Originaldatei (1.274 × 1.600 Pixel, Dateigröße: 554 KB, MIME-Typ: image/jpeg)
Diese Datei und die Informationen unter dem roten Trennstrich werden aus dem zentralen Medienarchiv Wikimedia Commons eingebunden.
Beschreibung
The griffin - copyright Christies | |||
---|---|---|---|
Fotograf |
All rights reserved, Daniel Pett, 2010-09-13 17:12:52 |
||
Titel |
The griffin - copyright Christies |
||
Beschreibung |
English: An extremely fine, near complete copper-alloy two-piece Roman cavalry sports helmet dating from the late 1st-mid-3rd century AD. The helmet consists of a face mask, a head piece with a griffin figurine crest attachment. It was found in 33 fragments, with 34 smaller fragments found in association. Many of the fragments were found to join and the restored helmet is now c. 90% complete.
The finely wrought face mask corresponds to Robinson's Cavalry Sports Helmet Type C (Robinson 1975, 114-7) and Kohlert's Type V (Kohlhert 1978, 23-4). It depicts an idealised youthful male face, with luxuriant curly hair in three rows, the first of which extends to the mid-point of the full cheeks. The fine eyebrows are indicated by short diagonal engraved strokes, the eyelids are shown and both eyes are depicted with a pierced ring in the centre of the eye-holes to represent the iris. Traces of the reserved white metal coating are visible on the face, but it is likely that the hair and helmet would have appeared in bright natural bronze. The nostrils are pierced and the full lips slightly parted. Originally the mask would have hinged at the centre of the brow within the curly hair (Jackson and Craddock 1995, 80). At the neck it was fastened by a leather strap which would have been secured by its eyeleted ends to an iron strap on the jawline on each side of the mask, with slight remains of iron corrosion surviving. The survival of the headpiece, in its Phrygian form is exceptional with a crest attachment in the form of a winged griffin with its right paw raised and resting on an amphora. At the back of the head is a single row of curls can be seen below a raised ridge. Although no Roman garrisons are documented in the immediate vicinity, the findspot lies in an area with a substantial Roman military presence on a key route leading to the northern frontier. The nearest is at Brough and there are others further to the north-west in the Eden valley (e.g. Kirkby Thore, Brougham, Old Penrith). Stanwix, the garrison of the only thousand strong cavalry unit known from Roman Britain, is c. 50km to the NW. To the east of the Pennines over Stainmore are further garrisons. Findspots of other sports helmets are varied. In many cases they have been found within or in the immediate environs of garrisons, often of auxiliary cavalry units (alae; cohortes equitatae) (Garbsch 1978) as at Ribchester, Lancashire and Newstead, Borders. In several cases however there is no closely associated fort or fortress, for instance, at Guisborough (N. Yorks) and Worthing (Norfolk) among the UK examples. The recent discussion by Nicolay (2007) of the 'lifecycle' of Roman military equipment provides various possible models by which the helmet may have come to be deposited in a context away from a garrison, by hoarding, votive deposition or burial with the dead. In this case of this helmet, the visor was found placed face downwards and the helmet had been folded prior to deposition. On this very limited evidence votive offering or hoarding of loot might better explain its deposition at this findspot, but in the absence of excavation this must remain speculative. |
||
Abgebildeter Ort | (County of findspot) Cumbria | ||
Datum | zwischen 75 und 250 | ||
Inventarnummer |
FindID: 404767 Old ref: LANCUM-E48D73 Filename: 19269498i-1.jpg |
||
Anerkennung |
|
||
Quelle |
https://finds.org.uk/database/ajax/download/id/296832 Catalog: https://finds.org.uk/database/images/image/id/296832 Artefact: https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/record/id/404767 |
||
Genehmigung (Weiternutzung dieser Datei) |
Attribution-ShareAlike License | ||
Andere Versionen |
|
Lizenz
- Dieses Werk darf von dir
- verbreitet werden – vervielfältigt, verbreitet und öffentlich zugänglich gemacht werden
- neu zusammengestellt werden – abgewandelt und bearbeitet werden
- Zu den folgenden Bedingungen:
- Namensnennung – Du musst angemessene Urheber- und Rechteangaben machen, einen Link zur Lizenz beifügen und angeben, ob Änderungen vorgenommen wurden. Diese Angaben dürfen in jeder angemessenen Art und Weise gemacht werden, allerdings nicht so, dass der Eindruck entsteht, der Lizenzgeber unterstütze gerade dich oder deine Nutzung besonders.
- Weitergabe unter gleichen Bedingungen – Wenn du das Material wiedermischst, transformierst oder darauf aufbaust, musst du deine Beiträge unter der gleichen oder einer kompatiblen Lizenz wie das Original verbreiten.
In dieser Datei abgebildete Objekte
Motiv
Dateiversionen
Klicke auf einen Zeitpunkt, um diese Version zu laden.
Version vom | Vorschaubild | Maße | Benutzer | Kommentar | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
aktuell | 14:49, 27. Jan. 2017 | 1.274 × 1.600 (554 KB) | Fæ | Portable Antiquities Scheme, PAS, FindID: 404767, roman, page 3, batch count 41 |
Dateiverwendung
Die folgende Seite verwendet diese Datei:
Metadaten
Diese Datei enthält weitere Informationen (beispielsweise Exif-Metadaten), die in der Regel von der Digitalkamera oder dem verwendeten Scanner stammen. Durch nachträgliche Bearbeitung der Originaldatei können einige Details verändert worden sein.
Kameraausrichtung | Normal |
---|---|
Horizontale Auflösung | 300 dpi |
Vertikale Auflösung | 300 dpi |
Software | Adobe Photoshop CS4 Windows |
Speicherzeitpunkt | 15:44, 7. Sep. 2010 |
Farbraum | Nicht kalibriert |
Bildbreite | 1.274 px |
Bildhöhe | 1.600 px |
Digitalisierungszeitpunkt | 16:34, 7. Sep. 2010 |
Datum, zu dem die Metadaten letztmalig geändert wurden | 16:44, 7. Sep. 2010 |
Eindeutige Kennung des ursprünglichen Dokuments | xmp.did:08D127068EBADF11AF7FC9F2B87FE5EC |