Jewelled disc brooch Ashmolean Museum, Oxford 500600 An… Kotomi_ Flickr
Disk Brooch. Anglo-Saxon. 7th century Not on view View more. Due to rights restrictions, this image cannot be enlarged, viewed at full screen, or downloaded.. Disk Brooch. second half 7th century. Jeweled Bracelet (one of pair) 500-700. Jeweled Bracelet. 500-700. Pectoral with Coins and Pseudo-Medallion.
AngloSaxon Disc Brooch
disc brooch. Museum number 1879,0524.34. Description Silver-gilt plated disc brooch; nielloed border and gold appliqué with cloisonné garnet and glass cross; five shell bosses; filigree.. La Niece, S., 'White inlays in Anglo-Saxon jewellery' in Science and Archaeology Glasgow 1987 ed. Slater E.A. and Tate, J. O., BAR British Series 196.
ArmourAndCastings Saxon disc brooch RA33
Silver open-work disc. Within a slightly peaned border is a plain field which contains the inscription. In the centre of the disc is an open-work ornament in low relief depicting a bird in profile with displayed wings gripping in its claws a fledgling or a small animal.. 'January [1833] Purchased Anglo-Saxon brooch found at Cuxton, Kent in.
Anglo Saxon Disc Brooch Flickr Photo Sharing!
Looking for Saxon Disc Brooch? We have almost everything on eBay. No matter what you love, you'll find it here. Search Saxon Disc Brooch and more.
AngloSaxon Disc Brooch
Penannular brooches do outlast the 7th century, but are only made in Irish, PIctish and perhaps Welsh styles. See below, under Middle and Late Anglo-Saxon Brooches, for details. Disc brooch. Although the term 'disc brooch' is often loosely used for any flat circular brooch, the early Anglo-Saxon disc brooch is a very specific form.
Anglo Saxon Brooch Composite jewelled disc brooch, gold, s… Flickr
The Strickland Brooch is an Anglo-Saxon silver and niello disc brooch dated to the mid 9th century, now in the British Museum. [1] Although its exact provenance is unknown, it is regarded by scholars as a rare and important example of an Anglo-Saxon brooch . Description
The Fuller Brooch is a piece of late 9th century AngloSaxon art of unknown provenance. It is a
The Priory Hill (Dover) brooch, found in 1883, is a good example of the Kentish jewelled brooch on a single cast-silver plate. The Dover composite brooch in the British Museum may also have come from the Priory Hill cemetery. It has hitherto lacked close attention, although its exceptionally delicate design and execution place it in a class.
AngloSaxon Disc Brooch from Monkton on display at the Ashmolean Museum AngloSaxon dress
At the time of its discovery this extraordinary hoard, found during the digging of a grave in Pentney churchyard in 1978, doubled the tally of known Late Saxon silver disc brooches. Not only that, the virtuoso craftsmanship and inventive decoration of at least three of the brooches put them in the first rank of Middle Saxon metalwork.
AngloSaxon Disc Brooch
$74.49 Saxon Disc Brooch MasterArks Returns & exchanges accepted Pay in 4 installments of $18.62. Klarna. Learn more Add to cart Item details Handmade item Materials: Bronze Recycled Length: 2 1/2 Inches; Width: 2 1/2 Inches This is a large, sturdy bronze brooch. It is 2 1/2 inches across and weighs 2 1/3 ounces.
Saxon disc brooch disc brooch, found in Kent… Flickr
They are S-shaped, turning round to bite their own backs; the body continues directly into the angle of a back leg which crosses the body and ends at the border in the rudiments of a foot; a front limb shoots forward to interlock with the hind curve of the other animal; the head is an eye framed by a right-angle; in one case the upper jaw passes.
Disc brooch, Early AngloSaxon, Priory Hill Anglo saxon, Saxon, Brooch
The Kingston Brooch is the largest known Anglo-Saxon composite brooch, and is considered by scholars to be an outstanding example of the composite disc brooch style. The brooch, created in the seventh century, is now in the World Museum Liverpool in Liverpool, England.
ArmourAndCastings Saxon disc brooch RA33
For the sixth century Anglo- Saxons, brooches and pins did the job. Today brooches are worn as decorative jewellery. Then a brooch was first and foremost an essential fastener of clothes. But the quality of the metal and the intricacy of the design would denote a person's status in society. When archaeologists have excavated Early Anglo-Saxon.
AngloSaxon Disc Brooch
The brooch was found in 2003 near Bletchingdon, Oxfordshire.1 Its gilt Style II animal ornament and garnet setting indicate that it is a high status dress-fastener, datable to the period. AN ANGLO‐SAXON DISC BROOCH FROM BLETCHINGDON, OXFORDSHIRE, WITH STYLE II ANIMAL ART - FERN - 2006 - Oxford Journal of Archaeology - Wiley Online Library
Pin on The Wheel & other Circles
Anglo-Saxon brooches are a large group of decorative brooches found in England from the fifth to the eleventh centuries. In the early Anglo-Saxon era, there were two main categories of brooch: the long (bow) brooch and the circular () brooch. The long brooch category includes cruciform, square-headed, radiate-headed, and small-long brooch brooches.
Saxon Disc Brooch by MasterArks on Etsy
Check out our saxon disc brooch selection for the very best in unique or custom, handmade pieces from our brooches shops.
ArmourAndCastings Saxon disc brooch RA33
As a uniquely suave and sophisticated piece of Anglo-Saxon jewellery it is, without contention, the most splendid of the great series of Late Saxon silver disc brooches (cf. reg. nos. 1980,1008.1-6 and 1949,0702.1 ). Indeed, its exquisitely controlled decoration and glossy condition for many years duped scholars into believing it could be a fake.