Unique Roman mask lamp found in Netherlands

The lamp is elaborately decorated with botanical motifs, with a large headdress-like acanthus leaf springing from a scallop shell on the forehead of the wide-eyed and even wider-mouthed mask. The sides of the face are framed in curls and what may be two small animal ears. His nose and heavy brow suggest it may be a satyr mask. The mouth serves as the filling hole of the lamp. The “neck” underneath it (actually the nozzle of the lamp) is edged with a fluted border that narrows and then widens again around the wick aperture.


Square pits dot the ground, some of them with the tell-tale black stains of carbonization from cremations. Archaeologists found a large number of potsherds, evidence that while the bodies were burning, mourners threw offerings in vases and jugs into the fire. The pottery exploded from the heat and the organic offerings were consumed.
The modern town of Cuijk was the Roman settlement of Ceuclum in antiquity. The large quantities of pottery discovered in the cemetery confirms that the population had wide access to consumer goods imported from elsewhere in the Roman Empire.
This video captures the moment of discovery and how the lamp reveals itself in increasingly complex detail as the archaeologist brushes away the dirt.
* This article was originally published here
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