player and a double pipe player accompany a gymnast in this
Medieval illustration. Duct flutes have a long history: an example of an
Iron Age specimen, made from a sheep bone, exists in
Leeds City Museum. Possibly the oldest discovered fipple instrument is the Wicklow Pipes. Although the instrument found was incomplete, a replica set was playable when fitted with fipples. L.E. McCullough notes that the oldest surviving whistles date from the 12th century, but that, "Players of the
feadan are also mentioned in the description of the King of Ireland's court found in
Early Irish law dating from the 7th and 8th centuries A.D." The Tusculum whistle is a 14-cm whistle with six finger holes, made of brass or bronze, found with pottery dating to the 14th and 15th centuries; it is currently in the collections of the
National Museums Scotland. One of the earliest surviving recorders was discovered in a castle moat in
Dordrecht, the
Netherlands in 1940, and has been dated to the 14th century. It is largely intact, though not playable. A second more or less intact 14th century recorder was found in a latrine in northern Germany (in Göttingen): other 14th-century examples survive from Esslingen (Germany) and Tartu (Estonia). There is a fragment of a possible 14th-15th-century bone recorder in Rhodes (Greece); and there is an intact 15th-century example from Elblag (Poland). ==Duct flutes==