CHAP. X.]
HABITATIONS IN BRITAIN IN BRONZE AGE.
351
flanges (Fig. 119), and passed into the palstave (Figs. 117, 118).
Fig. 119.—Flanged Axe, Arreton, Isle of Wight, 12. | Fig. 121.—Socketed Celt, Thames, Kew. 12. |
This again proved inconvenient, and a third form was invented, in which the handle was let into a socket in the head of the axe, as in Figs. 120, 121. The second and the third of these have never been found in association with the first in this country. It is strange that the bronze-smiths should not have hit upon the mode by which we insert handles in our axes, which seems so natural and obvious, and it is still more so when we reflect that the hammer- and battle-axes of stone, perforated for the reception of the straight handle, were used in the early Bronze age.[1] These, however, were not copied from bronze
- ↑ For an account of these see Evans, op. cit. chap. viii.