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Adze

Popularization note

The iron adze was found on the Castle Hill in Lublin during archaeological research conducted in 1969.

It is a massive object with a bar-shaped spindle and a spatula-shaped blade. It was made with the technique of forging from iron billet.

It belongs to a set of tools used for chopping, splitting and ploughing wooden surfaces. The adze was also quite a versatile tool, because it was used for both initial and special processing, when making grooves, mortises, and flails (notches in knotted joints).

The results of archaeological research carried out on Castle Hill, including the discovered tools connected with woodworking, provide evidence that in the 13th and the first half of the 14th century the log construction, also known as the tie beam construction, was most commonly used in wooden buildings. It is associated with Slavic architecture. In this system, houses were built in the early Polish period, both in towns and urban settlements and in villages. Rural houses were usually sunk in the ground - so called dugouts and sunken huts, whereas in the early urban settlements, above-ground buildings dominated.

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown (blacksmith)

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 19 cm, width: 7,4 cm

Object type

woodworking equipment

Technique

forging

Material

iron

Creation time / dating

476 — 1100

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Castle in Lublin (Lublin), Lublin (Lublin Province)

Owner

The National Museum in Lublin

Identification number

1853/A/ML/1

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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