Nr. 99518827

Neolithischen Feuerstein Werkzeug. Spiennes, 4500-3500 v. Chr. 11,2 cm Höhe. Spanische Importlizenz. (Ohne Mindestpreis)
Nr. 99518827

Neolithischen Feuerstein Werkzeug. Spiennes, 4500-3500 v. Chr. 11,2 cm Höhe. Spanische Importlizenz. (Ohne Mindestpreis)
Tool.
Neolithic Period, Spiennes, 4500-3500 BC.
Flint
11.2 cm Height.
CONDITION: It is preserved in its original state.
PROVENANCE: Private Collection, Belgium. Acquired before the 1970's.
DESCRIPTION:
The Neolithic Flint Mines of Spiennes occupy two chalk plateaux located to the south-east of the city of Mons. They cover an area essentially devoted to agriculture. The site appears on the surface as a large area of meadows and fields strewn with millions of scraps of worked flint. Underground, the site is an immense network of galleries linked to the surface by vertical shafts dug by Neolithic populations.
The Neolithic Flint Mines of Spiennes are the largest and earliest concentration of ancient mines of north-west Europe. The mines were in operation for many centuries and the remains vividly illustrate the development and adaptation of mining techniques employed by prehistoric populations in order to exploit large deposits of a material that was essential for the production of tools and cultural evolution generally. They are also remarkable by the diversity of technical mining solutions implemented and by the fact that they are directly linked to a habitat contemporary to them.
In the Neolithic period, (from the last third of the 5th millennium until the first half of the 3rd millennium), the site was the centre of intensive flint mining present underground. Different techniques were used, the most spectacular and characteristic of which was the digging out of shafts of 0.8 to 1.20m in diameter with a depth down to 16 metres. Neolithic populations could thus pass below levels made up of large blocks of flint (up to 2m in length) that they extracted using a particular technique called ‘striking’ (freeing from below with support of a central chalk wall, shoring up of the block, removal of the wall, removal of the props and lowering of the block). The density of the shafts is important, as many as 5,000 in the zone called Petit Spiennes (14 ha), leading to criss-crossing of pits and shafts in some sectors.
The neolithic flint mines near Spienne in Belgium are part of UNESCO's world heritage since the year 2000 (Id. N°: 1006). With the second half of the 5. Millenium BC stone from the Spienne mine was worked in socially increasingly complex neolithic groups in that region. No doubt a source of wealth to that cultures.
The groups of that area are refered to as Michaelsberg culture. They flourished from the mid 5th Millenium BC until the mid 4th Millenium BC in middle Europe. Their culture streched from Germany, northern France to Belgium. Around Spienne, it was finally replaced by the Seine-Oise-Marne culture, which did not use the nearby mine anymore
Notes:
The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.
The piece includes authenticity certificate.
The piece includes Spanish Export License.
Ähnliche Objekte
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Dieses Objekt wurde vorgestellt in:
So kaufen Sie auf Catawiki
1. Etwas Besonderes entdecken
2. Höchstgebot abgeben
3. Sichere Zahlung durchführen

