Bruzelius,[1] Nilsson,[2] and Holmberg,[3] convey to us a vivid idea of the life of the people in the north of Europe in the Bronze age.
Fig. 152.—Man with Bronze Axe on a rock at Simrislund, Scania.
In Fig. 152 we see a human figure represented, armed with a bronze axe. In some groups the characteristic stone axe-hammer with its handle is to be seen; in others the small-handled short sword, and the round buckler. Some of the figures of the warriors are larger than life-size. The sculptured rock at Tegneby,[1] figured below (Fig. 153), may be taken as an example of some of the groups. In the upper part domestic oxen are represented with their driver, and a man is ploughing with a yoke of oxen. An archer is shooting, and down below a party of four men, armed with round shields and axes, are fighting. Boats also are represented, some of them drawn up in line, and one in front with a covered stern possesses an awning. On a rock in the same place a group of warriors is seen on horseback contending with spears, and
Page:Early Man in Britain and His Place in the Tertiary Period.djvu/421
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
CHAP. X.]
SCULPTURES OF BRONZE AGE IN SCANDINAVIA.
393