12-sided Roman relic baffles archaeologists, spawns countless theories

12-sided roman relic baffles archaeologists, spawns countless theories

12-sided Roman relic baffles archaeologists, spawns countless theories

LONDON — As the group of amateur archaeologists sifted through tiles, animal teeth and pottery fragments buried within an ancient Roman pit in eastern England, one of them encountered something unusual last June.

It was a cast bronze object, hollow in the middle, flat along 12 faces, about the size of a clenched fist. Only one of the diggers — all members of Norton Disney village’s archaeology society — recognized the discovery: It was a Roman dodecahedron, likely to have been placed there 1,700 years earlier.

“You’re looking at a very strange and bizarre object,” Richard Parker, secretary of the Norton Disney History and Archaeology Group, said in a telephone interview.

At first glimpse, the dodecahedron looks more like a sci-fi illustration than it does an ancient Roman relic. Each of its pentagon-shaped faces is punctuated by a hole, varying in size, and each of its 20 corners is accented by a semi-spherical knob.

Since 1739, some 130 of these objects have been discovered across Northern and Western Europe. While archaeologists have dated the relics to Roman times, they have been baffled by the objects for centuries, with no consensus ever emerging on what they were for. There is no known written description of them in ancient texts; nor do any pictorial references exist.

“One reason that it is so captivating for the public is that it’s hard to believe that we have anything from the Roman period that we don’t know what it’s for,” Lorena Hitchens, an archaeologist specializing in Roman dodecahedrons, said in a telephone interview. “It’s very tempting to want to solve that mystery.”

“It’s a really good dodecahedron,” added Hitchens, who examined the relic and found it to be remarkably intact. A preliminary inspection dated the find to between A.D. 43 and 410, the later Roman period.

“It really is one of the oddest and most unusual artifacts that you can get from antiquity,” said Parker, who was brewing tea for his fellow amateur archaeologists when one of the volunteers found the relic. “You look at it and you think: This doesn’t belong. But it actually does. It’s from the Roman period.”

And yet, no one can say how the Romans put it to use. “The function of these enigmatic forms is still unclear and no firm conclusions have been reached,” the British Museum’s Portable Antiquities Scheme summarizes.

There are, however, clues: The form, condition and locations of the discoveries all offer signposts. They may not solve the mystery, but archaeologists believe that they at least narrow the range of working theories.

For instance, dodecahedrons so far discovered range in length from two to over four inches, suggesting to Hitchens that they are not standard measuring devices. “You need consistency to be able to use anything as a gauge,” she said.

The geographic locations of the discoveries offer another clue: They have been found across the northern and western provinces of the Roman Empire — modern-day Britain, France and Germany. “They’re always north of the Alps,” with none so far discovered around the Mediterranean Basin, Hitchens said. To her, this is a hint that they were not primarily military objects: “If it was purely a Roman military thing, it would have been used all over the empire.”

Internet sleuths have joined the speculation, including on a dedicated Reddit forum, with many gravitating toward an explanation that revolves around their use as tools. In one YouTube video, knit and crochet pattern designer Amy Gaines posits her theory that dodecahedrons may have been used to knit gold chains, constructing a 3D-printed replica to demonstrate her theory. Parker said one member of the public suggested to him this week — perhaps half-jokingly — that they could have been used as a dog treat dispenser. English Heritage lists theories ranging from a tool for finding the best date to sow grain, to functioning as a candleholder, a polygonal die, a range finder, a surveying instrument, or a way of knitting gloves.

But academic archaeologists shy away from the suggestion that they were practical objects used as everyday tools. “I know that because I’ve examined a lot of them, and they don’t have the kind of use wear you’d expect from a tool,” Hitchens said.

“They’re also much more delicate than people realize,” she said. “They would be broken very quickly.”

Nor does Hitchens believe that they could have been used as die — the varying weights of the faces, due to the oddly shaped holes, make them unbalanced, and the protruding knobs impede their ability to roll.

The most popular theory among academic experts, although not yet proved, is that dodecahedrons held religious or ritual meaning, linked in some way to local practices on the Roman Empire’s fringes.

Proponents of this theory — including Parker — also point to the intricacy of the object itself, suggesting it probably had special value. According to Hitchens, the relic was made using a lost-wax bronze-casting process, an extremely technical feat — made even more challenging by the fact that the final product was hollow. “It’s a difficult shape to work with. You have to be really at the top of your game to make one of these,” she said.

Archaeologists believe the Norton Disney relic was intentionally buried at the site where it was found — the same place where a figurine of a godlike figure riding a horse, an object associated with places of worship, was found decades earlier. “We think there is some sort of religious element to the site,” Parker said. “It’s very possible that we may be looking at something that had a ritualistic element.”

“You can’t at this point yet prove that, though,” Hitchens said. “At some point, it will reveal itself to us.”

Perhaps that moment will come next month, when it will go on display at the nearby Lincoln Museum, suggested Gaines, the pattern designer.

“Who knows, somebody may see it and make a connection to its use that may be the best solution,” she suggested in an email. “I wonder in 2,000 years what an archaeologist will think when she discovers some of the tools or the junk we throw away without the instruction manual.”

OTHER NEWS

9 minutes ago

Olivia Rodrigo still figuring out when to reschedule Manchester Co-Op Live concerts

10 minutes ago

Pizza Hut fined $2.5m for sending 10 million marketing messages in four months

10 minutes ago

Fury v Usyk LIVE: Start time, undercard and latest updates ahead of press conference in Saudi Arabia

10 minutes ago

Watch live: Partygate investigator Sue Gray gives evidence at Covid inquiry

10 minutes ago

South Korean court rejects effort to block plan that would boost medical school admissions

10 minutes ago

Finnish carrier will resume Estonia flights in June after GPS interference prevented landings

10 minutes ago

Shoppers with limp and lifeless locks coin this celebrity-approved volumising spray the SECRET to 'fuller and thicker looking' hair'

10 minutes ago

Slovak leader in serious but stable condition after assassination try, hospital says

10 minutes ago

eSafety Commissioner threatened over X takedown notice

11 minutes ago

Ten Hag keen to keep Bruno Fernandes at Man Utd after display against Newcastle

11 minutes ago

Doctor who saved Sen. Duckworth’s life says he's trapped in Gaza but still helping patients

11 minutes ago

5 Israeli soldiers killed by friendly fire in northern Gaza

11 minutes ago

Cornell University president called out over message of 'gratitude' for anti-Israel agitators

11 minutes ago

Christian ex-teacher scores big payday from California school district after refusing transgender directives

11 minutes ago

X users have accounts restricted for using the term ‘cisgender’

12 minutes ago

Souths hoping to weave magic with early coach signing

12 minutes ago

Move to preserve, promote sustainable travel in KZN

12 minutes ago

Slovakia shooting was 'politically motivated'

12 minutes ago

Watchdog groups call on House of Commons to close spending loophole

12 minutes ago

Dubai: Expat sues Apple, demands data from AirTag used to track him

12 minutes ago

Arsenal hit gold with "unstoppable" ace who's worth 8x more than Partey

16 minutes ago

Notre Dame Offensive Line Could Hold The Key To A 2024 Breakout

17 minutes ago

Gold prices in Riyadh Today 16 May 2024

17 minutes ago

UK’s toxic water: illegal sewage, parasite in taps – and higher bills on the way

17 minutes ago

Former MGM exec tapped to lead off-Strip casino

17 minutes ago

'No doubt' that China will come back, but may take several quarters, Siemens CEO says

17 minutes ago

Tiger killed after being hit by car on Malaysia expressway

17 minutes ago

Top Asean officials meet Myanmar junta chief for ‘cooperation’ talks

17 minutes ago

Trump supportive of Aukus defence pact, former Australian PM Morrison says

17 minutes ago

As US hikes China tariffs, imports soar from China-reliant Vietnam

19 minutes ago

China announces 15-day visa-free stay in select provinces for cruise travelers to boost tourism

20 minutes ago

Video: Counter-terror police find radioactive material needed to make a dirty bomb in garden shed: 'Far-right extremist', 31, arrested with explosives also seized

20 minutes ago

Shoppers with limp and lifeless locks coin this celebrity-approved volumising spray the SECRET to 'fuller and thicker looking' hair'

21 minutes ago

REVEALED: The bag brand featured in Succession and The White Lotus has dropped a new limited-edition collection (and it's stunning)

21 minutes ago

Liverpool, Man City and Man Utd stars targeted by Saudi Arabian clubs in new transfer assault

22 minutes ago

Director to answer questions on church pyramid scheme donations

22 minutes ago

Celtic secures third straight league title in Scotland and stays on course for a trophy double

22 minutes ago

New optical tweezers can trap large and irregularly shaped particles

22 minutes ago

Biden's DHS promotes ways for visa holders to stay in US after losing work amid major layoffs

23 minutes ago

One Tech Tip: Protecting your car from the growing risk of keyless vehicle thefts