Monday, 17 March 2014
Knowth Flint macehead, 3300-2800 BC
This ceremonial macehead, found beneath the eastern chamber tomb at the great passage tomb at Knowth, in the Boyne Valley, is one of the finest works of art to have survived from Neolithic Europe. The unknown artist took a piece of very hard pale-grey flint, flecked with patches of brown, and carved each of its six surfaces with diamond shapes and swirling spirals. At the front they seem to form a human face, with the shaft hole as a gaping mouth.
If it was made in Ireland, the object suggests that someone on the island had attained a very high degree of technical and artistic sophistication. Click to read more....
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