People lived on the margins of the fen in roundhouses like this one, farming, hunting and fishing. They kept sheep, an ancient breed similar to these in the picture below, which were trotting loose about the rural site.
The day I was there, house-martins were flying like darts in and out of the roundhouse, working away to feed their young, who were peeking shyly out of the mud nests plastered to the beams. I wonder if this would have happened in 1300 BC when the fire would have been continually smoking? Perhaps the martins would have built their nests under the shaggy eaves.
Anyway, within these snug., safe houses - Francis Pryor has described how during the great storm of 1987 he stood in the doorway of the first reconstructed roundhouse on this site, watching sheet-metal roofs tear loose and blow away from the nearby industrial site - our Bronze Age ancestors lived and worked, and, setting out along the causeway they had built, performed ceremonies and made ritual offerings to the waters.
The acid, anaerobic peaty waters don’t preserve bones very well, but they are excellent for preserving wood, leather, and metal. Many bronze swords and spearheads were given to the marsh; gold earrings, pins and brooches have also been found. To whom or what were these dedicated? Perhaps to the dead, the ancestors – there are burial mounds on the island – or perhaps to the spirits of the water and the wild. We may guess; probably we will never know.
There's even a section of excavated causeway visible in situ, albeit housed for protection inside a hut where it's kept from drying out (and therefore crumbling into dust) by a constantly dripping sprinkler system. To stand looking down on the actual timbers which prehistoric people once trod is fascinating even if not, in such a context, terribly romantic. However the photo below doesn't show that the concrete walls of the hut have been painted with trompe l'oeil murals of the prehistoric fen in spring, summer, autumn and winter, stretching away to the horizon, populated with gulls and herons and moorhens and wild ducks.
In his book Britain BC Francis Pryor writes:
The post alignment is indeed a causeway, but it’s
far more than that. The main evidence for this is provided by the nearly three
hundred finds of prehistoric metalwork made to date. They were found within the
area of the posts, and also along their southern side, but not along the
northern side which faced ‘out’ ... into the wide-open fen. It’s tempting to
view this in symbolic terms: the open fen to the north was seen as being
hostile or untamed. It was on this side of the posts that we found the remains
of dogs, and the only complete human skeleton. They were in extremely poor
condition after lying for thousands of years in the acid peat ... but I reckon
the death occurred in the Iron Age – a period when Flag Fen was still in use as
an important ceremonial centre. Given what we know about the so-called ‘bog
bodies’ of Britain and Scandinavia in the Iron Age, I wouldn’t be at all
surprised to learn that the individual [and dogs] had been killed before being
thrown into the waters.
Francis Pryor, Britain BC, p 281
Even more exciting, the museum houses a collection of no less than eight prehistoric log boats, all more or less intact, some with carved decorations and even lifting handles, discovered at a nearby site called Must Farm. These are in the process of being preserved, like the Mary Rose.
If you're anywhere near Peterborough, do visit if you can. We went on a sunny Tuesday morning in early summer. We had the site to ourselves, to wander around and marvel. The sheep trotted past and took shelter under the trees. Fish splashed in the fen; I heard a cuckoo. It was easy almost to imagine oneself back in the past...