2002
DOI: 10.1017/s0003598x00090566
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The Venerable Bede, druidic tonsure and archaeology

Abstract: Dr Venclová is well known to readers of ANTIQUITY as the excavator of the site of Mšecké Žehrovice in Bohemia, find-place of the most famous example of Iron Age human representation. What she presents here is a provocative theory — that the Mšecké Žehrovice stone head represents a Celtic druid!

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Cited by 10 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…It should not be a surprise if missionaries related what local communities knew to what stories were in the Bible so as to persuade more readily. A recent inspiring work on Gallic images was that of Natalia Venclova (2002), who studied descriptions of the so-called Celtic tonsure and found its resemblance on Iron Age and late Bronze Age statuary. Another line of inquiry might be to compare the sequence in the Pictish forms of standing stones and their iconography with the remarkably similar sequence on the Baltic island of Gotland, where a transition from symbol, to picture, to cross and from incised to relief carving can be observed, but which mostly took place before there was a Christian church on the island.…”
Section: Standing Stonesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It should not be a surprise if missionaries related what local communities knew to what stories were in the Bible so as to persuade more readily. A recent inspiring work on Gallic images was that of Natalia Venclova (2002), who studied descriptions of the so-called Celtic tonsure and found its resemblance on Iron Age and late Bronze Age statuary. Another line of inquiry might be to compare the sequence in the Pictish forms of standing stones and their iconography with the remarkably similar sequence on the Baltic island of Gotland, where a transition from symbol, to picture, to cross and from incised to relief carving can be observed, but which mostly took place before there was a Christian church on the island.…”
Section: Standing Stonesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A curious omission is the wonderful 'severed' (literally) stone head from Mšecké Žehrovice in Bohemia, once part of a human body and dated to the fifth century BC. This image presents a biography of a highly relevant piece of material culture, encapsulating notions of disembodiment, violence, disintegration, reincorporation, and deposition, together with evidence for the idiosyncratic and highly symbolic treatment of hair that has been identified (Venclová, 2002) as reflective of a possible 'druidic' tonsure.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%