August, 1873.]
TUMULI IN THE SALEM DISTRICT.
must have been worn by women as necklaces and bracelets.
Dr. Hunter makes the follow
ing remarks respecting them :—“The beads are very interesting ; they are made of carnelian ornamented with a pure white enamel of consi derable thickness, which has been let into the
stone by grinding the pattern, filling in probably with oxide of tin and exposing the stone to heat. The enamel is very hard, cannot be touched with a knife, and is not acted upon by strong nitric acid.
The small beads are made of white
carnelian and ice-spar, a glossy felspar used by the natives to imitate diamonds. . . . . They are in a better style than most of the beads I have seen from tumuli.”
Besides these, a few were
found made of quartz and of some dark-green stone. Figures 12 and 13 show the beads. 4. Iron implements.-These, consisting chief. ly of knives or short swords, and measuring
225
duction of metals, when arms and implements consisted of spear-heads of flint, and arrow heads of flint or bone. The tumuli of the Bronze period contain relics of burnt bodies, vessels of clay, and implements and ornaments of bronze ; and so show the people in a more advanced state of civilization than the preded ing. The tumuli of the Iron period are the most recent.* They show the people in a com paratively advanced state of civilization. Iron swords, knives, and spear-heads, highly polished vessels and trinkets of gold, silver, and pre cious stones are found in them.
Some of them
also contain sculptures and inscriptions. Now it will be readily seen that all the
tumuli in the Salem District belong to the last
bling state that I have been able to procure only
or Iron period. It is a striking fact that tumuli are found in almost every part of the world. Besides the countries already mentioned, they are found in Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Great Bri
one unbroken.
All the others have had to be
tain, Siberia, America, and the north of India.
gathered in pieces and stuck together on boards with strong cement. Figures 30–32 represent these. Some pieces of iron which appear to have been spear-heads, and some other things, have also been found, but in consequence of their broken condition I cannot pronounce posi tively what they were. III. In discussing the difficult question “How old are the tumuli ?” it is necessary in the first place to glance at the results already achieved by antiquaries in Europe. The nor thern countries of Europe—Denmark, Sweden, and Norway—are particularly full of these ancient burial-places; and they have received the
In Europe, tumuli belonging to each of these three periods are common. But in the south of India I believe that only those of the third period are found.t I am not sure—not having seen Capt. Meadows Taylor's book—whether any of the tumuli in the north belong to any of the earlier periods, but I think not. The question now is reduced to this:–What is the probable age of the last or Iron period * I confess candidly, at the outset, that this question is enveloped in much darkness, and that, with the present data, nothing more can be done than to fix proximately the time when the Iron period ceased in Europe, and then,
most careful attention from the northern anti
reasoning by analogy, to fix conjecturally the
quaries, by whom they have been divided, according to their contents, into three classes— (1) Tumuli of the Stone period; (2) Tumuli of the Bronze period; and (3) Tumuli of the Iron period. Those of the Stone period are consi dered the oldest. They are often of great size, and are “peculiarly distinguished by their im portant circles of stones and large stone cham
time when it ceased in India.
from 1 foot to 22 inches, are in such a crum
The earliest account of tumuli we have is in the Iliad.
Homer in his account of the
funeral of Patroclus describes in glowing terms
how the body of the warrior was left burning during the night, and the embers quenched with wine at the dawn ; how the ashes were
bodies, together with objects of stone and amber.” This period represents the lowest
then inclosed in an urn, placed near the centre of the place occupied by the pyre, which was surrounded by an artificial substructure; and how the loose earth was heaped above it so as
state of civilization—a state before the intro
to form a mound.
bers, in which are found the remains of unburnt
- But on this theory see Fergusson's Rude Stone Monu
muli on the Nilgiri Hills, but as iron implements were found
ments, pp. 9, 10, 19, et passim.–ED. t Bronze vessels and ornaments have been found in tu
with them, they do not define a Bronze age, but rather
the transition from the Bronze to the Iron age.