspiring and expanding upon one another. In the end, Nielsen concludes that, based on accelerator datings from beeswax found on the back of the plates, the vessel was created within the Roman Iron Age.[1] However, as an addendum to Nielson article indicates (2005: 57), results from the Leibniz Lab on the same bee's wax dated some 400 years earlier.

According to Professor Ronald Hutton, as the cauldron metallurgy has been linked to the Black Sea and has elephants on it, the cauldron should no longer be considered Celtic. [15]

Iconography edit

 
Exterior plate f, with torc-wearing head
 
Detail from interior plate A
 
Interior plate C

Base plate edit

The decorated medallion on the circular base plate depicts a bull. Above the back of the bull is a female figure wielding a sword; three dogs are also portrayed, one over the bull's head and another under its hooves. Presumably all of these figures are in combat; the third dog, located beneath the bull and near its tail, seems to be dead, and is only faintly shown in engraving, and the bull may have been brought down. Below the bull is scrolling ivy that draws from classical Greco-Roman art.[16] The horns of the bull are missing, but there is a hole right through the head where they were originally fitted; they were perhaps gold. The head of the bull rises entirely clear of the plate, and the medallion is considered the most accomplished part of the cauldron in technical and artistic terms.[17]

Exterior plates edit

Each of the seven exterior plates centrally depicts a bust. Plates a, b, c, and d show bearded male figures, and the remaining three are female.

  • On plate a, the bearded man holds in each hand a much smaller figure by the arm. Each of those two reach upward toward a small boar. Under the feet of the figures (on the shoulders of the larger man) are a dog on the left side and a winged horse on the right side.
  • The figure on plate b holds in each hand a sea-horse or dragon.
  • On plate c, a male figure raises his empty fists. On his right shoulder is a man in a "boxing" position, and on his left shoulder, there is a leaping figure with a small horseman underneath.
  • Plate d shows a bearded figure holding a stag by the hind quarters in each hand.
  • The female figure on plate e is flanked by two smaller male busts.
  • A female figure holds a bird in her upraised right hand on plate f. Her left arm is horizontal, supporting a man and a dog lying on its back. Two birds of prey are situated on either side of her head. Her hair is being plaited by a small woman on the right.
  • On plate g, the female figure has her arms crossed. On her right shoulder, a scene of a man fighting a lion is shown. On her left shoulder is a leaping figure similar to the one on plate c.

Interior plates edit

  • Plate A shows an antlered male figure seated in a central position, often identified as Cernunnos. In his right hand, Cernunnos holds a torc, and with his left hand he grips a horned serpent a little below the head. To the left is a stag with antlers that are very similar to the human/divine figure. Surrounding the scene are other canine, feline, and bovine animals, some but not all facing the male figure, as well as a human riding a dolphin. Between the antlers of the god is an unknown motif, possibly a plant or a tree, but most likely just the standard background decoration.[18]
  • On plate B, the large bust of a torc-wearing female is flanked by two six-spoked wheels, what seem to be two elephants, and two griffins. A feline or hound is underneath the bust. In northwest Gaulish coinage from 150 to 50 BC, such wheels often indicate a chariot, so the scene could be seen as a goddess in an elephant biga (Olmsted 1979; 2001: 125–126).
  • The large bust of a bearded figure holding on to a broken wheel is at the centre of plate C. A smaller, leaping figure with a horned helmet is also holding the rim of the wheel. Under the leaping figure is a horned serpent. The group is surrounded by three griffins facing left below, and above, two strange animals who look like hyenas,[19] facing right. The wheel's spokes are rendered asymmetrically, but judging from the lower half, the wheel may have had twelve spokes.
  • Plate D depicts a bull-slaying scene, with the same composition repeated three times across the plate; the only place where such repetition appears on the cauldron. Three large bulls are arranged in a row, facing right, and each of them is attacked by a man with a sword. A feline and a dog, both running to the left, appear respectively over and below each bull. After the Stowe version of the "Tain", Medb's men run forward to kill the Donn bull after his fight with Medb's "white-horned" bull, whom he kills.
  • On the lower half of plate E, a line of warriors bearing spears and shields march to the left, bringing up the rear is a warrior with no shield, bearing a sword, and wearing a boar-crested helmet which resembles helmets from later Germanic cultures. Behind him are three carnyx players. In front of this group a dog leaps up, perhaps holding them back. Behind the dog, at the left side of the scene, a figure over twice the size of the others holds a man upside down, apparently with ease, and apparently is about to immerse him in a barrel or cauldron. On the upper half, warriors on horseback with crested helmets and spears ride away to the right, with at the right a horned serpent, fitted in above the tops of the carnyxes, who is perhaps leading them. The two lines are below and above what appears to be a tree, still in leaf, lying sideways. This is now most often interpreted as a scene where fallen warriors are dipped into a cauldron to be reborn into their next life, or afterlife. This can be paralleled in later Welsh literature.[20]

Interpretation and parallels edit

 
The Pashupati Seal (Lord of Animals) from the Indus Valley civilization[21] is remarkably similar to the antlered figure of plate A.[5][22]

For many years, some scholars have interpreted the cauldron's images in terms of the Celtic pantheon, and Celtic mythology as it is presented in much later literature in Celtic languages from the British Isles. Others regard the latter interpretations with great suspicion.[23] Much less controversially, there are clear parallels between details of the figures and Iron Age Celtic artefacts excavated by archaeology.[24]

Other details of the iconography clearly derive from the art of the ancient Near East, and there are intriguing parallels with ancient India and later Hindu deities and their stories. Scholars are mostly content to regard the former as motifs borrowed purely for their visual appeal, without carrying over anything much of their original meaning, but despite the distance some have attempted to relate the latter to wider traditions remaining from Proto-Indo-European religion.

Celtic archaeology edit

Among the most specific details that are clearly Celtic are the group of carnyx players. The carnyx war horn was known from Roman descriptions of the Celts in battle and Trajan's Column, and a few pieces are known from archaeology, their number greatly increased by finds at Tintignac in France in 2004. Diodorus Siculus wrote around 60–30 BC (Histories, 5.30):

"Their trumpets again are of a peculiar barbarian kind; they blow into them and produce a harsh sound which suits the tumult of war"

Another detail that is easily matched to archaeology is the torc worn by several figures, clearly of the "buffer" type, a fairly common Celtic artefact found in Western Europe, most often France, from the period the cauldron is thought to have been made.[25]

Other details with more tentative Celtic links are the long swords carried by some figures, and the horned and antlered helmets or head-dresses and the boar crest worn on their helmet by some warriors. These can be related to Celtic artefacts such as a helmet with a raptor crest from Romania, the Waterloo Helmet, Torrs Pony-cap and Horns and various animal figures including boars, of uncertain function. The shield bosses, spurs and horse harness also relate to Celtic examples.[26]

 
Gallo-Roman figure of Taranis/Jupiter with his wheel and thunderbolt, and carrying torcs

The antlered figure in plate A has been commonly identified as Cernunnos, who is named (the only source for the name) on the 1st-century Gallo-Roman Pillar of the Boatmen, where he is shown as an antlered figure with torcs hanging from his antlers.[27] Possibly the lost portion below his bust showed him seated cross-legged as the figure on the cauldron is. Otherwise there is evidence of a horned god from several cultures.

The figure holding the broken wheel in plate C is more tentatively thought to be Taranis, the solar or thunder "wheel-god" named by Lucian and represented in a number of Iron Age images; there are also many wheels that seem to have been amulets.[28]

Near East and Asia edit

The many animals depicted on the cauldron include elephants, a dolphin, leopard-like felines, and various fantastic animals, as well as animals that are widespread across Eurasia, such as snakes, cattle, deer, boars and birds. Celtic art often includes animals, but not often in fantastic forms with wings and aspects of different animals combined.[29] There are exceptions to this, some when motifs are clearly borrowed, as the boy riding a dolphin is borrowed from Greek art, and others that are more native, like the ram-headed horned snake who appears three times on the cauldron.[30] The art of Thrace often shows animals, most often powerful and fierce ones, many of which are also very common in the ancient Near East, or the Scythian art of the Eurasian steppe, whose mobile owners provided a route for the very rapid transmission of motifs and objects between the civilizations of Asia and Europe.

In particular, the two figures standing in profile flanking the large head on exterior plate F, each with a bird with outstretched wings just above their head, clearly resemble a common motif in ancient Assyrian and Persian art, down to the long garments they wear. The figure is usually the ruler, and the wings belong to a symbolic representation of a deity protecting him. Other plates show griffins borrowed from Ancient Greek art of that of the Near East. On several of the exterior plates the large heads, probably of deities, in the centre of the exterior panels, have small arms and hands, either each grasping an animal or human in a version of the common Master of Animals motif, or held up empty at the side of the head in a way suggesting inspiration from this motif.

Celtic mythology edit

Apart from Cernunnos and Taranis, discussed above, there is no consensus regarding the other figures, and many scholars reject attempts to tie them in to figures known from much later and geographically distant sources. Some Celticists have explained the elephants depicted on plate B as a reference to Hannibal's crossing of the Alps.[5]

Because of the double-headed wolfish monster attacking the two small figures of fallen men on plate b, parallels can be drawn to the Welsh character Manawydan or the Irish Manannán, a god of the sea and the Otherworld. Another possibility is the Gaulish version of Apollo, who was not only a warrior, but one associated with springs and healing besides.[13]

Olmsted relates the scenes of the cauldron to those of the Táin Bó Cuailnge, where the antlered figure is Cú Chulainn, the bull of the base plate is Donn Cuailnge, and the female and two males of plate e are Medb, Ailill, and Fergus mac Róich. Olmsted also toys with the idea that the female figure flanked by two birds on plate f could be Medb with her pets or Morrígan, the Irish war goddess who often changes into a carrion bird.[13] Olmsted (1979, 1994) sees Cernunnos as Gaulish version of Irish Cu Chulainn. As Olmsted (1979) indicates, the scene on the upper right of plate A, a lion, a boy on a dolphin, and a bull, can be interpreted after the origin of the bulls of the Irish "Tain", who take on similar animal forms, fighting each other in each form, as indicated in the two lions fighting on the lower right of plate A.

Plate B could be interpreted after a Gaulish version of the beginning of the Irish "Tain", where Medb sets out to get the Donn bull after making a circuit around her army in her chariot to bring luck to the "Tain". Olmsted (1979) interprets the scene on Plate C as a Gaulish version of the Irish Tain incidents where Cu Chulainn kicks in the Morrigan's ribs when she comes at him as an eel and then confronts Fergus with his broken chariot wheel.[13]

Olmsted (1979) interprets the scene with warriors on the lower part of Plate E as a Gaulish version of the "Aided Fraich" episode of the "Tain" where Fraech and his men leap over the fallen tree, and then Fraech wrestles with his father Cu Chulainn and is drowned by him, while his magic horn blowers play "the music of sleeping" against Cu Chulainn. In the "Aided Fraich" episode, Fraech's body is then taken into the underworld by weeping banchuire to be healed by his aunt and wife Morrigan. This incident is depicted on outer plate f, which is adjacent and opposite to plate E.[13]

Both Olmsted and Taylor agree that the female of plate f might be Rhiannon of the Mabinogion. Rhiannon is famous for her birds, whose songs could "awaken the dead and lull the living to sleep". In this role, Rhiannon could be considered the Goddess of the Otherworld.[5][13]

Taylor presents a more pancultural view of the cauldron's images; he concludes that the deities and scenes portrayed on the cauldron are not specific to one culture, but many. He compares Rhiannon, whom he thinks is the figure of plate f, with Hariti, an ogress of Bactrian mythology. In addition, he points to the similarity between the female figure of plate B and the Hindu goddess Lakshmi, whose depictions are often accompanied by elephants. Wheel gods are also cross-cultural with deities like Taranis and Vishnu, a god from Hinduism.[5]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Nielsen, S; Andersen, J; Baker, J; Christensen, C; Glastrup, J; et al. (2005). "The Gundestrup cauldron: New scientific and technical investigations”, Acta Archaeologica, 76: 1–58. ISSN 0065-101X
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jouttijärvi, Arne (2009), "The Gundestrup Cauldron: Metallurgy and Manufacturing Techniques”, Materials and Manufacturing Processes, 24: 960–966. ISSN 1042-6914
  3. ^ NMD, "The dating and origin of the silver cauldron"; Koch
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Bergquist, A K & Taylor, T F (1987), "The origin of the Gundestrup cauldron", Antiquity 61: 10–24.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Taylor, Timothy (1992), "The Gundestrup cauldron", Scientific American, 266: 84–89. ISSN 0036-8733
  6. ^ Exhibition page 2016-01-12 at the Wayback Machine, National Museum of Scotland, 10 Mar – 25 Sep 2016
  7. ^ Koch; NMD
  8. ^ NMD; Green, 45, Sandars, 255
  9. ^ Sandars, 252; Megaws, 174–175; Laings, 85, and 68–69 on the even larger, but very fragmentary, Brå cauldron
  10. ^ Green, 84
  11. ^ Koch, John T. (2006). Celtic culture: a historical encyclopedia. Vol. 1-. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781851094400.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-06-28. Retrieved 2010-08-22.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Olmsted, Garrett S (1979), "The Gundestrup cauldron : its archaeological context, the style and iconography of its portrayed motifs and their narration of a Gaulish version of Táin Bó Cúailnge", Collection Latomus 162 [Latomus: Bruxelle 1979]. ISBN 2-87031-102-8
  14. ^ Green, 45
  15. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-Xqvp0PYLE
  16. ^ Megaws, 175–176; NMD, "The bullfight"
  17. ^ Sandars, 256; Laings, 83; Koch
  18. ^ Zakroff, Laura Tempest (2017-05-08). The Witch's Cauldron: The Craft, Lore & Magick of Ritual Vessels. Llewellyn Worldwide. ISBN 9780738752525.
  19. ^ Green, 137
  20. ^ NMD, "The Gundestrup Cauldron – The Cauldron of Fate?"; Megaws, 176
  21. ^ Gavin Flood (15 April 2008). The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism. John Wiley & Sons. p. 204. ISBN 9780470998687.
  22. ^ Ross, Ann (1967), "The Horned God in Britain ", Pagan Celtic Britain: ISBN 0-89733-435-3
  23. ^ Koch; Megaws, 176
  24. ^ Megaws, 174–176; Koch
  25. ^ Megaws, 174–176; Green, 99
  26. ^ Megaws, 174–177, 160–163; Green, 100–103
  27. ^ Green, 78, 135, 137, 147–148, 151
  28. ^ Green, 147–149
  29. ^ Koch; Megaws, 160–163
  30. ^ Green, 135–139

References edit

  • Green, Miranda, Celtic Art, Reading the Messages, 1996, The Everyman Art Library, ISBN 0297833650
  • Koch, John ed., "Gundestrup cauldron" in Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia, 2006, ABC-CLIO, ISBN 1851094407, 9781851094400, google books
  • "Laings", Lloyd Laing and Jennifer Laing. Art of the Celts: From 700 BC to the Celtic Revival, 1992, Thames & Hudson (World of Art), ISBN 0500202567
  • "Megaws" = Megaw, Ruth and Vincent, Celtic Art, 1989, Thames and Hudson, ISBN 0500050503
  • "NMD" = "The Gundestrup Cauldron", National Museum of Denmark, web section, accessed on 1 February 2016
  • Olmsted, Garrett (2001), "Celtic Art in Transition during the First Century BC", Archaeolingua: Volume 12: 2001: ISBN 9638046376.
  • Sandars, Nancy K., Prehistoric Art in Europe, Penguin (Pelican, now Yale, History of Art), 1968 (nb 1st edn.)

Further reading edit

  • Kaul, Fleming (ed), Thracian Tales on the Gundestrup Cauldron, 1991, Najade Press, ISBN 978-9-073-83501-6.
  • Garrett S. Olmsted, The Gods of the Celts and the Indo-Europeans, Inndbrucker Beitrage zur Kulterwissenschaft: Volume 92: 1994: ISBN 3851241738, 9789073835016, 2019 revised version
  • Salo, Unto (2018). The Gundestrup Cauldron: Cultural-Historical and Social-Historical Perspectives. JIES Monograph No. 63. ISBN 978-0-9845383-4-8.

gundestrup, cauldron, richly, decorated, silver, vessel, thought, date, from, between, more, narrowly, between, this, places, within, late, tène, period, early, roman, iron, cauldron, largest, known, example, european, iron, silver, work, diameter, height, fou. The Gundestrup cauldron is a richly decorated silver vessel thought to date from between 200 BC and 300 AD 1 2 or more narrowly between 150 BC and 1 BC 3 This places it within the late La Tene period or early Roman Iron Age The cauldron is the largest known example of European Iron Age silver work diameter 69 cm 27 in height 42 cm 17 in It was found dismantled with the other pieces stacked inside the base in 1891 in a peat bog near the hamlet of Gundestrup in the Aars parish of Himmerland Denmark 56 49 N 9 33 E 56 817 N 9 550 E 56 817 9 550 4 5 It is now usually on display in the National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen with replicas at other museums during 2015 16 it was in the UK on a travelling exhibition called The Celts 6 The Gundestrup Cauldron exterior plates b g e Gundestrupclass notpageimage Discovery site in Denmark Another view exterior plates d e c f Another view from left exterior plates b f a The cauldron is not complete and now consists of a rounded cup shaped bottom making up the lower part of the cauldron usually called the base plate above which are five interior plates and seven exterior ones a missing eighth exterior plate would be needed to encircle the cauldron and only two sections of a rounded rim at the top of the cauldron survive The base plate is mostly smooth and undecorated inside and out apart from a decorated round medallion in the centre of the interior All the other plates are heavily decorated with repousse work hammered from beneath to push out the silver Other techniques were used to add detail and there is extensive gilding and some use of inlaid pieces of glass for the eyes of figures Other pieces of fittings were found Altogether the weight is just under 9 kilograms 7 While the vessel was found in Denmark it was probably not made there or nearby it includes elements of Gaulish and Thracian origin in the workmanship metallurgy and imagery The techniques and elements of the style of the panels relate closely to other Thracian silver while much of the depiction in particular of the human figures relates to the Celts though attempts to relate the scenes closely to Celtic mythology remain controversial Other aspects of the iconography derive from the Near East 8 Hospitality on a large scale was probably an obligation for Celtic elites and although cauldrons were therefore an important item of prestige metalwork they are usually much plainer and smaller than this This is an exceptionally large and elaborate object with no close parallel except a large fragment from a bronze cauldron also found in Denmark at Rynkeby 9 however the exceptional wetland deposits in Scandinavia have produced a number of objects of types that were probably once common but where other examples have not survived It has been much discussed by scholars and represents a fascinatingly complex demonstration of the many cross currents in European art as well as an unusual degree of narrative for Celtic art 10 though we are unlikely ever to fully understand its original meanings Contents 1 Discovery 2 Reconstruction 3 Metallurgy 4 Flow of raw material 5 Origins 6 Iconography 6 1 Base plate 6 2 Exterior plates 6 3 Interior plates 7 Interpretation and parallels 7 1 Celtic archaeology 7 2 Near East and Asia 7 3 Celtic mythology 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further readingDiscovery edit nbsp The central medallion of the base plate from a replica The Gundestrup cauldron was discovered by peat cutters in a small peat bog called Raevemose near the larger Borremose bog on 28 May 1891 11 The Danish government paid a large reward to the finders who subsequently quarreled bitterly amongst themselves over its division 4 5 Palaeobotanical investigations of the peat bog at the time of the discovery showed that the land had been dry when the cauldron was deposited and the peat gradually grew over it The manner of stacking suggested an attempt to make the cauldron inconspicuous and well hidden 4 Another investigation of Raevemose was undertaken in 2002 concluding that the peat bog may have existed when the cauldron was buried 1 The cauldron was found in a dismantled state with five long rectangular plates seven short plates one round plate normally termed the base plate and two fragments of tubing stacked inside the curved base 1 2 4 5 In addition there is a piece of iron from a ring originally placed inside the silver tubes along the rim of the cauldron 1 2 It is assumed that there is a missing eighth plate because the circumference of the seven outer plates is smaller than the circumference of the five inner plates 1 2 4 5 A set of careful full size replicas have been made One is in the National Museum of Ireland in Dublin 12 and several are in France including the Musee gallo romain de Fourviere at Lyon and the Musee d archeologie nationale at Saint Germain en Laye Reconstruction editSince the cauldron was found in pieces it had to be reconstructed The traditional order of the plates was determined by Sophus Muller the first of many to analyze the cauldron His logic uses the positions of the trace solder located at the rim of the bowl In two cases a puncture mark penetrating the inner and outer plates also helps to establish the order 2 4 5 In its final form the plates are arranged in an alternation of female male depictions assuming the missing eighth plate is of a female 13 Not all analysts agree with Muller s ordering however Taylor has pointed out that aside from the two cases of puncturing the order cannot be determined from the solder alignments His argument is that the plates are not directly adjacent to each other but are separated by a 2 cm gap thus the plates in this order cannot be read with certainty as the true narrative supposing one exists 1 2 4 5 13 However Larsen 2005 16 fig 12 indicates not only did his study vindicate the order for the inner plates established by Muller Klindt Jensen and Olmsted but the order of the outer plates is also established by the rivet holes the solder alignments and the scrape marks Metallurgy edit nbsp Inside panel A with the famous horned figure nbsp Inside panel D with bull slaying replica The Gundestrup cauldron is composed almost entirely of silver but there is also a substantial amount of gold for the gilding tin for the solder and glass for the figures eyes According to experimental evidence the materials for the vessel were not added at the same time so the cauldron can be considered as the work of artisans over a span of several hundred years The quality of the repairs to the cauldron of which there are many is inferior to the original craftsmanship 1 2 4 5 Silver was not a common material in Celtic art and certainly not on this scale Except sometimes for small pieces of jewellery gold or bronze were more usual for prestige metalwork 14 At the time that the Gundestrup cauldron was created silver was obtained through cupellation of lead silver ores 2 By comparing the concentration of lead isotopes with the silverwork of other cultures it has been suggested that the silver came from multiple ore deposits mostly from Celtic northern France and western Germany in the pre Roman period The lead isotope studies also indicate that the silver for manufacturing the plates was prepared by repeatedly melting ingots and or scrap silver Three to six distinct batches of recycled silver may have been used in making the vessel 1 2 Specifically the circular base plate may have originated as a phalera and it is commonly thought to have been positioned in the bottom of the bowl as a late addition soldered in to repair a hole 5 By an alternative theory this phalera was not initially part of the bowl but instead formed part of the decorations of a wooden cover 5 The gold can be sorted into two groups based on purity and separated by the concentration of silver and copper The less pure gilding which is thicker can be considered a later repair as the thinner purer inlay adheres better to the silver The adherence of the overall gold is quite poor The lack of mercury from the gold analysis suggests that a fire gilding technique was not used on the Gundestrup cauldron The gilding appears to have instead been made by mechanical means which explains the function of closely spaced punch marks on the gilded areas 1 2 An examination of lead isotopes similar to the one used on the silver was employed for the tin All of the samples of tin soldering are consistent in lead isotope composition with ingots from Cornwall in western Britain The tin used for soldering the plates and bowl together as well as the glass eyes is very uniform in its high purity 1 2 Finally the glass inlays of the Gundestrup cauldron have been determined through the use of X ray fluorescence radiation to be of a soda lime type composition The glass contained elements that can be attributed to calcareous sand and mineral soda typical of the east coast of the Mediterranean region The analyses also narrowed down the production time of the glass to between the second century BC and first century AD 1 2 Flow of raw material edit nbsp Exterior plate d The workflow of the manufacturing process consisted of a few steps that required a great amount of skill Batches of silver were melted in crucibles with the addition of copper for a subtler alloy The melted silver was cast into flat ingots and hammered into intermediate plates 1 For the relief work the sheet silver was annealed to allow shapes to be beaten into high repousse these rough shapes were then filled with pitch from the back to make them firm enough for further detailing with punches and tracers The pitch was melted out areas of pattern were gilded and the eyes of the larger figures were inlaid with glass The plates were probably worked in a flat form and later bent into curves to solder them together 4 It is generally agreed that the Gundestrup cauldron was the work of multiple silversmiths Using scanning electron microscopy Benner Larson has identified 15 different punches used on the plates falling into three distinct tool sets No individual plate has marks from more than one of these groups and this fits with previous attempts at stylistic attribution which identify at least three different silversmiths 1 2 4 5 Multiple artisans would also explain the highly variable purity and thickness of the silver 1 2 Origins edit nbsp Interior plate B replica The silverworking techniques used in the cauldron are unknown from the Celtic world but are consistent with the renowned Thracian sheet silver tradition The scenes depicted are not distinctively Thracian but certain elements of composition decorative motifs and illustrated items such as the shoelaces on the antlered figure identify it as Thracian work 4 5 Taylor and Bergquist have postulated that the Celtic tribe known as the Scordisci commissioned the cauldron from native Thracian silversmiths According to classical historians the Cimbri a Teutonic tribe went south from the lower Elbe region and attacked the Scordisci in 118 BC After withstanding several defeats at the hands of the Romans the Cimbri retreated north possibly taking with them this cauldron to settle in Himmerland where the vessel was found 4 5 According to Olmsted 2001 the art style of the Gundestrup cauldron is that utilized in Armorican coinage dating to 75 55 BC as exemplified in the billon coins of the Coriosolites This art style is unique to northwest Gaul and is largely confined to the region between the Seine and the Loire a region in which according to Caesar the wealthy sea faring Veneti played a dominant and hegemonic role Agreeing with this area of production determined by the art style is the fact that the lead isotope compositions of the Gundestrup cauldron plates mostly included the same silver as used in northern France for the Coriosolite coins Larsen 2005 35 Not only does the Gundestrup cauldron enlighten us about this coin driven art style where the larger metalwork smiths were also the mint masters producing the coins but the cauldron also portrays cultural items such as swords armor and shields found and produced in this same cultural area confirming the agreement between art style and metal analysis If as Olmsted 2001 and Hachmann 1990 suggest the Veneti also produced the silver phalerae found on the Isle of Sark as well as the Helden phalera then there are a number of silver items of the type exemplified by the Gundestrup cauldron originating in northwest France dating to just before the Roman conquest Nielsen believes that the question of origin is the wrong one to ask and can produce misleading results Because of the widespread migration of numerous ethnic groups like the Celts and Teutonic peoples and events like Roman expansion and subsequent Romanization it is highly unlikely that only one ethnic group was responsible for the development of the Gundestrup cauldron Instead the make and art of the cauldron can be thought of as the product of a fusion of cultures each inspiring and expanding upon one another In the end Nielsen concludes that based on accelerator datings from beeswax found on the back of the plates the vessel was created within the Roman Iron Age 1 However as an addendum to Nielson article indicates 2005 57 results from the Leibniz Lab on the same bee s wax dated some 400 years earlier According to Professor Ronald Hutton as the cauldron metallurgy has been linked to the Black Sea and has elephants on it the cauldron should no longer be considered Celtic 15 Iconography edit nbsp Exterior plate f with torc wearing head nbsp Detail from interior plate A nbsp Interior plate C Base plate edit The decorated medallion on the circular base plate depicts a bull Above the back of the bull is a female figure wielding a sword three dogs are also portrayed one over the bull s head and another under its hooves Presumably all of these figures are in combat the third dog located beneath the bull and near its tail seems to be dead and is only faintly shown in engraving and the bull may have been brought down Below the bull is scrolling ivy that draws from classical Greco Roman art 16 The horns of the bull are missing but there is a hole right through the head where they were originally fitted they were perhaps gold The head of the bull rises entirely clear of the plate and the medallion is considered the most accomplished part of the cauldron in technical and artistic terms 17 Exterior plates edit Each of the seven exterior plates centrally depicts a bust Plates a b c and d show bearded male figures and the remaining three are female On plate a the bearded man holds in each hand a much smaller figure by the arm Each of those two reach upward toward a small boar Under the feet of the figures on the shoulders of the larger man are a dog on the left side and a winged horse on the right side The figure on plate b holds in each hand a sea horse or dragon On plate c a male figure raises his empty fists On his right shoulder is a man in a boxing position and on his left shoulder there is a leaping figure with a small horseman underneath Plate d shows a bearded figure holding a stag by the hind quarters in each hand The female figure on plate e is flanked by two smaller male busts A female figure holds a bird in her upraised right hand on plate f Her left arm is horizontal supporting a man and a dog lying on its back Two birds of prey are situated on either side of her head Her hair is being plaited by a small woman on the right On plate g the female figure has her arms crossed On her right shoulder a scene of a man fighting a lion is shown On her left shoulder is a leaping figure similar to the one on plate c Interior plates edit Plate A shows an antlered male figure seated in a central position often identified as Cernunnos In his right hand Cernunnos holds a torc and with his left hand he grips a horned serpent a little below the head To the left is a stag with antlers that are very similar to the human divine figure Surrounding the scene are other canine feline and bovine animals some but not all facing the male figure as well as a human riding a dolphin Between the antlers of the god is an unknown motif possibly a plant or a tree but most likely just the standard background decoration 18 On plate B the large bust of a torc wearing female is flanked by two six spoked wheels what seem to be two elephants and two griffins A feline or hound is underneath the bust In northwest Gaulish coinage from 150 to 50 BC such wheels often indicate a chariot so the scene could be seen as a goddess in an elephant biga Olmsted 1979 2001 125 126 The large bust of a bearded figure holding on to a broken wheel is at the centre of plate C A smaller leaping figure with a horned helmet is also holding the rim of the wheel Under the leaping figure is a horned serpent The group is surrounded by three griffins facing left below and above two strange animals who look like hyenas 19 facing right The wheel s spokes are rendered asymmetrically but judging from the lower half the wheel may have had twelve spokes Plate D depicts a bull slaying scene with the same composition repeated three times across the plate the only place where such repetition appears on the cauldron Three large bulls are arranged in a row facing right and each of them is attacked by a man with a sword A feline and a dog both running to the left appear respectively over and below each bull After the Stowe version of the Tain Medb s men run forward to kill the Donn bull after his fight with Medb s white horned bull whom he kills On the lower half of plate E a line of warriors bearing spears and shields march to the left bringing up the rear is a warrior with no shield bearing a sword and wearing a boar crested helmet which resembles helmets from later Germanic cultures Behind him are three carnyx players In front of this group a dog leaps up perhaps holding them back Behind the dog at the left side of the scene a figure over twice the size of the others holds a man upside down apparently with ease and apparently is about to immerse him in a barrel or cauldron On the upper half warriors on horseback with crested helmets and spears ride away to the right with at the right a horned serpent fitted in above the tops of the carnyxes who is perhaps leading them The two lines are below and above what appears to be a tree still in leaf lying sideways This is now most often interpreted as a scene where fallen warriors are dipped into a cauldron to be reborn into their next life or afterlife This can be paralleled in later Welsh literature 20 nbsp Interior plate E nbsp Boar helmeted figure nbsp Detail nbsp The carnyx players nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Interpretation and parallels edit nbsp Bronze 4th century BC buffer type Celtic torc from France nbsp Carnyx head from the Tintignac group nbsp Torrs Pony cap and Horns nbsp Celtic helmet from Satu Mare Romania with raven crest around 4th century BC nbsp Thracian plaque with the Thracian horseman nbsp Thracian disc found in the Netherlands nbsp Achaemenid seal impression with Master of Animals motif the Persian king subduing two Mesopotamian lamassu nbsp Griffin on an Ancient Greek vase nbsp The Pashupati Seal Lord of Animals from the Indus Valley civilization 21 is remarkably similar to the antlered figure of plate A 5 22 For many years some scholars have interpreted the cauldron s images in terms of the Celtic pantheon and Celtic mythology as it is presented in much later literature in Celtic languages from the British Isles Others regard the latter interpretations with great suspicion 23 Much less controversially there are clear parallels between details of the figures and Iron Age Celtic artefacts excavated by archaeology 24 Other details of the iconography clearly derive from the art of the ancient Near East and there are intriguing parallels with ancient India and later Hindu deities and their stories Scholars are mostly content to regard the former as motifs borrowed purely for their visual appeal without carrying over anything much of their original meaning but despite the distance some have attempted to relate the latter to wider traditions remaining from Proto Indo European religion Celtic archaeology edit Among the most specific details that are clearly Celtic are the group of carnyx players The carnyx war horn was known from Roman descriptions of the Celts in battle and Trajan s Column and a few pieces are known from archaeology their number greatly increased by finds at Tintignac in France in 2004 Diodorus Siculus wrote around 60 30 BC Histories 5 30 Their trumpets again are of a peculiar barbarian kind they blow into them and produce a harsh sound which suits the tumult of war Another detail that is easily matched to archaeology is the torc worn by several figures clearly of the buffer type a fairly common Celtic artefact found in Western Europe most often France from the period the cauldron is thought to have been made 25 Other details with more tentative Celtic links are the long swords carried by some figures and the horned and antlered helmets or head dresses and the boar crest worn on their helmet by some warriors These can be related to Celtic artefacts such as a helmet with a raptor crest from Romania the Waterloo Helmet Torrs Pony cap and Horns and various animal figures including boars of uncertain function The shield bosses spurs and horse harness also relate to Celtic examples 26 nbsp Gallo Roman figure of Taranis Jupiter with his wheel and thunderbolt and carrying torcs The antlered figure in plate A has been commonly identified as Cernunnos who is named the only source for the name on the 1st century Gallo Roman Pillar of the Boatmen where he is shown as an antlered figure with torcs hanging from his antlers 27 Possibly the lost portion below his bust showed him seated cross legged as the figure on the cauldron is Otherwise there is evidence of a horned god from several cultures The figure holding the broken wheel in plate C is more tentatively thought to be Taranis the solar or thunder wheel god named by Lucian and represented in a number of Iron Age images there are also many wheels that seem to have been amulets 28 Near East and Asia edit The many animals depicted on the cauldron include elephants a dolphin leopard like felines and various fantastic animals as well as animals that are widespread across Eurasia such as snakes cattle deer boars and birds Celtic art often includes animals but not often in fantastic forms with wings and aspects of different animals combined 29 There are exceptions to this some when motifs are clearly borrowed as the boy riding a dolphin is borrowed from Greek art and others that are more native like the ram headed horned snake who appears three times on the cauldron 30 The art of Thrace often shows animals most often powerful and fierce ones many of which are also very common in the ancient Near East or the Scythian art of the Eurasian steppe whose mobile owners provided a route for the very rapid transmission of motifs and objects between the civilizations of Asia and Europe In particular the two figures standing in profile flanking the large head on exterior plate F each with a bird with outstretched wings just above their head clearly resemble a common motif in ancient Assyrian and Persian art down to the long garments they wear The figure is usually the ruler and the wings belong to a symbolic representation of a deity protecting him Other plates show griffins borrowed from Ancient Greek art of that of the Near East On several of the exterior plates the large heads probably of deities in the centre of the exterior panels have small arms and hands either each grasping an animal or human in a version of the common Master of Animals motif or held up empty at the side of the head in a way suggesting inspiration from this motif Celtic mythology edit Apart from Cernunnos and Taranis discussed above there is no consensus regarding the other figures and many scholars reject attempts to tie them in to figures known from much later and geographically distant sources Some Celticists have explained the elephants depicted on plate B as a reference to Hannibal s crossing of the Alps 5 Because of the double headed wolfish monster attacking the two small figures of fallen men on plate b parallels can be drawn to the Welsh character Manawydan or the Irish Manannan a god of the sea and the Otherworld Another possibility is the Gaulish version of Apollo who was not only a warrior but one associated with springs and healing besides 13 Olmsted relates the scenes of the cauldron to those of the Tain Bo Cuailnge where the antlered figure is Cu Chulainn the bull of the base plate is Donn Cuailnge and the female and two males of plate e are Medb Ailill and Fergus mac Roich Olmsted also toys with the idea that the female figure flanked by two birds on plate f could be Medb with her pets or Morrigan the Irish war goddess who often changes into a carrion bird 13 Olmsted 1979 1994 sees Cernunnos as Gaulish version of Irish Cu Chulainn As Olmsted 1979 indicates the scene on the upper right of plate A a lion a boy on a dolphin and a bull can be interpreted after the origin of the bulls of the Irish Tain who take on similar animal forms fighting each other in each form as indicated in the two lions fighting on the lower right of plate A Plate B could be interpreted after a Gaulish version of the beginning of the Irish Tain where Medb sets out to get the Donn bull after making a circuit around her army in her chariot to bring luck to the Tain Olmsted 1979 interprets the scene on Plate C as a Gaulish version of the Irish Tain incidents where Cu Chulainn kicks in the Morrigan s ribs when she comes at him as an eel and then confronts Fergus with his broken chariot wheel 13 Olmsted 1979 interprets the scene with warriors on the lower part of Plate E as a Gaulish version of the Aided Fraich episode of the Tain where Fraech and his men leap over the fallen tree and then Fraech wrestles with his father Cu Chulainn and is drowned by him while his magic horn blowers play the music of sleeping against Cu Chulainn In the Aided Fraich episode Fraech s body is then taken into the underworld by weeping banchuire to be healed by his aunt and wife Morrigan This incident is depicted on outer plate f which is adjacent and opposite to plate E 13 Both Olmsted and Taylor agree that the female of plate f might be Rhiannon of the Mabinogion Rhiannon is famous for her birds whose songs could awaken the dead and lull the living to sleep In this role Rhiannon could be considered the Goddess of the Otherworld 5 13 Taylor presents a more pancultural view of the cauldron s images he concludes that the deities and scenes portrayed on the cauldron are not specific to one culture but many He compares Rhiannon whom he thinks is the figure of plate f with Hariti an ogress of Bactrian mythology In addition he points to the similarity between the female figure of plate B and the Hindu goddess Lakshmi whose depictions are often accompanied by elephants Wheel gods are also cross cultural with deities like Taranis and Vishnu a god from Hinduism 5 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gundestrup cauldron Celtic polytheism Migration Period Pashupati seal GutasagaNotes edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Nielsen S Andersen J Baker J Christensen C Glastrup J et al 2005 The Gundestrup cauldron New scientific and technical investigations Acta Archaeologica 76 1 58 ISSN 0065 101X a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jouttijarvi Arne 2009 The Gundestrup Cauldron Metallurgy and Manufacturing Techniques Materials and Manufacturing Processes 24 960 966 ISSN 1042 6914 NMD The dating and origin of the silver cauldron Koch a b c d e f g h i j k l Bergquist A K amp Taylor T F 1987 The origin of the Gundestrup cauldron Antiquity 61 10 24 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Taylor Timothy 1992 The Gundestrup cauldron Scientific American 266 84 89 ISSN 0036 8733 Exhibition page Archived 2016 01 12 at the Wayback Machine National Museum of Scotland 10 Mar 25 Sep 2016 Koch NMD NMD Green 45 Sandars 255 Sandars 252 Megaws 174 175 Laings 85 and 68 69 on the even larger but very fragmentary Bra cauldron Green 84 Koch John T 2006 Celtic culture a historical encyclopedia Vol 1 ABC CLIO ISBN 9781851094400 National Museum of Ireland Archived from the original on 2015 06 28 Retrieved 2010 08 22 a b c d e f g Olmsted Garrett S 1979 The Gundestrup cauldron its archaeological context the style and iconography of its portrayed motifs and their narration of a Gaulish version of Tain Bo Cuailnge Collection Latomus 162 Latomus Bruxelle 1979 ISBN 2 87031 102 8 Green 45 https www youtube com watch v I Xqvp0PYLE Megaws 175 176 NMD The bullfight Sandars 256 Laings 83 Koch Zakroff Laura Tempest 2017 05 08 The Witch s Cauldron The Craft Lore amp Magick of Ritual Vessels Llewellyn Worldwide ISBN 9780738752525 Green 137 NMD The Gundestrup Cauldron The Cauldron of Fate Megaws 176 Gavin Flood 15 April 2008 The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism John Wiley amp Sons p 204 ISBN 9780470998687 Ross Ann 1967 The Horned God in Britain Pagan Celtic Britain ISBN 0 89733 435 3 Koch Megaws 176 Megaws 174 176 Koch Megaws 174 176 Green 99 Megaws 174 177 160 163 Green 100 103 Green 78 135 137 147 148 151 Green 147 149 Koch Megaws 160 163 Green 135 139References editGreen Miranda Celtic Art Reading the Messages 1996 The Everyman Art Library ISBN 0297833650 Koch John ed Gundestrup cauldron in Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia 2006 ABC CLIO ISBN 1851094407 9781851094400 google books Laings Lloyd Laing and Jennifer Laing Art of the Celts From 700 BC to the Celtic Revival 1992 Thames amp Hudson World of Art ISBN 0500202567 Megaws Megaw Ruth and Vincent Celtic Art 1989 Thames and Hudson ISBN 0500050503 NMD The Gundestrup Cauldron National Museum of Denmark web section accessed on 1 February 2016 Olmsted Garrett 2001 Celtic Art in Transition during the First Century BC Archaeolingua Volume 12 2001 ISBN 9638046376 Sandars Nancy K Prehistoric Art in Europe Penguin Pelican now Yale History of Art 1968 nb 1st edn Further reading editKaul Fleming ed Thracian Tales on the Gundestrup Cauldron 1991 Najade Press ISBN 978 9 073 83501 6 Garrett S Olmsted The Gods of the Celts and the Indo Europeans Inndbrucker Beitrage zur Kulterwissenschaft Volume 92 1994 ISBN 3851241738 9789073835016 2019 revised version Salo Unto 2018 The Gundestrup Cauldron Cultural Historical and Social Historical Perspectives JIES Monograph No 63 ISBN 978 0 9845383 4 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gundestrup cauldron amp oldid 1214739882, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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