Category
page 1Individual wooden objects
Trojan Horse
tale from Trojan War, a wooden horse used by the Greeks during the Trojan war
Ark of the Covenant
in Judaism, a wooden chest containing the two stone tablets of the Ten Commandments
Kalambo
archaeological site in Zambia

London Hammer
hammer made of iron and wood that was found in London, Texas, U.S.
Stele of Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu
Painted, wooden offering stele located in Cairo, Egypt
Sororium Tigillum
wooden beam said to have been erected on the slope of the Oppian Hill in Ancient Rome by the father of Publius Horatius, one of the three brothers Horatii
Schöningen Spears
8 wooden throwing spears from the Palaeolithic, excavated in 1994–1998 in Schöningen, Helmstedt district, Germany
instrument of Jesus' crucifixion
equipment used for the execution of religious figure Jesus Christ
Öndvegissúlur
Öndvegissúlur (), or high-seat pillars, were a pair of wooden poles placed on each side of the high-seat—the place where the head of household would have sat—in a Viking-period Scandinavian house.
Ranjatai
The is a log of fragrant agarwood currently placed in the Shōsōin repository in the Tōdai-ji. The wood was first imported into Japan during the Nara period in the 8th century. It is considered a famous piece of incense wood due to its proximity and circumstance of the spread of Japanese Buddhism. It is claimed to have been placed in the repository by Empress Kōmyō in memory of Emperor Shōmu.