Accession No
1923.1074 A.6
Description
Flint handaxe.
Place
Europe; France; Somme; near Amiens
Period
Palaeolithic
Source
?Ransom collection
Department
Arch
Reference Numbers
1923.1074 A.6
Cultural Affliation
Material
Stone; Flint
Local Term
Measurements
Events
Description (Labels & Markings)
Round label affixed to object reads: 'Nr Amiens 1884'.
Event Date
Author: Lucie Carreau
Description (Physical description)
Flint handaxe.
Event Date 04/02/2019
Author: Lucie Carreau
Context (Other owners)
As William Ransom is not known to have a distinctive collections label or mark, it is not clear if the label affixed to this object was his own or whether it was affixed by someone who owned it before he acquired it. It is also possible that this object is not part of the Ransom Collection (see Contexts). Therefore William Ransom is tentatively listed in the Source field.
Event Date 11/2/2019
Author: Lucie Carreau
Context (Other)
1923.1074 was entered in the Accession Register as ‘L[ower] Palaeo[lithic] C[oup] de P[oing]s etc. 1 Moust[erian] point’ from France, as part of William Ransom’s collection given by his son Francis. Apart from the Mousterian point, there is no indication of the number of objects associated with 1923.1074, and Ransom is not known to have numbered his collections with a distinguishing label or mark. At an unknown point after 1923 at least one previously accessioned French handaxe (1883.12 A, see also 1888.14.2) was erroneously marked ‘1923.1074’. Other French handaxes marked ‘1923.1074’ certainly came into the museum from other donors – four from G.J.B. Fox (now TEMP.00815-TEMP.00818), one from Walter K. Foster (now TEMP.00819) – but their correct accession number is unknown, if they were ever assigned one. It is therefore clear that not all the objects marked and subsequently given catalogued cards as 1923.1074 were actually part of the Ransom collection, and it is currently impossible to identify which were in the 1923 donation. Although it is unknown why or when this mistake took place, it may relate to the fact that all the material in question is from Palaeolithic France (see also 1925.18).
Event Date 11/2/2019
Author: Lucie Carreau
FM:282725
Images (Click to view full size):