Little Thetford flesh hook | |
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Material | Bronze |
Size | Hooked part length:12 in (30 cm) weight:9 oz (255 g) Butt end length:6 in (15 cm) weight:4 oz (113 g) |
Created | late Bronze Age (1150 – 950 BC)[1] |
Discovered | 1929, Little Thetford |
Present location | British Museum |
Identification | CHER 06956 |
Bronze Age |
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↑ Chalcolithic |
↓ Iron Age |
The Little Thetford flesh-hook is a late Bronze-Age (1150 – 950 BC) artefact discovered in 1929 in Little Thetford, near Ely, Cambridgeshire, England. A flesh-hook is a metal hook with a long handle used to pull meat out of a pot or hides out of tan-pits. This particular find is one of 32 other such archaeologically significant finds, scatters, and excavations within 1 square mile (2.6 km2) of Little Thetford.