Awl

A bone awl, needle or piercer.
It came from a site at Panticapaeum, modern Kerch, on the Crimean peninsula in Ukraine. Panticapaeum was a Greek colony but the area had for centuries been on trade routes between East and West and had absorbed culture from a long list of peoples including Scythians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Mongols, Ottomans, Slavs, and Tatars. This complex archaeology was discovered in the 19th century and was subject to many excavations. News of these discoveries was disseminated by the widespread distributing of finds and this example was collected by Lieutenant Colonel LAD Montague. Montague’s collection of over 800 classical archaeological objects was bequeathed to the museum on his death in 1946.

Object Summary

Accession Loan No.
5/1946/746
Collection Class
Foreign archaeology
Collection Area Region
Central and Eastern Europe
Collector Excavator
Montague, LAD
Material
bone
Common Name
awl
Simple Name
awl

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awl; point; needle