Page:The Ancient Stone Implements (1897).djvu/425

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FROM VARIOUS COUNTRIES.
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but rather longer, was found near Civitanova[1] (Piceno), and the form occurs in Central Italy. A long leaf-shaped arrow from Italy is engraved by Lindenschmit,[2] as well as a tanged form without barbs. The latter form occurs in the Isle of Elba.[3] I have a series, from near Bergamo, nearly all of which are tanged, though few of them are distinctly barbed. The various forms of lance and arrow heads in the province of Perugia[4] have been described by Prof. Bellucci. The stone arrow-heads frequently cited as having been found on the plains of Marathon[5] appear to be only flakes,[6] as are many of those from Tiryns.[7] At Mycenæ,[8] however, in the fourth sepulchre, Schliemann found thirty-five beautifully-wrought arrow-heads of obsidian. They are mainly of triangular form, hollowed at the base, though the long loaf shape is also present. In general facies they closely resemble the Danish forms.

In a dolmen in Andalusia[9] a broken arrow-head of flint, with pointed stem and barbs, was found; and inasmuch as the fragment is engraved by Don Manuel de Gongora y Martinez as the head of a three-pointed dart, it appears that the form is not common in Spain.

A number of arrow-heads, mostly tanged, have, however, been found in the south-east of Spain by MM. Siret.[10] In Portugal[11] the arrow-heads are usually triangular, but often with long-projecting wings or barbs.

Returning northwards, I may cite a small series of flint arrow-heads in my collection, found near Luxembourg, where they appear to be not uncommon. They present the following forms: leaf-shaped, tanged, tanged and barbed, triangular with a straight base, and the same with barbs.

Numerous arrow-heads of flint have also been found in Gelderland, and a collection of them is to be seen in the Leyden Museum. Some are also in the Christy Collection. The most common forms are triangular, with barbs, or with a somewhat rounded base, and stemmed and barbed. Leaf-shaped and tanged arrow-heads appear to be rarer. Some scarce triangular forms are equilateral, and others long and somewhat expanding at the base. I have a series from Heistert, Roermond, Limburg.

In Central and Southern Germany flint arrow-heads appear to be rather scarce. In Pomerania the prevailing type is triangular hollowed at the base. The same form occurs in Thuringia. In the Königsberg Museum there are arrow-heads leaf-shaped pointed at both ends, lozenge-shaped, slightly tanged, tanged and barbed, and triangular with and without the hollowing at the base. Linden-
  1. Mortillet, Matériaux, p. 89.
  2. "Alterth. uns. held. Vorz.," vol. i., Heft vi. pl. i. 9. "Hohenz. Samml.," Taf. xliii.
  3. Mortillet, Mat., vol. iii. p. 319.
  4. Archivio per l'Ant. e la Etn., vol. ix. p. 289. See also Marinoni, "Abit. lacust. in Lombardia," Milan (1868), p. 20.
  5. Dodwell, "Class. Tour in Greece," vol. ii. p. 159. Leake, "Demi of Attica," p. 100.
  6. F. Lenormant in Rev. Arch., vol. xv. p. 146.
  7. Schliemann, "Tiryns," (1886), pp. 78, 174.
  8. "Mycenae," (Murray, 1878), p. 272. See also pp. 76 and 158.
  9. "Antigüedades Prehistóricas de Andalusia," p. 104.
  10. "Les premiers Ages du Métal, &c.," Anvers, 1887.
  11. "Ant. de Algarve," 1886. Cartailhac, p. 86, 159, 170.