Author:
Fokkens Harry,Achterkamp Yvonne,Kuijpers Maikel
Abstract
The Bell Beaker bracers, or wrist-guards, are traditionally thought to
have functioned as archery equipment, protecting the arm against the sting
of the bowstring. Their position on the body is therefore thought to have
been on the inside of the lower arm. Through analysis of the position in
which wrist-guards are found, we have come to the conclusion that they were,
however, more often than not fastened to the outside of the arm, which leads
us to consider a range of new possible uses and meanings for the bracers.
With combined information from archaeological and ethnographic surveys we
have come to think of the stone wrist-guard as an artefact that was
associated with a martial, ideologically-laden activity in the Bell Beaker
culture.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
17 articles.
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