File:Early Medieval buckle (detail of pin rest) (FindID 190941).jpg

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Early Medieval buckle (detail of pin rest)
Photographer
Royal Institution of Cornwall, Anna Tyacke, 2007-10-10 23:05:02
Title
Early Medieval buckle (detail of pin rest)
Description
English: Cast copper-alloy buckle frame, triangular in plan and semi-circular in cross-section, with a flat reverse. The frame may have originally been D-shaped, like the comparanda below, and been bent into this new form.

At the apex of each of the points of the triangle, there is a sub-triangular animal head terminal with circular eye sockets which may have originally been settings for a stone. One of the three terminals is missing, but would probably have looked the same.

The frame is chamfered on the outer edge, but still leaving a flat upper surface which is ornamented with a zig-zag pattern, with some barred ornament along the chamfered surface. Underneath, the curving part of the frame is chamfered inwards slightly from the outer edge.

The pin and bar are missing; the bar would originally have connected the missing terminal with its opposite. A recess between the eyes of the other larger surviving snake head represents the pin rest. A number of similar examples have been found in Suffolk, from Orford (SF7560), Nacton (SF-9F02E3), Claydon (SF-79DAF8) and Mendham (SF-76F478). The Mendham example was attached to the belt by means of an additional plate wrapped around the pin-bar and cut in at the outer edges to accommodate the frame. Other examples on the PAS database include NMS-9B0AC7 and an interesting pair of rectangular variants, HAMP-BA9FC0 and LVPL-99FBD2 (found in Suffolk).

A similar buckle frame from Old Sarum, although not from a dated context, is in the Ashmolean Museum (Hinton 1974, no. 32) and is also illustrated by Cuddeford (1996, p. 16, no. 15). They are dated on art-historical grounds to the 9th to 11th centuries.

The closest parallels are in the Borre style, named after a site in Denmark, but this particular type of buckle has only been found in Britain and Ireland and therefore should be referred to as Anglo-Scandinavian or Hiberno-Norse (see below).

"The triangular headed animal is found commonly on 10th century strap ends in Ireland that are probably made in Hiberno-Norse Dublin, but based on Anglo-Saxon forms. They have been found on high status crannogs in the midlands that were in commercial contact with Dublin and an example was found in the vicinity of a Viking house at Truska, Co. Galway. I dont have any exact parallels from buckles, however the animal form is found on moulding on a buckle plate from the royal crannog of Coolure Demesne, Co. Westmeath (Coolure Demesne Crannog, Lough Derravaragh: an introduction to its archaeology and landscapes, Aidan O'Sullivan, Rob Sands and Eamonn P. Kelly, Wordwell, Bray, 2007, page 29, Fig.34, No. E621:79). This site also produced other Viking Age material including hack silver, ingots, scales, weights etc. If your buckle were to turn up on a Viking Age site in Ireland it would probably be assumed to have a Hiberno-Norse background" (Eamonn Kelly, National Museum of Ireland, pers comm).

Depicted place (County of findspot) Cornwall
Date between 800 and 1100
Accession number
FindID: 190941
Old ref: CORN-EC5F13
Filename: Septfinds 003.jpg
Credit line
The Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS) is a voluntary programme run by the United Kingdom government to record the increasing numbers of small finds of archaeological interest found by members of the public. The scheme started in 1997 and now covers most of England and Wales. Finds are published at https://finds.org.uk
Source https://finds.org.uk/database/ajax/download/id/153274
Catalog: https://finds.org.uk/database/images/image/id/153274/recordtype/artefacts archive copy at the Wayback Machine
Artefact: https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/record/id/190941
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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current12:05, 22 January 2017Thumbnail for version as of 12:05, 22 January 20171,280 × 960 (504 KB) (talk | contribs)Portable Antiquities Scheme, CORN, FindID: 190941, early medieval, page 148, batch count 2593

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