The 'Gundestrup cauldron' is a richly decorated silver vessel, thought to date from the
La Tène Period in the
2nd or
1st century BC. It was found in a
peat bog near
Gundestrup in
Himmerland,
Denmark in
1891. It is now kept in the
National Museum of Denmark in
Copenhagen.
The decorations on the walls of the cauldron depict
Celtic deities and
rituals. Because of these, and because of the size of the vessel (diameter 69 cm, height 42 cm), it is thought to have been used for sacrificial purposes of the
druidic religion.
Discovery and Assembly
The cauldron had been dismantled and deposited in a dry section of the Raevemose peat bog. Originally, it was put on dry land as an offering and not buried. It was found in
1891 as an ensemble of 13 plates: one round plate, five long rectangular and seven shorter rectangular ones (with an eighth one missing). The plates consist of 97% pure silver, partly gilded.
In
1892, Sophus Müller reconstructed the plates into their present shape, with the five short plates on the inside, the seven longer ones forming the outside and the round plate forming the base. Following a scheme of Klindt-Jensen, the exterior plates are generally labelled with small letters, a–g, and the interior ones with capital A–E.
Decoration
Base Plate
The round base plate is dominated by a bull. On its back is a leaping man wielding a spear, attacking it. Two dogs are also shown, one over the bull's head, and another under its hooves.
Exterior Plates
Each of the seven exterior plates centrally depicts a bust, probably of a deity. Plates a, b, c and d show bearded male figures, while the remaining three are female.
★ On plate 'a', the bearded figure holds in each hand a much smaller man by the arm. Each of the two men reach upward towards a small boar. Under the feet of the men (on the shoulders of the god) are a dog on the left side and a winged horse on the right side.
★ The god on plate 'b' holds in each hand a sea-horse or dragon. The god has been associated with the Irish sea-god
Manannan.
★ On plate 'c', the god raises his empty fists. On his right shoulder is a man in a "boxing" position, and on his left shoulder a leaping figure with a small horseman underneath.
★ Plate 'd' shows a bearded god holding a stag by the hind quarters in each hand.
★ The goddess on plate 'e' is flanked by two smaller male busts.
★ On plate 'f': the goddess holds a bird in her upraised right hand. Her left arm is horizontal, supporting a man and a dog lying on its back. She is flanked by two birds of prey on either side of her head. Her hair is being plaited by a small woman on the right.
★ On plate 'g', the goddess has her arms crossed. On her right shoulder, a scene of a man fighting a lion is shown. On her left shoulder is a leaping figure similar to the one on plate c.
Plate A: Horned God

Plate A
Plate A centrally shows a horned male figure in a seated position, usually identified with
Cernunnos. In its right hand, the figure is holding a
torque, and with its left hand, it grips a horned serpent by the head. To the left is a stag with antlers very similar to the god's. Other animals surround the scene, canine, feline, bovine, and a human figure riding a fish or a dolphin. The scene has been compared to the
Pashupati "lord of animals" of the
Indus Valley Civilization. It has also been associated with depictions of the Buddha, and of the Western Buddha-god
Virupaksha.
[1]
Plate B: Goddess with Wheels
Plate B shows the bust of a goddess, flanked by two six-spoked wheels and by mythical animals: two elephant-like creatures and two griffins. Under the bust is a large hound.
Plate C: Broken Wheel

Plate C: the broken
wheel
Plate C shows the bust of a bearded god holding on to a broken wheel. A smaller leaping figure with a
horned helmet is also holding the rim of the wheel. Under the leaping figure is a horned serpent. The group is surrounded by elephants and
griffins similar to those on plate B. The god has been associated with the Irish
Dagda. The wheel's
spokes are rendered asymmetrical, but judging from the lower half, the wheel may have had twelve spokes, consistent with
chariot burials excavated in
East Yorkshire.
Plate D: Bull Sacrifice
Plate D shows a scene of bull-slaying. Three bulls are depicted in a row, facing right. Each bull is attacked by a man with a sword. Under the hooves of each bull is a dog running to the right, and over the back of each bull is a cat, also running to the right.
Plate E: Warrior Initiation

Plate E: initiation ritual
Plate E apparently displays a sort of
initiation ritual. In the lower half, a line of
warriors bearing spears and shields, accompanied by
carnyx players march to the left. On the left side, a large figure is immersing a man in a cauldron. In the upper half, heading away from the cauldron, and probably having completed the initiation ritual are warriors on horseback. Interestingly, later Celtic myth, such as that of
Bran the Blessed, features
resurrection themes based on immersion of dead warriors in cauldrons.
Interpretation
The Gundestrup cauldron is the largest known example of European
Iron Age silver work. The style and workmanship suggest
Thracian origin, while the imagery seems
Celtic (
torques,
horned God,
carnyx). This has opened room for conflicting theories of Thracian vs.
Gaulish origin of the cauldron.
Bergquist and Taylor propose manufacture by a Thracian craftsman, possibly commissioned by the Celtic
Scordisci and fallen into the hands of
Cimbri who invaded the Middle lower
Danube in
120 BC. Olmsted interprets the iconography as a prototype of the
Irish myth of the
Táin Bó Cuailnge, associating the horned figure with
Cú Chulainn rather than with Cernunnos.a large and growing number of scholars identify it as that of the goddess
lakshmi
References
★ Bergquist, A. K., and T. F. Taylor, ''The origin of the Gundestrup Cauldron'',
Antiquity, vol. 61,
1987, pp. 10-24.
★ Olmsted, G.S., ''The Gundestrup version of
Táin Bó Cuailnge'', Antiquity, vol. 50, pp. 95-103.
★ Klindt-Jensen, O., ''The Gundestrup Bowl — a reassessment'', Antiquity, vol. 33, pp. 161-9.
See also
★
Celtic art
★
Celtic polytheism
★
Druid
External links
★
Celtic Art & Cultures : detailed description of the cauldron
★
Gundestrup Cauldron : origins of the cauldron and its place within Celtic culture