I never cease to be amazed by the wonderful, rare and beautiful objects from the distant past that have been unearthed in Cumbria. Here we sit, at the end of one of England’s cul-de-sacs but our ancient ancestors were up to all sort of interesting things.

They look like spoons, don’t they? And indeed archaeologists call them spoons. They’re between 2,200 and 2000 years old, and they were found at Crosby Ravensworth in the Eden Valley in 1868.

According to the 1869 edition of The Archaeological Journal1,

‘”They were found by a farmer in this parish near a spring of water, whilst he was digging out the soil in order to form a drinking place for his cattle during the droughty weather in the summer. There was a small mound near the spring about 2 ft high and 8 or 9 ft across, in which we dug… In it were found pieces of freestone which had evidently been subjected to the action of fire, and some traces of wood ashes or burnt earth, but nothing else rewarded our labors.”‘

‘”…These objects were not found together; they lay some seven or eight yards apart in the boggy ground that surrounds the spring, and at an inconsiderable depth, about twelve to eighteen inches.”‘

There aren’t many of these spoons about; these are two of just 25 found across Britain, Ireland and France. They’re almost invariably found in a pair like the Crosby Ravensworth ones and they all have the same basic ‘decoration’; one spoon is engraved with lines dividing it into four quarters, and the other has a hole drilled to one side. They have a shallow ‘handle’ at one end of each spoon, just big enough to grasp between your thumb and forefinger.

As they’re not obviously well shaped for eating, there has been speculation since they were first found that they had a ‘ritual’ purpose. The earliest detailed account goes into great depth about a possible baptismal function2, but this theory hasn’t gained weight as the years have passed. The British Museum3, which isn’t known for putting itself out on an arcane limb, suggests that they may have had a divinatory purpose, with liquid being dripped from the spoon with the hole onto the spoon with the quartered pattern, with meaning being drawn from which quarter the liquid landed. The British Museum suggests that water, beer, or blood might have been used. I suspect if our guesses about the method are correct, the liquid must have been quite viscous, so perhaps blood or even something like egg would have have worked best.

Sadly, as with so many ancient things, this has to remain a tantalising theory4. Archaeologists learn from the ‘context’ in which items are found, and whilst we have a slightly better account for the Crosby Ravensworth spoons than we do for most Victorian discoveries, they just didn’t have the benefit of modern archaeological knowledge and practice. Those ashes, for example. Was it a cremation? Complete coincidence? Not actually ashes at all?

They are intriguing, though. Like the Bewcastle cauldron and the Embleton Sword, they were found in boggy ground. None of the 25 spoons have been found, as far as we know, near settlements. Most are from bogs, rivers, or seemingly deliberately buried, and a few have been found in graves. Regulars at Esmeralda’s know how often I point out that our iron age ancestors had a habit of placing special objects – including, sometimes, people – into watery ground. Our ‘celtic’ ancestors – and indeed, people before then – believed in a celtic underworld that was home to gods and the dead. Watery ground was seen as neither ground nor air, but an in-between area where we might be able to get messages to the underworld, to ask for help or a blessing from deities and the dead. As often pointed out, the fact that we still insist in chucking coins into ‘wishing’ wells and springs suggests that this instinct runs deep.

What, exactly, our ancestors wanted from their watery friends, we will never know.

© Diane McIlmoyle 23.11.12

Bronze Relics of the Late Celtic Period, Albert Way, pp52-83. The Archaeological Journal, Vol. XXVI, 1869. Celtic Spoons by Very Rev. Canon Rock, p35. The Archaeological Journal, Vol. XXVI, 1869. See The British Museum. http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/pe_prb/b/bronze_spoons.aspx And we should bear in mind what was said as soon as the year after they were discovered: ‘… it is, however, scarcely needful to insist on the necessity of great caution in the endeavour to associate with any hallowed use such mysterious relics of remote antiquity, to which no obvious or secular purpose can be safely ascribed.’ Albert Way, as above.