Type: Type V Dagger
Location: Denmark
Age: Late Holocene
Material: Flint
MoST ID: 2319
Pedestal Link: https://une.pedestal3d.com/r/ADEPjoy245
Model Author: Christopher Sutton
This flint Type V dagger is from Denmark. It dates to the Late Neolithic, ca. 3600-3950 BP. Daggers with flared stems like this are called ‘fishtail’ daggers.
The artefact in this model is a Type V-A flint dagger from Denmark. It differs from Type IV daggers primarily by the lack of ‘stitching’ down the handle’s centre. Percussion flaking scars are visible on both faces of this dagger at the blade and handle ends. The percussion scar remnants on the blade indicate that it was not ground smooth prior to pressure flaking. Both faces were expertly pressure-flaked, with scars extending to or slightly beyond the centreline. The scars are oriented straight-in or slightly oblique to the axis of the dagger. The end of the handle consists mostly of cortex, with one side partly reduced, perhaps to straighten the basal edge. One archaeologist has proposed that cortex was left on the basal end of some daggers to demonstrate the flintknapper’s skill at using the entire length of the nodule. One of the handle corners is heavily rounded and striated, perhaps from use as a strike-a-light. One of the edges at the transition from the blade to the handle sustained recent damage, possibly from a plow-strike.
See the annotations for technological details about this stone tool.
A ‘dagger’ in European terminology is a pointed knife with cutting edges on both margins (by this definition, many of the bifaces from North America would be considered daggers). The earliest European bifacial flint daggers are stemmed, lanceolate, and side-notched examples from northern and central Italy, many made from southern Alpine flint. These early daggers are small, with most measuring between ca. 5-10 cm long. They emerged in the Late Neolithic by about 5600 BP, and are also found in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Small bifacial daggers continued to be manufactured well into the Copper Age in Italy, with larger, expertly-made ‘prestige’ daggers interred with the famous burials at Remedello cemetery, ca. 5000 BP. A small hafted bifacial stone dagger was carried by Ötzi, who died while crossing the Alps in ca. 5230 BP. Bifacial stone daggers overlap chronologically with daggers made on indirect percussion blades, a technology that originated in northwestern Greece and spread to production centres in Syria, Sardinia, Bulgaria, France, and Portugal.
The beaches of southern Scandinavia are covered in large nodules of fine-grained flint. Between ca. 3500-4350 years ago, flintknappers began making elaborate bifacial daggers from this rich resource, particularly in the main production centres in Jutland (Denmark) and Skåne (Sweden). Bifacial daggers were eventually produced in many parts of Europe where high-quality flint was available, but the largest and most complex forms were made by flintknappers in southern Scandinavia. These daggers occurred during the Late Neolithic transition between the Single Grave period and the Bell Beaker (Early Bronze Age) period, sometimes referred to as the Dolktid, or Dagger Period.
The earliest flint daggers in southern Scandinavia were elongated and leaf shaped, or ‘lanceolate’, and later daggers were made with a distinctive ‘fishtail’-shaped handle. Lanceolate daggers had a longer usage period and were far more common than the later fishtail daggers. One estimate is that about 10,000 lanceolate daggers are in known collections from southern Scandinavia, compared to about 1000 fishtail daggers. The lanceolate daggers are divided into three main types (Types I, II, and III, ca. 3950-4350 BP), with various subtypes, based on their workmanship and shape. Two main types of fishtail daggers are identified (Types IV and V, ca. 3600-3950 BP), also subdivided into variants. One type of dagger with a straight-sided handle (Type VI) continued into the Bronze Age, ca. 3500 BP. All of these dagger types show considerable skill in their manufacture, but some—particularly Type IV C-E daggers—are among the most complex stone tools ever produced. The Hindsgavl Dagger—a Type IV-D dagger—is considered a National Treasure of Denmark. It is on permanent display at the Danish National Museum, Copenhagen and, in 2009, an image of the Hindsgavl Dagger was printed on the 100 Kroner banknote. Lanceolate daggers were sometimes deposited in large caches, and burials throughout the Late Neolithic period often incorporated one or more flint daggers.
The shape of the Scandinavian fishtail daggers is very similar to the shape of Central European bronze daggers made during the Classical Únětice period, ca. 3300-4300 BP. This suggests to many archaeologists that the Scandinavian flintknappers were attempting to imitate more valuable Bronze Age daggers that were starting to appear in their area. According to this view, the flint imitations are ’skeuomorphs’ of the Bronze Age daggers. However, one archaeologist argues that this is a simplistic interpretation for two reasons. First, dagger-making long preceded the introduction of metals into Scandinavia. Second, only six bronze daggers have been recovered in Scandinavia, and, unlike flint daggers, none of these were found in burial contexts. The few metal objects interred in graves were axes, not daggers—the grave-good daggers were made of flint. The archaeological patterns suggest that there was a ‘dagger idea’ during this period of prehistory which provided the social context which resulted in the eventual adoption of metal daggers and, later, swords. In this interpretation, daggers served as objects that signalled shared participation in an overriding concept signalled by both flint and bronze daggers, and as such they helped bridge cultural and ethnic differences. Shapes of flint and bronze daggers converged to a fishtail morphology to emphasise this shared idea, but resident cultures maintained their preference of dagger material and specialist manufacturing traditions.
The blanks for Type IV/V fishtail daggers were made by expert bifacial percussion flaking. Once the biface was thinned and reduced to the right size, the handle was manufactured. Since the handle was designed to be thicker than the blade, reduction at this end was done differently than the blade end. At the handle end, the biface was narrowed by percussion flaking in such a way that the handle grew narrow at about the same rate as it grew thin. The knappers were particularly concerned with producing a roughly diamond-shaped cross section to the handle, and this was probably achieved by indirect percussion (punch flaking) in the handle-narrowing process. The indirect percussion technique can be carefully controlled so that the flakes end at the biface centreline, and this strategy can be used to transform a lenticular cross section into a roughly rectangular one. The end of the handle was squared-off by indirect percussion on Type IV daggers, but Type V daggers often retained cortex on the handle end.
The blade end of the dagger was flaked differently than the handle, with initial percussion flaking creating a relatively thin, wide shape with a flat lenticular cross section. The craftsmen next ground all of the percussion flake scars from this part of the biface, smoothing out the irregularities and providing the ideal cross section for pressure flaking. The dagger-makers often oriented the pressure force obliquely to the long axis of the biface, rather than at a near-right angle. On these daggers, the flakes travelled across the face of the biface at an oblique angle—a ‘transverse parallel’ pressure flaking technique. The angle of orientation of the pressure flaking scars varied between daggers.
Many Danish Daggers were put to use and, through frequent resharpening, discarded as stubby worn-out blades on proportionately over-large handles. The corners at the end of the handle often show considerable wear, probably from their use as strike-a-lights in fire-making kits. Some Danish Daggers also served as grave goods. The flintknapper Errett Callahan suggested that two grades of daggers were produced by Danish flintknappers: the best examples were ‘prestige daggers’ intended for ceremonial use and perhaps made for interring with burials. Lesser-quality daggers with narrower blades were made for everyday use and these were the ones that were resharpened. Some modern flintknappers consider the Type IV dagger to be the pinnacle of highly skilled stone-flaking because of the number of techniques required and the careful staging necessary to make these elaborate flint tools. They were made by specialists and learning to make them likely entailed a long period of apprenticeship.