CONTEXTUALISING METAL-DETECTED DISCOVERIES: the staffordshire anglo-saxon hoard

Similar documents
Contextualising Metal-Detected Discoveries: The Staffordshire Anglo-Saxon Hoard

Contextualising Metal-Detected Discoveries: Staffordshire Anglo-Saxon Hoard

Contextualising Metal-detected discoveries: The Staffordshire anglo-saxon hoard

Contextualising Metal-Detected Discoveries: Staffordshire Anglo-Saxon Hoard

THE ALFRED JEWEL: AD STIRRUP: AD THE CUDDESDON BOWL: AD c600 ABINGDON SWORD: AD C875

Fort Arbeia and the Roman Empire in Britain 2012 FIELD REPORT

the Aberlemno Stone Information for Teachers investigating historic sites

Contextualising Metal-Detected Discoveries: Staffordshire Anglo-Saxon Hoard

Viking Loans Box. Thor s Hammer

Special School Days

Tourism Symposium 2016

Cambridge Archaeology Field Group. Fieldwalking on the Childerley Estate, Cambridgeshire. Autumn 2014 to Spring Third interim report

Amanda K. Chen Department of Art History and Archaeology University of Maryland, College Park

LE CATILLON II HOARD. jerseyheritage.org Association of Jersey Charities, No. 161

Contexts for Conservation

Early Medieval. This PowerPoint includes information on the following images: 53 and 55

STONES OF STENNESS HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT SCOTLAND STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE

Touring Highlights from The Courtauld Gallery s Collection of Islamic Metalwork

The New York Historical Society. Buch Uniform

ORNAMENTS. of Wealth and Power Bronze, Silver and Gold Artefacts of Ancient China and Neighbouring Regions BARRY TILL

Information for Teachers

The Vikings Begin. This October, step into the magical, mystical world of the early Vikings. By Dr. Marika Hedin

Higher National Unit Specification. General information for centres. Fashion: Commercial Design. Unit code: F18W 34

IRAN. Bowl Northern Iran, Ismailabad Chalcolithic, mid-5th millennium B.C. Pottery (65.1) Published: Handbook, no. 10

STUDENT ACTIVITY SHEETS Lullingstone Roman Villa

ALUTIIQ MUSEUM & ARCHAEOLOGICAL REPOSITORY 215 Mission Road, Suite 101! Kodiak, Alaska 99615! ! FAX EXHIBITS POLICY

The lab Do not wash metal gently Never, ever, mix finds from different layers

Ancient Arts. Ancient Arts Ltd Experimental Archaeology and Replica Artefacts. Llynnon Roundhouse designed by Ancient Arts

Research Paper No.2. Representation of Female Artists in Britain in 2016

PREHISTORIC ARTEFACT BOX

DEMARCATION OF THE STONE AGES.

Special School Days

A looted Viking Period ship s vane terminal from Ukraine Ny Björn Gustafsson Fornvännen

Harald s Viking Quest Group Leader s Notes

Fieldwalking at Cottam 1994 (COT94F)

Kangaroo Island Easter Art Exhibition Penneshaw Hall, Penneshaw Good Friday 30 March to Sunday 8 April 2018

A HOARD OF EARLY IRON AGE GOLD TORCS FROM IPSWICH

Contact Details The Collection: Art & Archaelogoy in Lincolnshire Danes Terrace, Lincoln LN2 1LP Tel: +44 (0)

What the shirts tell us

Kandy Period Bronze Buddha Images of Sri Lanka: Visual and Technological Styles

A COIN OF OFFA FOUND IN A VIKING-AGE BURIAL AT VOSS, NORWAY. Bergen Museum.

GETTY VILLA UNVEILS A BEHIND-THE-SCENES LOOK AT OBJECT COLLECTION AND CONSERVATION IN THREE SIMULTANEOUS EXHIBITIONS

Nubia. Sphinx of Taharqo Kawa, Sudan 680 BC. Visit resource for teachers Key Stage 2

Exporting Egypt: Where? Why? Whose?

Classroom Activity Ideas

1 Introduction to the Collection

Community Services Committee 14 December Report for Decision. The Eden Hore Collection Building from the Feasibility Study (COM )

SERIATION: Ordering Archaeological Evidence by Stylistic Differences

Small Finds Assessment, Minchery Paddock, Littlemore, Oxford (MP12)

Scientific evidences to show ancient lead trade with Tissamaharama Sri Lanka: A metallurgical study

Centurio helmet from Sisak

Facial Reconstruction

OUR MOB and OUR YOUNG MOB 2017 ENTRY FORM 2017

Evidence for the use of bronze mining tools in the Bronze Age copper mines on the Great Orme, Llandudno

Art for all ages in the heart of the Ouachitas

h i s t om b an d h i s t r e a su r e s Worksheet CArter ArChAeoLoGY

An archaeological watching brief and recording at Brightlingsea Quarry, Moverons Lane, Brightlingsea, Essex October 2003

HANDLIST SCULPTURE. Woruldhord

ST PATRICK S CHAPEL, ST DAVIDS PEMBROKESHIRE 2015

Charles W. Eisemann Center Forrest & Virginia Green Mezzanine-Gallery Policies & Procedures for Exhibiting

Lyminge, Kent. Assessment of Ironwork from the Excavations Patrick Ottaway. January 2012

A Sense of Place Tor Enclosures

EMERALD PATERNITY TEST

the brands Jewellery and keepsakes for boys and girls Valid until Spring 2016

Moray Archaeology For All Project

Jane C. Waldbaum Archaeology Field School Scholarship. It was difficult at first to adjust to the ten-hour time change, but my body quickly

Witten's & Sons 3-4 Vine Place, Sunderland, Tyne & Wear, SR1 3NE Tel:

VII. List of Figures: Fig. No.

JAAH 2019 No 24 Trier Christiansen Logbook

The Pegasus Stone, Oswestry:

A survey of women and men in the science, engineering, technology and built environment about their experiences with personal protective equipment

Cambridge Archaeology Field Group. Fieldwalking on the Childerley Estate Cambridgeshire

Minutes of the meeting of THE SCOTTISH ARCHAEOLOGICAL FINDS ALLOCATION PANEL

1 INTRODUCTION 1. Show the children the Great Hall Finds.

KILMARTIN CROSSES; KILMARTIN SCULPTURED STONES AND NEIL CAMPBELL TOMB

WAREHOUSE DESIGN COMPETITON

Anglo Saxon Introduce Me

OHIO UNIVERSITY HAZARD COMMUNICATION PROGRAM (FOR NON-LABORATORY APPLICATIONS) Dept. Name Today s Date Dept. Hazard Communication Contact

27 30 June Waterperry Gardens. The International Contemporary Arts Festival INFORMATION PACK. The International Contemporary Arts Festival

READERSHIP 61% 39% 82% 18% 824,000 IAS 2017 average issue readership (Europe) the highest circulation of any travel magazine. 3.

Which of above statement is/ are true about the Indus Valley Civilization? a. I Only b. II Only c. I, II and III d. III Only. Answer: c.

EARL S BU, ORPHIR HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT SCOTLAND STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE. Property in Care (PIC) ID: PIC291 Designations:

This Unit is particularly suitable for those candidates wishing to embark upon a career in jewellery design and/or manufacture.

What s on? January April Togas and Tunics. Knitting and Crochet. Family Events Workshops Tours Talks. Roman Baths

Afedap Formations bijou :

Photographs. Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Pearson Education, Inc.

Lockhart Spirit of the Land Sculpture Information Saturday 7 & Sunday 8 October 2017

Press release. Art in the Park at Compton Verney 2015 Faye Claridge: Kern Baby Saturday 14 March Sunday 13 December 2015

Fossils in African cave reveal extinct, previously unknown human ancestor

Learning Task - Junior Hairdresser - Blow Drying

FOUR CYLINDER SEALS FROM KITION

Linking aesthetics and sensuality

Learning to Walk in the Slippers of a High-Wire Artist

The Watlington Hoard

little treasures 2019

58, RUE DU LOUVRE PARIS TEL FAX

PRESS CONFERENCE PRESENTATION OF THE NEW DIRECTOR OF THE VIENNALE. January 11, 2018 Metro Kinokulturhaus

RACQUEL TAYLO R REMNA NT S O N MA IN

Costume Head: Job Description

THE PRE-CONQUEST COFFINS FROM SWINEGATE AND 18 BACK SWINEGATE

Transcription:

CONTEXTUALISING METAL-DETECTED DISCOVERIES: the staffordshire anglo-saxon hoard Four views of the pommel now reconstructed from K005, K596-7, K604, K1374 and K1968 - Photo montage - Lucy Martin NEWSLETTER 8 june 2015

NEWSLETTER 8 JUNE 19, 2015 Hello, once more, with this the eighth Staffordshire Hoard Newsletter. It is a great pleasure to be editing the newsletter again and catching up with all the new developments and discoveries about the Hoard, welcoming new personnel to the team and saying farewell to others. This was all brought to a happy conclusion early this year when EH (now Historic England) commissioned Barbican to carry out Stage 2. We are now five months into the 30 month programme, and the final report is due to be submitted to the referees two years from now. The Barbican website has a wealth of detail about what was achieved in Stage 1 and what we hope to do in Stage 2. It also has the final Project Design for this stage of the project which includes the Assessment Chris wrote summarising our state of knowledge at the end of Stage 1. All of this can be accessed at http://www.barbicanra.co.uk/staffordshirehoard.html together with details of who is in the team carrying out Stage 2. As summer is here (apart from the weather) I thought you might be amused by the following, particularly all those who have been labouring to categorise the If you read the PD, and get as far as Section 16, you will discover that we various foils. don t have all the money needed to complete the project as originally scoped. Though we have over 300,000 for this stage guaranteed, another 100,000 or so is needed. The owners are embarking on a vigorous fund-raising campaign, so we are hoping they are successful. We shall be making the decision of what can be done, and what has to be excluded, at the end of this year when we see how the fundraising is going. As ever, thank you to all the contributors. Stage 1 was front-loaded with the scientific work, and so the focus was due to shift to the typology and art historical NOTES FROM THE PROJECT MANAGER aspects in Stage 2 with only small amounts of further scientific analysis. has changed because the It is a year since our last Newsletter at the This end of Stage 1. At that point the first Birmingham Museum Trust was awarded version of the project design had been a grant from the Esmée Fairbairn submitted, and we were waiting to see Foundation. This has enabled them to whether what had been proposed for Stage employ two archaeological scientists for a 2 could be afforded. The rest of the total of 18 months. This means we are summer and autumn passed in various being able to explore such organics as are discussions resulting in three further associated with the objects in more detail, versions of the PD to accommodate some and to continue the analysis of the structural changes to the management of metalwork. We are extremely grateful for the project, and various other matters. this bonus. Below Pieta introduces the full

team now at work in Birmingham. This SHEET GROUPING includes three new conservators who are busy joining the fragments. Some of the A useful 3-day grouping exercise took place in April, attended by Chris Fern and results can be seen in these pages. George Speake, to reassess the many diegiven the new strands of scientific impressed gilt-silver fragments and analysis being undertaken, it was felt a associated reeded strips. This project, one formal post of scientific advisor and of the priorities of Stage 2, is being internal referee would be useful. I am very carried out in the Conservation Lab at pleased to say that Professor Marcos BMAG, and builds on the initial Martinon-Torres from the Institute of conservation and joining that started at the Archaeology UCL has agreed to British Museum, reported on by Fleur Shearman in earlier newsletters. The undertake this work. grouping and sorting is proving to be a We are also being joined by Lucy Martin tantalizing and challenging task, but has of Cotswold Archaeology who will be been aided by the appointment of taking the photographs of the objects for Giovanni Fragni, under the supervision of the final publication. She introduces Pieta Greaves. Acknowledgement should herself below and has produced the cover be given to the careful boxing and image for this Newsletter. Some of you labelling at the British Museum and to may recognise one element of that as Fleur Shearman s detailed conservation having been a cover image on one of our report, which has facilitated the task of Newsletters before (no. 4 February classifying and identifying the many 2013, K005). Now it can be seen as different fragments. Progress has been forming part of a gilded cast silver made, with new associations and discpommel along with K596-7, K604, K1374 overies coming to light in recent weeks. and K1968. The die-impressed sheets present us with The typology team which was just Chris a range of figural and zoomorphic for Stage 1, has been augmented by designs. We can be reasonably certain that George Speake who is taking the majority of the warrior panels and responsibility for the die-impressed friezes and some zoomorphic designs once sheets. He and Giovanna tell you what is enhanced at least one splendid AngloSaxon helmet, but not all sheets can be going on with these below. confidently associated with a helmet. The Finally, I am happy to tell you that the linked moustached heads, for example first refereed journal article from the could have been the part of the rim mount research project will appear later this year. of a drinking vessel. It is clear that some Ellie Blakelock has written up the pilot of the initial groupings and classifications study on the gold that showed the are no longer valid. The report in phenomenon of deliberate surface Newsletter 7 that there appear to be c. 17 enrichment (see Newsletter 5 June 2013), different die-impressed friezes now needs and this has been accepted for publication to be modified. Significantly the provisional grouping of so-called in Archaeometry. marching warrior friezes 1-6 has now Hilary Cool been reduced down to two and the use of two distinctive dies. One panel shows three helmeted warriors with spear, swords and shields moving to the left. The other panel shows armed, helmeted

Warriors moving to the left warriors, with smaller up-raised shields, moving to the right (see composite photographs above and below). Whilst we cannot be certain how these panels were arranged, parallels with Swedish helmets would suggest that they were positioned above the helmet-band, each side of the helmet showing the warriors marching in sequence towards the front. Progress has also been made in locating and positioning more fragments of the encircling helmet-band of kneeling warriors, and the containing silver tray which was secured to the helmet rim. The overall length of the helmet-band will provide some indication of the size of the helmet. It is surmise at present whether the zoomorphic frieze of linked beaked quadrupeds was positioned above the kneeling warriors, or it derived from another helmet. There is much sorting and interpretation still to be undertaken. Challenges lie ahead, particularly in relation to the range of Style II decoration, but significant new pieces have been located to add to our understanding and appreciation of the iconography and stylistic variety of the die-impressed sheets. More fragments associated with the equestrian warrior are presenting intriguing possibilities that there were further figures in the panel. George Speake

Warriors moving to the right CONSERVATION AND RECONSTRUCTION OF THE HOARD HELMET FOILS. It s been an intense couple of months working on the foils of the Staffordshire Hoard. When I started on 1 April, I was confronted with a stack of boxes filled with smaller boxes that all contained fragments of embossed foil, some less than a square millimetre. While reconstructing these fragments of gold and silver was a new project for me, I ve worked with precious metals for a long time. Before returning to university I was an independent jeweller, designing and creating works in silver and gold. Later as an undergraduate I had the opportunity to curate a collection of bronze axes, some of which were 5,000 'Before' - the boxes of foil fragments

years old. From that moment on I was hooked on ancient metals. I worked in the university arts and sculpture foundry in order to cast my own replica axes, and I had an internship at the Science Museum of Minnesota where I re-catalogued and conserved the metals collection there. After getting my degree in Minnesota, I came to the University of Sheffield to complete a masters and PhD in archaeometallurgy. I moved on from bronze axes, and for my thesis I explored the tools and techniques used by the metal artisans of the Bronze Age. Now I ve jumped ahead to Anglo Saxon times to apply my skills as a metalsmith and archaeologist to reassemble the foils that are part of the Staffordshire Hoard. are long and snaky, and if you look closely, they have a sort of skinny foreleg that wraps around the body of the next creature. Unlike the Warrior foils there wasn t a border marking the beginning or and of each section, so the first part of the task was to figure out what the original design looked like. In order to make these foils, a metalsmith makes a die, a sturdy plate made of bronze or perhaps bone or antler. The design can be directly carved onto the surface of the die, or a die can be made of wax and then cast in bronze. Once the die is made, the smith takes a thin sheet of metal and places it over the die. A piece of leather or lead is placed over the sheet metal and then the layers are hammed so that the sheet metal is pushed into the die, making an impressed design on the surface. In order to figure out what the die looked like, I had to sort out all the duck-like creatures. It didn t take long to notice that they had individual features. Some had round heads and others were cone-shaped. Some had long, skinny feet; some had short, fat feet. I made a list of all the different features I could recognise and then looked to see how often they repeated. One duck was different than the rest in that his back and foot were Meet the experts day 2015: sharing the foils with the incomplete. I recognised that this must have been the first public duck on the die. Because the ducks are interlaced and I started by getting familiar with each and every fragment and it wasn t long before I there are no borders dividing the design could recognise and sort them into the dif- into sections, the incomplete duck at the ferent friezes. The first project I worked beginning of the die would have to fit on was the Frieze of the Beaked closely to the last duck in order to Quadrupeds, also known affectionately as continue the sequence. In addition, the the Ducks. It s hard to imagine what else beaded border above the last duck had a they could be, unless they re geese. They couple of slightly larger beads. They were have long quacking beaks, a curved neck, larger because the smith had used them to and paddle-shaped feet, but their bodies line the foil up for the next

Ducks sequence ' After' - the foils sequence completed sequence in the continuing design. Once I had found one edge of the die it was relatively easy to get my ducks in a row in fact row after row. An entire sequence of five ducks was repeated to make a long, narrow foil of about 57 centimetres, which is pretty close to the length needed for a foil to go around the edge of a helmet. What a helmet that must have been! BMAG NEWS The team at BMAG is now at full strength, we have:peter McElhinney who is looking at the organic and inorganic remains in the hoard. Giovanna Fregni who is reconstructing the die impressed strips. Ellie Blakelock who is looking at the silver alloys and some of the gold construction elements. We also have two conservators, Kayleigh Fuller, and Lizzie Miller who is reconstructing and conserving the pieces, along with student Rachel Altpeter who has come to us from UCL for 10 months. The steel helmet would have been covered in gleaming gold foils and panels held in place by heavier gold strips. The panels depicted scenes of marching warriors with spears and swords. In another panel, warriors attack a horse and rider. And then finally we have a gold frieze of ducks? Well, we call them ducks, or beaked The team has also carried out a meet the quadrupeds, but maybe they really are experts day at BMAG, where the public geese. Or perhaps they are dragons or some other fierce mythical Anglo Saxon beasts. But whether they re ducks or dragons, they are another fascinating piece in the story of the Staffordshire Hoard. Dr Giovanna Fregni Ellie and Rachel preparing the SEM

had the opportunity to ask questions and discuss our progress, there was also a chance for people to learn some conservation techniques with a pop-up conservation table. K1387: niello x 30 Peter, Kayleigh and Lizzie with future conservators Great progress has been made on all fronts with new discoveries and objects coming together week by week. A couple of the highlights include, the frieze Giovanna has described, and the elaborate pommel K1387 (illustrated below) with niello biting animals on one side. K1387: Niello snakes design Pieta Greaves: Conservation Coordinator Pommel K1387

A POSSIBLE SWORD HILT SET This pommel [K39, K1007] and pair of hilt-collars [K160, K186, K1364, K595, K953, K304] in silver represents a possible set from a sword-hilt. One of the collars was whole, but the other parts have been reassembled from seven fragments. each collar. The Style II art dates the set to the late 6thor early 7th century. Whilst it is possible the suite was made in an Anglo-Saxon workshop, parallels for the pommel from the Continent and Scandinavia, mean that it might possibly indicate an imported sword. Chris Fern THE STAFFORDSHIRE HOARD PROGRAMME: NEWS AND EVENTS *Dr David Symons, Curator of Archaeology and Numismatics at Birmingham Museums Trust retired in March. Dave has been involved with the hoard since it arrived at the museum in 2009, and was a long-standing member of the Research Advisory Panel. More recently, he was responsible for curating the new Staffordshire Hoard gallery at Birmingham Museum which opened in October, and is attracting large numbers of visitors. * History West Midlands have produced a series of three podcasts about the hoard, in which members of the research project and museum staff Pommel K39/K1007 and hilt collars discuss what they re learning through the research and They were cast and all are decorated in conservation project. sunken relief with abstract animal art of Style II. All the parts were probably http://historywm.com/podcast/ gilded originally, traces of which remain, and all the animal body elements were inlaid with black niello, which would * BMT have been running a competition have created a striking contrast of black in conjunction with the School of and gold. The pommel bears on its Jewellery at Birmingham City University surviving side two back-to-back and three local jewellery firms (Weston zoomorphs, with a further creature on the Beamor, Fattorini, Hockley Mint) to remaining pommel shoulder. The collars produce jewellery inspired by the hoard. have panelled animals and animal body The final designs will be on sale in the parts that were different on each side of museum shop.

* The New Vic Theatre in Newcastleunder-Lyme held/ is holding a five week festival of new theatre shows inspired by the Staffordshire Hoard. They ve been working closely with The Potteries Museum and Art Gallery to create the new works, including a documentary piece about the discovery of the hoard, featuring actors playing members of museum staff. http://www.newvichoardfestival.org.uk/ skills acquired during this time have further informed my artefact photography. By coincidence this period was my first encounter with the Hoard as, whilst I was at Liverpool, I was involved in the radiography of the blocks of soil to make an initial assessment of the quantity of precious metal in them for the Treasure process. I take particular pleasure in postprocessing and my personal photography is highly textured and manipulated; much Jenni Butterworth of my personal work can be viewed at SH Programme Co-ordinator roundography.com, along with a few examples of my professional work. Pommel K0005 (Photograph by Lucy Martin) INTRODUCING LUCY MARTIN: PHOTOGRAPHER AND ILLUSTRATOR END NOTE I am the Senior Illustrator at Cotswold Archaeology, based near Cirencester. I have been an archaeological illustrator for thirteen years, during which time my photography has taken on a gradually more prominent role in my professional (and personal) life. Between 2009 and 2012 I studied and practised cultural heritage radiography, with a focus on exploring the range of filmless capture systems on the market, and many of the I would just like to add to Jenni's valediction to Dave Symons. We were at university together and he seemed like a permanent fixture at BMT and was always most helpful in providing access to the museum collections. I know he has thoroughly enjoyed his time with the Hoard as one of the many 'foil sorters', amongst many other things, and as a regular speaker to local societies. We wish him well in his retirement.