Discs from the stone age









Rondelle in sandstone, perforated and engraved, from Isturitz. This piece has had a great deal of care lavished on it to make it symmetrical, and to have a circular ornamentation consistent with its use as the whorl for a drop spindle, used for spinning yarn. A thin wooden, bone, or ivory rod would have been pushed through the hole in order for it to be used as a drop spindle.



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Original, Musée d'Archeologie Nationale et Domaine, St-Germain-en-Laye

A very important site for rondelles or discs of this type is Gönnersdorf in Germany. Here, more than 400 rondelles or parts thereof were found, almost all made of slate. Few were decorated in any way, most were obviously used for a particular purpose.During the excavations in 1968, and 1970 to 1974, 382 Rondelles or parts of rondelles which could be identified with respect to diameter were found in Gönnersdorf. With two exceptions, they are made of slate. The other two pieces are made of antler and mammoth ivory; both are intact, but it seems that they were undecorated, although the surface was heavily corroded.Text above translated and adapted from: Bosinski (1977)



Image of the Magdalenian settlement in Gönnersdorf, 12 500 BP, RGZM special exhibition in Mainz 1975.



Traces of two small round tents, and three large, fur-covered dwellings, with a broad oval shape, similar to a yurt, were revealed with a diameter of 6 to 10 metres. They were coloured red on the inside and outside, and the floors were paved with slate.



The settlement was systematically excavated over an area of 650 square metres, and bones were found of mammoth, horse, bison, aurochs, reindeer, deer and arctic fox, as well as birds.



Photo: http://www.landschaftsmuseum.de/Bilder/Rekonstr_Rundzelt-2.jpg

Text: http://www.landschaftsmuseum.de/Seiten/Lexikon/Kunst-Goenn.htm

The pieces found indicated that first the pieces were made as round discs, and then they were pierced at the centre. There were groups of well made discs with no central hole made, as though it was part of a production process. The holes were made from each side, since they were biconical. Most discs have no drilling except for the central hole. Not all the holes were well centred from each side to meet in the exact centre of the drilling points. Some pieces were obviously broken during the drilling process.Most of the roundels are undecorated, but some have also ornaments made ​​out of circles, triangles, ovals or radials. The edges were first retouched , then ground. The position of the central hole was sometimes marked by a cross, indicating careful alignment of the holes.Text above translated and adapted from: Bosinski (1977)

Rondelles made of slate, from Gönnersdorf, City of Neuwied.



( The museum card suggests that these may have been fasteners for tent covers. I believe it is much more likely that they were spindle whorls for spinning thread - Don )



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2018

Source and text: Display at LVR-LandesMuseum Bonn

On loan from : Directorate General for Cultural Heritage Rhineland-Palatinate, Generaldirektion Kulturelles Erbe Rheinland-Pfalz.





Rondelles in slate from Gönnersdorf Stadtkreis Neuwied.



Of the 302 rondelles which were either complete or could be substantially reconstructed with respect to size, the diameters varied between 20 mm and 90 mm, with a continuous transition between the individual measurements, there was no preferred size.



Photo and text: Bosinski (1977)





Rondelles in slate from Gönnersdorf Stadtkreis Neuwied.



Of the 302 rondelles, there were 29 discs, about 10%, less than 25 mm in diameter, and 53, 17.5%, with a diameter greater than 55 mm. The remaining 220 rondelles, 73%, had a diameter between 25 and 55 mm, and matched the sizes of those recovered from other sites.



Photo and text: Bosinski (1977)





Rondelle, 5 cm diameter, pierced with a central hole the size of a pencil, from the Grotte des Enfants, Balzi Rossi (Italy), now kept in the Museum of Monaco.



It is made mostly of carbon mixed with organic matter.



Photo and text: http://precieux.mnhn.fr/?page_id=90



Engraving of an aurochs and a bison from Mas d'Azil.



The two sides are quite different. The one on the left depicts an adult aurochs considered a female because of the fine features of the head. The withers and chest are marked with small incisions. Horns and ears are sketched. The eye and the nostril are shown as points.



The other side of the disk shows a young bison, which, according to the size of the horn and the curvature of the hump might be about five months old. This young bison is half the size of the adult animal. Again, we find the same incisions along the shoulder and the chest. Aurochs females sometimes adopted baby bison.(I assume similar behaviour between cattle and bison has been recorded in zoos - Don )



(note also that the French Wikipedia wrongly credits the young bison rondelle as coming from Bédeilhac - Don )



Text: http://www.musee-archeologienationale.fr/template.php?SPAGE=2276

Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Facsimile, Musée d'Archeologie Nationale et Domaine, St-Germain-en-Laye







Disc discovered by Marthe and Saint-Just Péquart during excavations of the Magdalenian layers of the Mas d'Azil Cave.



This disc was cut from a scapula and engraved on both sides with figurative patterns. On one side is a female auroch, and on the other a young bison.



Length 51 mm, width 49 mm, thickness 1 mm. MAN 77 558



Photo: © RMN-Grand Palais (musée d'Archéologie nationale) / Loïc Hamon

Source: http://www.sculpture.prehistoire.culture.fr/en/contenu/research.html#-multi-disciplinary-research





This scapula from Mas d'Azil was used as the base material for round disks similar to the ones above.



To the casual observer, it might seem that not much care was taken in making the discs completely round at the roughing out stage. However I have made my own rondelles from a sheep scapula, and even with modern tools it is by no means easy to get a completely circular disc.



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Facsimile, Musée d'Archeologie Nationale et Domaine, St-Germain-en-Laye

Très mince rondelle en os, de 31 mm de diamètre, perforée en son centre, avec sur chaque face la représentation d'un herbivore et des signes en chevron le long des bords. Cette oeuvre d'art miniature fut découverte en 1868 par M. Hardy et publiée pour la première fois en 1872 dans "Le Magasin pittoresque", revue populaire de l'époque.

Very thin disc in bone, 31 mm. in diameter, perforated in its centre, with on each face the representation of a herbivore (deer?) and chevrons along the edges. This miniature work of art was discovered in 1868 by M. Hardy and was published for the first time in 1872 in "Le Magasin pittoresque", a popular review of the time.



Photo and French text: Visiter les Abris de Laugerie-Basse - Alain Roussot - Editions Sud-Ouest.



My thanks to Anya for access to this resource.







Click either of these images to see an animation.



It may have been a button, with a leather thong through the hole, knotted at the end. (I believe that this, and all similar rondelles are weights for drop spindles for spinning yarn - Don )



Animation by Don Hitchcock.



Another view of the disc.



This looks like a museum quality facsimile.



Label:



Rondelle d'os gravée

Laugerie-Basse

Fouilles Hardy

Périgueux, Musée d’art et d’archéologie du Périgord

Pr.A. 1905



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Musée d’art et d’archéologie du Périgord, Périgueux















Poster showing the two sides of the disc.



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Musée d’art et d’archéologie du Périgord, Périgueux





Rondelle or disc cut out in a circular shape, with a hole through the centre. It is undecorated.



These discs are usually cut from a scapula (shoulder blade), which provides a ready made thin, flat support.



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Musée d’art et d’archéologie du Périgord, Périgueux













Rondelles (Mas d'Azil?)



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Facsimile, Musée d'Archeologie Nationale et Domaine, St-Germain-en-Laye









Rondelle with geometric ornamentation from Mas d'Azil.



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Facsimile, Musée d'Archeologie Nationale et Domaine, St-Germain-en-Laye





Multi perforated engraved disc from the Magdalenian discovered by Péquart at Mas d'Azil.



This disc cut from an omoplate or shoulder blade, has sixteen holes evenly spaced around the circumference with an extra one in the centre.



On each side of the disc, an engraved line connects the perforations. The disc is decorated with two bands of engraved hatching along the diameter of both sides of the central hole. Six pairs of convergent dashes in a chevron shape are within the bands of hatching.



This type of geometric pattern associated with multiple perforations can be found on several other pieces of discs found at the site.



Photo: http://www.arize.fr/Rondelle-multi-perforee.html

Text: translated and adapted from http://www.arize.fr/Rondelle-multi-perforee.html



Engraved and perforated discs from Mas d'Azil.



(left) Disk with radiating barbed pattern.



(right) Disk with a central perforation, length 8cm.



Photo: Pleistocene Coalition News Vol 4, Issue 1, Jan-Feb 2012

Source: Saint-Germain en Laye Museum.

















Man confronts a bear.



This is a stunning work from Mas d'Azil. It consisted originally of a disk, with an engraving on each side.



Disk carved from a scapula (bovine?) Fragmented, 78 mm x 37 mm.



On one side of the disk, we have a human male with an erect penis confronting a bear, with a heavy stick over his shoulder, and on the other side, a man being struck down by a bear. He appears to be shown lying face down, and uniquely, there is no other palaeolithic representation of a man in such a position. If the disc is tipped upside down on this face, a horse may be seen.



It was first described in Piette (1902)



Photo: Duhard (1992)







Rondelle découpée figurant un homme et une patte d'ours.



Disc showing a man and the paw of a bear.



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Facsimile, Musée d'Archeologie Nationale et Domaine, St-Germain-en-Laye



Another version of the man and bear.



Two representations of human figures, a horse, a bear and chevrons. This exceptional piece is made of a scapula. This is the only representation of a composition combining the themes of bears and humans and a horse in a narrative sequence in the whole Palaeolithic corpus of art.



On the most famous face, the forelimb of the bear is directed toward the body of an upright man, looking to the left. The animal is on the offensive or defensive. The man is in a lively attitude. His left leg is lifted and his penis is erect, marking perhaps the effect of aggressive motivation, interpreted as a defensive reaction. HIs arms are stretched forward, and he carries on his right shoulder what appears to be a thick stick pointed at the animal. The theme of man being threatened by an animal is very rare throughout the Palaeolithic iconographic furniture.



(cf the Lascaux bird man and disembowelled bison - Don )



On the reverse side, the scene seems to again be to the disadvantage of the human under threat by the same bear paw. The man was probably seen from the rear, and errors and omissions excepted, there is no other man seen from the rear in Paleolithic art.



If we tip the disc upside down on the reverse side, an engraving of the front of a horse, with a mane and high pronounced jaw appears.



Photo: http://www.arize.fr/Homme-au-bambou.html

Text: translated and adapted from http://www.arize.fr/Homme-au-bambou.html



Fragment of a rondelle, a flat circular object always with a hole in the centre, as here. Often cut from a shoulder blade.



This one from l'abri de Raymonden, Chancelade, has a mammoth engraved, showing the trunk, one tusk, and another barely indicated, the mouth, the head, the eye, the shoulders and front leg.



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Original, Musée d’art et d’archéologie du Périgord, Périgueux





Rondelles from France with naturalistic decoration.



1. Mas d'Azil , Ariège, Chollot (1980)



2. La Tulière, Dordogne, Sieveking (1971)



3 and 4. Mas d'Azil Ariège, Barandiaráran (2006)



5. Raymonden , Dordogne (as in the colour photo above)



6. Mas d'Azil, Ariège, Chollot (1980)



Photo and text: De Las Heras et al. (2008)



This rondelle or disc depicting a wooly mammoth was discovered in 1865 by E. Dupont.



It is made of ivory, and is subquadrangular in shape. The maximum width is 47.8 mm, the width of the larger perforations is 3.9 mm, and the maximum thickness is 3.4 mm.



Items close by the rondelle have been dated at 12 370 ± 170 BP, 12 990 ± 140 BP and 12 710 ± 150 BP.



Photo: P Cattelain

Source: Bott et al. (1994)













Rondelle from La Viña, Asturias.



(see colour photo below)



Photo: Fortea et al. (1987)







La Viña, boundary layer IV (lower):



Top row: horse cut out on a hyoid bone, engraved on both sides



Middle row: Deer rondelle and a contour cut on a rib.



Bottom layer: Llonín X, Rondelle engraved on both sides.



(note in particular with this lowest disc that the hole has not been made in the centre of the circular cutout of the scapula bone, but is eccentric - Don )



Photo and text: Rodríguez (2004)













Rondelle from Llonín, Asturias.



Photo: Fortea et al. (1990)



Rondelle découpée en os gravée (moulage)



Disc cut out and engraved, in bone.



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Facsimile, Musée d'Archeologie Nationale et Domaine, St-Germain-en-Laye





Plate with a hole in the centre.



Mammoth tusk; carved, polished and engraved. 138 x 81 mm.

Mal'ta Site (excavations by M.M. Gerasimov, 1928-1930), Siberia, the River Belaya, near Irkutsk, Russia

Maltinsko-buretskaya Culture. 23 000 - 19 000 BP



Photo and text: http://www.hermitagemuseum.org/





Left, face A of the rondelle from la grotte d'Enlène, showing an engraved bison.



Right, face B, a geometric design.



Photo: R. Bégouén

Source: Bégouén et al. (1989)





Left, face B of the rondelle from la grotte d'Enlène, showing a geometric design.



Right, face A, an engraved bison.



Drawing: F. Lebrun-Ricalens

Source: Bégouén et al. (1989)





Plate, or rondelle. Found with the burial of a child. Mal'ta site.



(Note that this is a facsimile. It looks to me like the paler sections are replicas of the shards of the rondelle that were actually found, and the darker areas are the best guess for what the rest of the rondelle looked like - Don )



Photo: Vladimir Gorodnjanski 2007

Source: The Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg





Rondelle from la Cueva de El Linar, sides A and B.



Photo: De Las Heras et al. (2008)





Close up of the engraving on the rondelle from la Cueva de El Linar.



Photo: De Las Heras et al. (2008)





Rondelle from la Cueva de El Linar, showing that the image can be fitted perfectly to a cave wall painting from Niaux, indicating a wide ranging homogenous artistic tradition of painting and engraving across the Pyrenees from what is now France to Spain, and very close cultural links.



Photo: De Las Heras et al. (2008)



Rondelle découpée gravée de motifs géométriques



Disc cut out and engraved with geometric motifs, from la grotte de Saint-Michel-d'Arudy, Pyrénées-Atlantiques.



Photo: Don Hitchcock 2014

Source: Facsimile (?), Musée d'Archeologie Nationale et Domaine, St-Germain-en-Laye





Rondelle from la Cueva de Las Aguas, sides A and B.



Photo: De Las Heras et al. (2008)





Rondelle from Gourdan, Haut-Garronne.



Photo: Chollot (1980)





Rondelle from la Cueva de Las Aguas, sides A and B and cross section.



Photo: De Las Heras et al. (2008)





Close up of the centre of the rondelle from la Cueva de Las Aguas.



(note that I have rotated this image 180° so that the grooves look like grooves and not ridges. This illusion is because most people are used to seeing light come from the upper left when making sense of such an image, and is the convention used by map makers when showing relief by shadowing - Don )



Photo: De Las Heras et al. (2008)



Rondelle from l'abri Plantade, Bruniquel, Tarn et Garonne.



Photo: Ladier et Welté (1993)

Rondelles from the Neolithic



Rondelles from the Ehrenstein Neolithic village.



The Stone Age 'buttons' are made of limestone.



Photo: Hendrik Zwietasch / Landesmuseum W

2

The following report is adapted from news articles about Neolithic rondelles found near the town of Ulm, in Baden-Württemberg, Germany.One report was written by Hans Holzhaider, at https://www.sueddeutsche.de/wissen/archaeologie-das-raetsel-der-grossen-knoepfe-1.4907746Another is a press release from the Museum of Ulm, at https://museumulm.de/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/PRESSE-RELEASE-BLACK-ON-WHITE-1.pdfIn 1952 the ruins of a 6000 year old village from the Neolithic Age were found in the valley of the river Blau near Ehrenstein. Due to their location in the damp valley floor, the remains of the wooden houses were excellently preserved.Excavations in 1952 and 1960 uncovered parts of 15 buildings. The size of the settlement was determined in 2014 by drilling sondages on over 9,000 mAccording to the tree rings preserved in the timber from the buildings, the first village was built in 3 955 BC. After several fires and reconstructions it was abandoned just under 100 years later.Among the numerous recovered objects made of stone, bone, antlers and ceramics, one find group stands out in particular: flat, almost round discs of various sizes made of limestone with a double perforation in the middle. On one side they are decorated at the edges with straight or triangular radial patterns. These were originally filled with a black paste so that the patterns were clearly visible.Apart from finished specimens, often with traces of use, there are many blanks and unfinished pieces. Apparently these discs were only made and used in this village. They still present a puzzle to archaeological research today.The first thought was that they were buttons. Small, round discs, nicely decorated on the edge, two holes in the middle, easy to sew on. They would look good on a traditional jacket.Oscar Paret, state archaeologist in Baden-Württemberg, had exactly this idea when he found the first specimens in the summer of 1952. 'We called them buttons' he wrote in his excavation report. The archaeologists had been called when a clay pot and several worked pieces of deer antler had been discovered in the excavated soil for the sludge sedimentation basin of a lime works in the valley of the Blau river, a few kilometres west of Ulm.



During the excavation, the remains of an entire Neolithic settlement appeared. The floorboards and the posts of the hut walls had been excellently preserved in the groundwater-bearing layer under the damp meadows of the blue valley.



The age of the remains could be dated exactly on the basis of the annual rings of the trunks used: the settlement was first built in 3 955 BC. It burned down completely four times, was rebuilt each time, and the final buildings were put up around 3 840 BC.



Here we can see a reconstruction of one of the houses in the settlement.

In March 2020, Arc-Tech built a model of a Stone Age house in the Blau valley in Southern Germany, shown here.



Text: https://pressfrom.info/us/news/science-and-technology/-441968-archeology-the-riddle-of-the-big-buttons.html

and https://www.sueddeutsche.de/

Photo: ulfr23

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nz5Zrqur9WA

References

Barandiaráran I., 2006: Imágenes y adornos en el arte portátil paleolítico, Col. Ariel Prehistoria, Barcelona. Bégouén R., Clottes J., Giraud J., Rouzaud F., 1989: La rondelle au bison d'Enlene (Montesquieuavantés, Ariège, Zephyrus, Revista de prehistoria y arqueología, ISSN 0514-7336, No. 41-42, 1988-1989, pp. 19-26 Bosinski G., 1977: Die rondelle des Magdalénien-Fundplatzes Gönnersdorf, Quartär, 27/ 28. Bonn Bott S., Cattelain P., Jadin I., 1994: Un mammouth gravé sur une rondelle du Trou de Chaleux (Prov. de Namur), Notae Praehistoricae, 13, 1994 Chollot M., 1980: Les origines du graphisme symbolique, Editions de la Fondation Singer-Poliganac, Paris De Las Heras C., Montes R., Lasheras J., Rasines P., Fatás P., 2008: Dos rodetes paleolíticos procedentes de las Cuevas del Linar y las Aguas, Alfoz de Lloredo (Cantabria), Veleia, 24-25, 2007-2008 Fortea J., Corchón S., González Morales M., Rodríguez Asensio A., Hoyos M., Laville M., Fernandez Tresguerres J., 1987: Trabajos recientes en los valles del Nalón y del Sella, Colloque Internacional d’Art Mobilier Paléolithique, Foix, 1987, pp: 191 y ss. Fortea J., Rasilla Vives M., Rodrigues-Otero V., 1990: Sobre un rodete perforado magdaleniense de Llonín, Archivo de Prehistoria Levantina, vol XX, pp . 95 y ss., Valencia. Ladier, E., Welté C., 1993: Les objets de parure de la vallée de l'Aveyron, Fontales, Abris de Bruniquel (Plantade, Lafaye, Gandil), Paléo, N.5, 1993 pp. 281-317 Rodríguez S., 2004: Palaeolithic Mobile Art in Cantabrian Spain and its prolongation in the Epipalaeolithic, Kobie,(Serie Anejos no. 8), año 2004. Las sociedades del Paleolítico en la región cantábrica. Sieveking A., 1971: A catalogue of Palaeolithic art in the British Museum, London

Settlements like the one in the Blautal are known from the entire northern Alpine region, from Lake Geneva to Lake Constance and the Salzkammergut. Its characteristic is the proximity to the water; A well-known example is the pile dwellings near Unteruhldingen on Lake Constance. There are 18 such sites in Germany alone. But only in one of these settlements, in the Valley of the Blue, were these strange, button-like objects found.As the excavation progressed, it quickly became clear: buttons couldn't be that. Quite apart from the fact that the button was invented in the Middle Ages, not even the Romans had buttons: these things were much too big to fit through a buttonhole. There were small specimens, only about two inches in diameter, but most were much larger, up to six inches in diameter. They were scattered all over the village.The settlement consisted of about 50 houses that were closely spaced in irregular rows - an early Swabian row house settlement. They usually consisted of two rooms, a larger one with an open fireplace and a smaller one with an oven. Only about a fifth of the area was archaeologically investigated, and around 200 'buttons' were found on this area alone. One can therefore assume that around a thousand of these objects were lying around in the entire village.It can be assumed that around a thousand of these objects were lying around in the entire village The Stone Age artisans found the material for the production of the "buttons" in the immediate vicinity: flat, fine-grained Jurassic limestone, as was also used for relining the ovens and hearths in the houses. The round blanks were cut from the lime slabs and sanded with water and sand.A flint drill was then used to drill two holes in the middle, from both sides; you can see from individual specimens that the holes did not always meet. The front and back are clearly different. The front is carefully smoothed and decorated with radial scratches on the edge. The cracks were blackened. When Oscar Paret's excavation team found the first specimens, they considered the black color to be dirt and tried to scrub it off. But analyzes with the mass spectrometer later showed that the cracks were covered with birch pitch. The Stone Age craftsmen obviously wanted to achieve an ornamental effect.