Rare Iron Age war trumpet and boar standard found

(bbc.com)

35 points | by breve 5 days ago ago

10 comments

  • sherr 16 hours ago ago

    The History Blog has more :

    https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/75071

    I look forward to the "musicologists" getting to grips with this carnyx and figuring out improvements to the reproductions they make.

  • WalterBright a day ago ago

    > used by Celtic tribes ... to intimidate their enemies

    Hmmm. I need to get me one of those!

  • gradus_ad a day ago ago

    Imagine being a Roman legionnaire walking in a column through a strange forest when out from the trees you hear...

    https://youtu.be/EOR7VKcSb9k?si=odGkhfl8xHEPKBiv

    • inglor_cz 14 hours ago ago

      "Oh, here comes my promotion to a centurion!"

      Jokes aside, the Roman legions were so insanely good at fighting and military logistics that the defeats they suffered are still remembered today - precisely because they were so few.

      After the Punic wars, the only peer competitor left was the Parthians/Persians. Everyone else got a few lucky hits at best, if they could exploit some major mistake (full respect to Arminius in the Teutoburg Forest, that is how it is done, but not every commander was as heedless as Varus).

  • nephihaha a day ago ago

    Love how Brit archaeologists can barely stomach using the C word (Celtic), for political reasons, and have to use the phrase "Iron Age" instead. Imagine if they treated the Romans like this, then they would have to refer to Roman Britain continually as "the Classical Period" or "Classical Britain". (Never mind that the Romans themselves were an Iron Age people.)

    Being the BBC, they also have to note all the CBEs that certain individuals have. Got to honour that Royal Charter.

    • sherr 16 hours ago ago

      Sounds like rubbish to me. What "political reasons" do you mean? Don't be shy.

      • arethuza 13 hours ago ago

        Well, presumably the Celts did come across in small boats? But so did the Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Scots... ;-)

    • ojo-rojo a day ago ago

      This is my first time hearing the British don't like saying Celtic. (I'm from the U.S.) There must be some history there?

      • ablation 13 hours ago ago

        As someone born, raised, and currently living in the UK, this is the first time I've heard of this. It's literally never come up or been an issue anywhere in the past 50 years I've been alive, and I've lived all over these isles. A bizarre OP.

    • The-Old-Hacker 13 hours ago ago

      Ironically, the Celtic tribe referred to were the Ancient Britons.