Mirror a link to bloody chapter in Dorset's past

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012
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Western Daily Press

The discovery of the burial of a woman who lived almost 2,000 years ago is a reminder one of the most dramatic times in Dorset’s history.

The 17 to 25-year-old woman who was buried near Chesil died shortly after the Roman invasion of Britain in AD 43. Her mourners placed an array of jewellery in her grave in one of the richest burials yet found in Dorset.

  1. mirror

    This mirror was placed in the grave of a woman who lived and died almost 2,000 years ago in Dorset

As well as glass beads and a bronze bangle there was also a mirror. The back of the mirror is finely decorated with Iron Age Celtic art.

The grave was found by a metal-detector user. When he reported the discovery, Bournemouth University promptly undertook an excavation to make sure that the find was carefully lifted and fully recorded. Now Dorset County Museum is campaigning to raising funds to buy and conserve this important find.

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Dr Miles Russell, the university’s senior lecturer in prehistoric and Roman archaeology, said: “Although damaged, this is one of the finest pieces of Celtic art yet recovered from the British Isles, the reverse of the bronze mirror being covered with an incredibly intricate pattern of carefully incised, swirling abstract loops.

“Created over 2,000 years ago, this highly personal artefact would undoubtedly have been the prized possession of a wealthy native aristocrat who lived long enough to see the Roman army invade and occupy her homeland.”

In a lecture to be given at the Dorset County Museum on Friday, November 30, Professor Andrew Fitzpatrick, an authority on the Iron Age, will tell the story of the discovery and explain how it adds to our understanding of Iron Age and Roman Dorset.

The county is famous for spectacular hillforts like Maiden Castle but there is a wealth of other Iron Age sites, and many important objects from this time are displayed in Dorset County Museum. These sites and finds make Dorset one of the most distinctive and important areas of Iron Age Britain.

At the beginning of history the people of Dorset were called the Durotriges. Unlike many neighbouring tribes, the Durotriges did not surrender to the Roman army. One of the bloodiest campaigns in the conquest for Roman Britain was fought between the Durotiges and the Roman army of Vespasian. The Chesil woman will have been a witness to this dramatic time in Dorset’s past and the discovery of her grave brings present generations face to face with history.

Tickets for the Chesil mirror lecture cost £10 and are available from the Museum Shop on 01305 756827. Further information from shop@dorsetcountymuseum.org.

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