|
Date: |
|
Description: | Description: Copper-alloy brooch with separate central silver stud. Apart from the silver stud, the brooch is made in one piece, consisting of a circular plate, a coiled spring to one side tapering into a pin, and a catchplate to the other side. The flat circular plate is 30mm wide and both edges are decorated with a grooved border within short transverse grooves, forming a ladder pattern which is interrupted by the projections which form the spring and catchplate. Within the border are 12 ring-and-dot motifs, neatly and evenly distributed with an outer ring of eight and an inner ring or square of four.The spring consists of one-and-a-half coils before the pin extends out towards the catchplate; it is incomplete, being broken just beyond the stud in the centre of the brooch. The catchplate is also incomplete, the hook at the end being damaged. The central stud is domed, and appears of shiny silver to the front, although the shaft of the rivet on the reverse is the same dark grey as the rest of the brooch. Analysis (below) has shown the domed head on the front and the shaft on the reverse to be made from the same metal, so the shiny appearance of the front is presumably due to over-cleaning of the front.Dimensions: The brooch measures 47mm long, 30mm wide, and weighs 7.44g. The plate is 0.8mm thick.Analysis: Non-destructive X-ray fluorescence analysis of the surface identified the metal disc and pin of the brooch as bronze, an alloy of copper with tin and impurities. The surface composition of the white-metal stud, and its pin where it protrudes through the disc to the back, is 70-73% silver, alloyed with copper and tin and approximately 1% gold (Department of Conservation and Scientific Research, The British Museum, File No. 7513-42, 12 November 2013).Discussion: This form of one-piece brooch is a relatively newly identified middle Anglo-Saxon type. Examples are more commonly lozenge-shaped or long thin ovals, as found in excavations at Sedgeford, Norfolk and Flixborough, Lincs (Rogers in Evans and Loveluck 2009, 1-3). There are, in addition, at least twelve of this type on the PAS database; the present example is, however, the first circular one-piece brooch to have been recorded on the PAS database. These brooches tend to be flimsy, small and cheap; ring-and-dot motifs are common decoration, but occasionally more elaborate ornament (e.g. on HAMP-CEBED7 and NMS-829627) enables a date in the 8th century to be established with confidence. This combines well with the late 8th- to early 10th-century dates for contexts containing this brooch type at Flixborough. Most one-piece brooches have been found in the Midlands or East Anglia. NB: this is not the same brooch type as the 7th-century 'safety-pin' brooches mentioned by Rogers, but may have developed from it.Copper-alloy or base silver brooches with central decorative studs of good pure silver are well known but rare finds from the middle Anglo-Saxon period. There are two recorded on the PAS database, NCL-771FB5 and NARC-E11208, both of which are large, well-made brooches dating to the 8th century. Other items, notably 9th-century strap-ends, also combine a copper-alloy body with silver rivets.The present example, combining a cheap construction and small size with the prestigious design of a circular brooch with central silver stud, is an unusual and interesting brooch.Date: It dates to the 8th century AD.
Original Image | Publisher: | http://finds.org.uk | Source: | Portable Antiquities | Identifier: | http://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/r... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
BROOCH
A cast copper-alloy disc, probably…
-
BROOCH
Description: Large circular disc brooch…
-
BROOCH
Incomplete middle saxon, copper alloy…
-
BROOCH
Incomplete Middle Anglo-Saxon copper-alloy one-piece…
-
BROOCH
An incomplete copper-alloy middle Anglo-Saxon…
-
Brooch
An incomplete copper-alloy Roman T-shaped…
-
BROOCH
An incomplete copper-alloy Roman T-shaped…
-
BROOCH
Treasure case 2012T503.Description and Dimensions:…
-
BROOCH
Middle Anglo-Saxon lozengiform brooch made…
-
BROOCH
Middle Anglo-Saxon lozengiform brooch made…
|