LaurieAnnie's photos with the keyword: Anglo-Saxon

Anglo-Saxon Shield Partially Reconstructed in the…

Anglo-Saxon Shield Partially Reconstructed in the…

The Strickland Brooch in the British Museum, May 2…

Sutton Hoo Shoulder Clasps in the British Museum,…

Fuller Brooch in the British Museum, May 2014

Bronze Strap Union Inlaid with Red Glass in the Br…

The Desborough Necklace in the British Museum, May…

04 Aug 2014 2847
The Desborough Necklace From Desborough, Northamptonshire, England Anglo-Saxon, about AD 650–700 Gold beads and cabochon garnet pendants Length: 25.000 cm (overall) Height: 2.500 cm (bead) Inventory # 1876,0504.1 This necklace is the finest of its kind surviving from Anglo-Saxon England. Workmen found it while digging for ironstone in 1876. The necklace may or may not be complete: the workmen divided the gold items among themselves before being persuaded to hand them over for a small reward. The beads were found near the head of a female skeleton and were said to be the only finds in the grave. The burial was one of the richest of more than sixty graves disturbed at the site. The necklace comprises biconical beads made of coiled gold wire which alternate with domed gold sheet pendants (bullae) and large cabochon garnet pendants in different shapes. In the centre is a gold equal-armed cross with a glass cabochon setting. Small differences in the garnet stones and the loops of the pendants suggest that elements of the necklace came from at least two different sources. The inclusion of a cross as the centrepiece of the necklace may reveal that the wearer of this necklace was Christian. By the late seventh century Christianity was well established in Anglo-Saxon England and most women of high social status were likely to have been Christian. This style of necklace developed from Byzantine fashions popular among the Lombards in about AD 550–600. The fashions spread north from Italy through Francia to Frisia (an area now covered by France, Germany and the Low Countries) and Anglo-Saxon England. S. Marzinzik, Masterpieces: Early medieval a (London, British Museum Press, 2013) L. Webster and J. Backhouse, The making of England: Anglo-S, exh. cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1991) Text from: www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/pe_mla/t/the_desborough_necklace.aspx

Anglo-Saxon Disc Brooch in the Metropolitan Museum…

16 Jun 2010 480
Disk Brooch, early 600s Anglo-Saxon; Probably made in Faversham, southeastern England; Found at Teynam, southeastern England Gold, cells inset with garnets and glass, border inlaid with niello Diam. 1 7/8 in. (4.8 cm) Purchase, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest, 1987 (1987.90.1) Anglo-Saxon artists were master gold- and silversmiths. Tribal leaders commissioned splendid objects for their own use and bestowed elaborately adorned jewelry and weapons on friends and followers. These three pieces, all of which demonstrate the delicacy of Anglo-Saxon jewelry making, come from the region of Kent, in southeastern England, which was a great center of jewelry production. Text from: www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/1987.90.1-3

Anglo-Saxon Pendant in the Metropolitan Museum of…

16 Jun 2010 400
Two Pendants, early 600s Anglo-Saxon; Probably made in Faversham, southeastern England Gold, cells inset with garnets Pendant 1: Diam. 1 1/8 in. (2.9 cm); Purchase, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest, 1987 (1987.90.2-3) Anglo-Saxon artists were master gold- and silversmiths. Tribal leaders commissioned splendid objects for their own use and bestowed elaborately adorned jewelry and weapons on friends and followers. These three pieces, all of which demonstrate the delicacy of Anglo-Saxon jewelry making, come from the region of Kent, in southeastern England, which was a great center of jewelry production. Text from: www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/1987.90.1-3

Anglo-Saxon Pendant in the Metropolitan Museum of…

16 Jun 2010 610
Two Pendants, early 600s Anglo-Saxon; Probably made in Faversham, southeastern England Gold, cells inset with garnets Pendant 2: Diam. 1 7/8 in. (4.8 cm) Purchase, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest, 1987 (1987.90.2-3) Anglo-Saxon artists were master gold- and silversmiths. Tribal leaders commissioned splendid objects for their own use and bestowed elaborately adorned jewelry and weapons on friends and followers. These three pieces, all of which demonstrate the delicacy of Anglo-Saxon jewelry making, come from the region of Kent, in southeastern England, which was a great center of jewelry production. Text from: www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/1987.90.1-3