The aim of this essay is to study bronze casting during the Scandinavian bronze age through the artefact crucibles. The main question is; how many castings has it been possible to do with the crucibles found at Broåsen Sweden before they had to be discarded? Other investigations of bronze casting have stated that 1-10 castings is the maximum amount of usage for a ceramic crucible, thereby making it a mass-produced and low value item. Earlier studies have however not focused on the crucibles themselves but rather some other part of the craft, making the usage, shape and content of the reconstructed crucibles used relatively inaccurate. By studying the Broåsen crucibles both in shape and raw material (clay and temper) eight replicas where mad...
We investigated the characteristics of a group of 13 Middle Iron Age egg-shaped crucibles and crucib...
The article describes the bronze axe mould, which has not been previously published and, referring t...
Bronze is the defining metal of the European Bronze Age and has been at the center of archaeological...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate whether bronze workers during the Bronze Age were exclus...
Production and use of metalwork in southern Scandinavia during the Bronze Age (1700-500 BC) has abov...
Bron...
Traces of bronze casting – fragmented moulds and crucibles – frequently occur at Late Bronze Age set...
A rare open shallow crucible from the British Museum collection, excavated at the Bronze Agesite of ...
The clay packings called Schmelzkugeln (Melt Bowls) have earlier been found in Haithabu, Schleswig. ...
From co-smelting through cementation to co-melting, there are different ways to make tin bronze. We ...
The bronze cauldron from Braa In the village of Braa, southwest of Horsens, in February 1952, the re...
‘Workshops’ and ‘workshop production’ are central to archaeological understanding of metalworking in...
The labels “stone” age and “bronze” age reflect what archaeologists perceive as trends in material c...
Throughout its history, experimental archaeology has fulfilled a valuable role in archaeological res...
This essay is an analysis of the objects made of bronze found in an excavation Västergarn parish, Go...
We investigated the characteristics of a group of 13 Middle Iron Age egg-shaped crucibles and crucib...
The article describes the bronze axe mould, which has not been previously published and, referring t...
Bronze is the defining metal of the European Bronze Age and has been at the center of archaeological...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate whether bronze workers during the Bronze Age were exclus...
Production and use of metalwork in southern Scandinavia during the Bronze Age (1700-500 BC) has abov...
Bron...
Traces of bronze casting – fragmented moulds and crucibles – frequently occur at Late Bronze Age set...
A rare open shallow crucible from the British Museum collection, excavated at the Bronze Agesite of ...
The clay packings called Schmelzkugeln (Melt Bowls) have earlier been found in Haithabu, Schleswig. ...
From co-smelting through cementation to co-melting, there are different ways to make tin bronze. We ...
The bronze cauldron from Braa In the village of Braa, southwest of Horsens, in February 1952, the re...
‘Workshops’ and ‘workshop production’ are central to archaeological understanding of metalworking in...
The labels “stone” age and “bronze” age reflect what archaeologists perceive as trends in material c...
Throughout its history, experimental archaeology has fulfilled a valuable role in archaeological res...
This essay is an analysis of the objects made of bronze found in an excavation Västergarn parish, Go...
We investigated the characteristics of a group of 13 Middle Iron Age egg-shaped crucibles and crucib...
The article describes the bronze axe mould, which has not been previously published and, referring t...
Bronze is the defining metal of the European Bronze Age and has been at the center of archaeological...