Rights Holder: North Lincolnshire Museum
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Unique ID: NLM-2242C5
Object type certainty: Certain
Workflow
status: Awaiting validation
Copper alloy tweezers fragment. One arm from a pair of tweezers, with a narrow straight-sided shaft, gently expanded and thinned [to thickness 0.7mm] towards a spatulate end, where the blade is neatly crimped. The object is broken across the returning curve of a sharply bent top loop. Closely spaced horizontally incised or moulded lines on the narrower part afford grip in addition to their decorative effect. Tweezers are a common component of furnished inhumation and cremation burials of the early Anglo-Saxon period. Suggested date: Early Medieval, 410-700.
Length: 55.6mm, Width: 12.0mm, Thickness (at loop): 1.5mm, Weight: 2.40gms
Notes:
The finder suggests this to be part of an assemblage amounting to c.5% of material recovered from an extensive site, the rest being removed illicitly without record. Archaeological opinion holds the site to have been of equivalent character to Flixborough, North Lincolnshire, in terms of its material culture. Coins are under-represented in the group
Subsequent action after recording: Returned to finder
Broad period: EARLY MEDIEVAL
Subperiod from: Early
Period from: EARLY MEDIEVAL
Subperiod to: Early
Period to: EARLY MEDIEVAL
Ascribed Culture:
Anglo-Saxon style
Date from: Circa AD 410
Date to: Circa AD 700
Quantity: 1
Length: 55.6 mm
Width: 12 mm
Thickness: 1.5 mm
Weight: 2.4 g
Date(s) of discovery: Sunday 1st January 1995 - Sunday 31st December 2000
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Other reference: NLM37261
Primary material: Copper alloy
Completeness: Fragment
Surface Treatment: Incised or engraved or chased
Grid reference source: From finder
Unmasked grid reference accurate to a 100 metre square.
No references cited so far.