Bronze Dog Statue Unearthed in England

News September 27, 2017

(Gloucestershire County Council)
SHARE:
bronze licking dog
(Gloucestershire County Council)

BRISTOL, ENGLAND—According to a report in The Forest of Dean and Wye Valley Review, two men discovered a hoard of Roman bronze artifacts in southwest England. Archaeologist Kurt Adams, Gloucestershire and Avon finds liaison officer, said the hoard dates to the fourth century A.D. and includes items that may have been deliberately broken, including small vessel fittings. A detailed statue of a standing dog with an open mouth was found intact. The “licking dog” may have been connected to a Roman healing temple located on what are now the grounds at Lydney Park, a nearby seventeenth-century country estate, or perhaps another undiscovered temple. To read about another discovery from Roman England, go to “London’s Earliest Writing.”

  • Features July/August 2017

    Set in Stone

    Why did prehistoric Native Americans fashion the enigmatic objects known as bannerstones?

    Read Article
    (John Bigelow Taylor)
  • Letter From Peru July/August 2017

    Connecting Two Realms

    Archaeologists rethink the early civilizations of the Amazon

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Quirino Olivera Nuñez)
  • Artifacts July/August 2017

    Bone Rosary Bead

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Border Archaeology)
  • Digs & Discoveries July/August 2017

    Ka-Ching!

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Jersey Heritage)