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  • Object number
    59/208
  • Description
    A blade from a mattock used for grubbing up soil. Found in an abandoned crofter?s cottage at Clashnessie in the Scottish Highlands.
    This is the blade from a large mattock, a tool used for grubbing up soil. It is known as a ?cabbie? in English and a ?caibe? in Scottish Gaelic. It was found in an abandoned crofter?s cottage at Clashnessie in the Scottish Highlands. A mattock head typically has an axe blade and an adze, or a pick and an adze. This blade is diamond-shaped with a slight upward curve, and has a round socket.
  • Physical description
    1 mattock; metal
  • Archival history
    MERL ‘Associated information’ form – ‘Very much a Celtic tool. We also have a similar tall from Cornwall (Acc. ’53 [53/593]) & in Wales the tool is indispensible for farm & garden work. J. G. Jenkins finds it quite impossible to work in the garden without a CAIB! – constantly needed for furrow cutting, weeding, clod breaking & a great many other tasks.’, Miscellaneous label in accession file – ‘Head of hoe called ‘cabbie’ (Phonet: [kabi], Gaelic orthog: ‘caibe (?)’) // From abandoned crofter’s cottage at Clashnessie on the west coast of Sutherland (28/8/58). // (For use the iron head is mounted on a straight wooden haft about 4 feet long. The ‘cabbie’ is still sometimes used in the region for lifting potatoes).’
  • Object name
    Mattock
  • Material
    Metal
  • Associated subject
    CULTIVATING : clearance
  • External document
    • L:\MERL\Objects\JISC 2012\60 series negatives\60_2899.tif - High resolution image
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University of Reading | Archive and Museum Database
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