1700-1500 BC. A bronze flanged axehead with rounded butt and broad flared blade with convex cutting edge, facetted rhomboidal lateral flanges. Cf. Evans, J. The Ancient Bronze Implements, Weapons and Ornaments of Great Britain and Ireland, London, 1881, fig. 25. Murawski, P. Benet's Artefacts of England and the United Kingdom, Ely, 2003, item B01-0304, supplied with a certificate of publication. 335 grams, 13cm (5"). Property of a West Yorkshire lady; collected from 1978-2008. Fine condition.
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2000-1500 BC. A large bronze flared flat-section axehead with convex cutting edge, rounded butt; slight facet below the edge. Cf. Evans, J. The Ancient Bronze Implements, Weapons and Ornaments of Great Britain and Ireland, London, 1881, item 28. 596 grams, 15.5cm (6"). Property of a West Yorkshire lady; collected 1978-2008. Fine condition.
1400-1200 BC. A substantial bronze palstave with square butt, flared blade, convex cutting edge with lateral flanges, median rib and stop to each side. Cf. Evans, J. The Ancient Bronze Implements, Weapons and Ornaments of Great Britain and Ireland, London, 1881, item 77. 439 grams, 15.5cm (6"). Ex Clark collection, Dorset; acquired in the 1970s. Fine condition.
Middle European, 800-500 BC. A cast looped and socketted axehead with slightly flared cutting edge; thickened collar to mouth and elongated beaks, ovoid loop. Cf. Read, C.H. British Museum Guide to the Antiquities of the Bronze Age, London, 1904, item 105. 164 grams, 99mm (4"). Property of a Cambridgeshire collector. "Extremely fine condition, small crack to socket."
2nd millennium BC. A large facetted triangular bronze blade with straight cutting edge, elliptical-section tubular socket with rib detailing, spike to the rear with chamfered discoid plaque. 539 grams, 22cm (8 1/2"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. [No Reserve] "Fine condition; disc and blade chipped, accretion to one face."
2nd millennium BC. A large narrow facetted triangular bronze blade with straight cutting edge, elliptical-section tubular socket with collar above and below, spike to the rear with chamfered discoid plaque. 370 grams, 22cm (8 1/2"). Property of a German collector; acquired in the 1990s. [No Reserve] "Fine condition, blade chipped."
2nd millennium BC. A large facetted triangular bronze blade with straight cutting edge, lateral flanges and median rib, elliptical-section tubular socket with collar above and below, spike to the rear with chamfered discoid plaque. 371 grams, 25cm (9 3/4"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. [No Reserve] Fine condition; small casting flaw to socket.
1300-1000 BC. A large European axehead with narrow bronze blade, straight edge and flared end; the socket with thick collar to the mouth and loop joining to one side of the collar. Cf. Evans, J. The Ancient Bronze Implements, Weapons and Ornaments of Great Britain and Ireland, London, 1881, item 148. 463 grams, 12.5cm (5"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. [No Reserve] Fine condition.
2nd millennium BC. A small bronze European axehead with scooped socket and flange to the mouth; the loop connected perpendicular to an extension of the mouth. 86 grams, 86mm (3 1/2"). Property of a German collector; acquired in the 1990s. [No Reserve] Fine condition; cutting edge partly absent.
1st century BC-1st century AD. A bronze figurine of a horse with one foreleg raised, crimped mane, ring-and-dot eyes and collar to the neck. In the Iron Age the horse was a symbol of the aristocratic warrior elite. As well as its association with battle, the horse was revered for beauty, speed, sexual vigour and fertility. There is substantial evidence for ritual associated with horses and equine imagery abounds with many different Celtic deities adopting the horse as their symbol, such as Taranis and Belenus, both of whom are warlike sky deities. But it is Epona who was associated the most with the animal and was responsible for horse breeding and fertility as well as patroness of cavalry officers. Small figures of horses, such as this one, were offered at shrines and temples as votive gifts to the deities. 35 grams, 58mm (2 1/4"). Private collection, UK; formed in the 1980s. [No Reserve] Fine condition.
1st century BC-1st century AD. A bronze model boar in animated pose with legs extended, tail looped, crest of bristles to the back, ring-and-dot motifs to the flanks. Cf. Rolland, H. Bronzes Antiques de Haute Provence, Paris, 1965, item 252. The boar was one of the most important zoomorphic symbols for the Celts as it represented war and hunting as well as feasting - aspects of life that were extremely important to them. Boars with prominent spinal crests are common on Celtic coins where they may be war motifs. Boars are also depicted on the famous Gundestrup cauldron as ornamental crests on the helmets of warriors and decorating war trumpets. The Roman author Tacitus mentions in The Germania that the Celtic tribe of the Aestii wore boar amulets for protection in battle. 52 grams, 54mm (2 1/2"). Property of a gentleman; acquired in the 1990s. Very fine condition.
2nd century BC-1st century AD. A flat-section bronze appliqué with La Tène style lyre-shaped crescentic swirls forming a standing bird with recurved tail, spiral hip, pellet eye; reserved panels keyed to accept silver foil. Cf. appliqué with double-lyre form from Santon Norfolk in Megaw, R.& V. Celtic Art. From its Beginnings to the Book of Kells, London, 1989, plate XX. 2.92 grams, 33mm (1 1/4"). Property of a German collector; acquired in the 1990s. [No Reserve] Fine condition.
2nd-3rd century BC. A two-part bronze horse bit assemblage, each cheek-piece formed as a round-section bar with expanding ends and projecting loop below; the bit formed as two interlocking rings and hexagonal-section shafts with rows of integral projecting knops. Similar to the Galatian bronze horse bit from the Hidirsihlar tumulus, Bolu, now in Istanbul Archaeological Museum. The Galatians were a part of the great Celtic migration which invaded Macedon, led by Brennus. The original Celts who settled in Galatia came through Thrace under the leadership of Leotarios and Leonnorios around 270 BC. 878 grams, 30cm (11 1/2"). From a private collection, acquired in the 1950s. Very fine condition.
1st century BC-2nd century AD. A pair of bronze pendants, each formed as two discs each with three radiating lobes, one of loops and the other of trapezoidal plaques, red enamel infill to the centre, connected by an enamelled triangular plaque to a thick suspension loop. 8.14 grams total, 39mm (1 1/2"). Property of a gentleman; acquired in the 1990s. [2, No Reserve] Fine condition.
1st-2nd century AD. A bronze linch pin of vase-headed type with transverse piercings to the bulb, square-section socket below the flange, broad D-shaped plaque with rolled edge; incised La Tène motif to the bulb, two discoid cells and incised arch, to the upper face concentric rings and two leaf-shaped panels reserved against an originally enamelled field. Cf. MacGregor, M. Early Celtic Art in North Britain, vol.2, Leicester, 1976, item 131 from Traprain Law, Scotland. 68 grams, 40mm (1 1/2"). Found Norfolk, UK. [No Reserve] Fair condition.
Dated 1884. A finely modelled bronze bust sculpture of a boy on a red marble base inscribed 'Thomas Mansfield Guthrie / 1884 / T.S. Burnett, A.R.S.A.'; engraved '231' to the underside; supplied with the gallery's data-sheets. The sculpture was shown at the 29th Exhibition of the Royal Scottish Academy of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture in Edinburgh, 1855. The sculptor, Thomas Stuart Burnett, was born in Edinburgh in 1853. He was the some of a lithographic printer who won the Gold Medal of the Royal Scottish Academy in1875 and was made an Associate of the body in 1893. He exhibited many times in Edinburgh, Glasgow and Aberdeen and was awarded several prizes for his work. He died in 1883. The subject of the study, Thomas Mansfield Guthrie, was the son of C.J. Guthrie, the Edinburgh Advocate. 8.4 kg, 47cm (18 1/2"). Property of a London gentleman; ex Vangelli Gallery, Westminster, London, UK. Very fine condition.
19th century AD. A bronze figure of a crouching ithyphallic satyr with hands resting on the knees, horse tail to the rear, bearded and with braided hair; funicular bowl to the head with circumferential lines, central socket. The satyr were the companions of Dionysus, god of wine and fertility. They are often associated with wild and uncultivated land, living a carefree existence, being fond of wine and women, they roam the countryside to the accompaniment of music. 165 grams, 67mm (2 3/4"). Property of a Middlesex gentleman; acquired in the 1980s; formerly R. Bussey, London collection. Very fine condition.
17th century AD. A flat-section bronze disc with design to one face comprising a heater shield with rose and thistle, initials 'I.R.' (Iacobus Rex, King James) above; the shield quartered with the lion rampant of Scotland top right, harp of Ireland bottom left, the other quarters with sub-quarters of the three lions of England and three fleurs-de-lys of France; plain border, probably mounted. The royal arms had this particular form from the Union of the crowns in 1603 until the establishment of the Commonwealth in 1649, and subsequently from 1660 until the death of Queen Anne in 1689. 9.39 grams, 30mm (1 1/4"). Property of a Devon collector. [No Reserve] Fair condition; usage wear.
15th-16th century AD. A bronze circular flat seal with attached hinged rib and suspension loop to reverse; with intaglio design of a shield divided horizontally with retrograde 'IhS' in each half; with incuse enigmatic ?I H O ?I S C S B black letter inscription. The initials 'IhS' to the shield are retrograde on this seal, an unusual feature and the inscription letters are widely spaced with two mascles as stops(?) placed very close to the adjoining letters; possibly a Continental seal. 26.30 grams, 29.09mm (1 1/4"). From a significant private English collection of seal matrices, formed over the past 35 years. Fine condition.
11th-12th century AD. A bronze Scandinavian type pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with central openwork raven with spread wings, beaded border. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazicheskiye Priveski Drevniye Rusi X-XIV Vekov, Moscow, 2013, item L-31. 5.04 grams, 32mm (1 1/4"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. Very fine condition.
9th-12th century AD. A flat-section bronze crescentic Scandinavian type pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with ribbed loop and beaded border, pellets to the centre. 3.32 grams, 21mm (3/4"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. [No Reserve] Fine condition.
11th-12th century AD. A bronze Scandinavian pendant of Kipplingeberg type (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with regardant beast and foliage. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazicheskiye Priveski Drevniye Rusi X-XIV Vekov, Moscow, 2013, item J.2.02. 3.15 grams, 29mm (1 1/4"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. Fine condition.
11th-12th century AD. A bronze Scandinavian type pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with integral loop, openwork motif of a bird with wings spread, three-pronged tail. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazicheskiye Priveski Drevniye Rusi X-XIV Vekov, Moscow, 2013, item L29. 5.30 grams, 35mm (1 1/2"). Property of an American collector; acquired 1980-2000. [No Reserve] Fair condition; loop open.
12th century AD. A bronze Scandinavian type pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus Middle Dnieper region), with integral pierced lug, pelletted border enclosing an addorsed pair of regardant ravens. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazicheskiye Priveski Drevniye Rusi X-XIV Vekov, volume III, Moscow, 2013, item L.7.01. 5.04 grams, 42mm (1 3/4"). Property of a German collector; acquired in the 1990s. Fine condition.
Late 10th-middle 12th century AD. A bronze miniature Scandinavian type spoon pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with ovoid bowl, collar and pierced lug. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazcheskye Priveski Drevnei Rusi X-XIV Vekov, volume I, Moscow, 2013, item D.94. 11 grams, 59mm (2 1/4"). Property of an American collector; acquired 1980-2000. [No Reserve] Fine condition.
10th century AD. A bronze Scandinavian type pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with integral loop, high-relief trefoil design with pellets. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazicheskiye Priveski Drevniye Rusi X-XIV Vekov, Moscow, 2013, item M-2. 1.39 grams, 21mm (3/4"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. [No Reserve] Very fine condition.
11th-12th century AD. A bronze Scandinavian type pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with integral loop and raised edge, reserved design of an eagle with wings spread. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazicheskiye Priveski Drevniye Rusi X-XIV Vekov, Moscow, 2013, item L.3.01-02. 7.52 grams, 31mm (1 1/4"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. [No Reserve] Fair condition.
10th-12th century AD. A pair of bronze Scandinavian type pendants, each discoid with raised rim and pierced suspension lug, central cruciform design of addorsed C-shaped scrolls, central pellet, radiating billets to the border. 6.12 grams total, 28-31mm (1 1/4"). Property of a German collector; acquired in the 1990s. [2, No Reserve] Fine condition.
10th-12th century AD. A bronze lunate Scandinavian pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with integral pierced lug, raised border and hatched panels, domed bosses. 5.26 grams, 30mm (1 1/4"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. [No Reserve] Fine condition.
11th-12th century AD. A bronze bifacial pendant formed as two addorsed horse-heads springing from a plaque with central trapezoidal hole, hatched surfaces; suspension ring above, six loops to the lower edge for attachment of chains, Baltic workmanship. Cf. Sedov, B.B. Finno-Ugri i Balti v Epokhi Srednevekovija, Moscow, 1987, plate LXI, item 2. 12 grams, 50mm (2"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. [No Reserve] Fine condition.
10th-12th century AD. A bronze openwork pendant with facing male figure, possibly Loki, modelled in the half-round within scrolled tendrils; knop above. The figure between tendrils may be a reference to the god Loki who was punished by being bound to a rock with the entrails of one of his sons. 6.45 grams, 36mm (1 1/2"). Property of a German collector; acquired in the 1990s. [No Reserve] Fine condition. Rare.
10th-12th century AD. A mixed group of bronze lunate Scandinavian pendants (also widespread in the historical Rus region), comprising: one with crescentic void; one with pelletted border; one with raised ribbing. 18 grams total, 22-45mm (1 - 1 3/4"). Property of a German collector; acquired in the 1990s. [3, No Reserve] Fine condition.
11th century AD. A bronze Scandinavian type pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with integral loop, openwork interlace design of a bird with tendrils. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazcheskye Priveski Drevnei Rusi X-XIV Vekov, volume III, Moscow, 2013, item J.6.02-03. 6.49 grams, 39mm (1 1/2"). Property of an American collector; acquired 1980-2000. Fine condition.
10th-11th century AD. A pair of bronze Scandinavian type pendants (also widespread in the historical Rus region), each with integral loop and scrolls within a beaded border. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazcheskye Priveski Drevnei Rusi X-XIV Vekov, volume I, Moscow, 2013, item B.3.03. 9.69 grams total, 30-33mm (1 1/4"). Property of an American collector; acquired 1980-2000. [2] Fine condition.
10th-12th century AD. A bronze Scandinavian type pendant (also widespread in the historical Rus region), with integral loop, openwork motif of an interlaced body extending from the face on the suspension loop. Cf. Korshyn, V.E.Yazicheskiye Priveski Drevniye Rusi X-XIV Vekov, Moscow, 2013, item K43. 2.49 grams, 28mm (1"). Property of an American collector; acquired 1980-2000. Fine condition.
8th-12th century AD. A mixed group of bronze items comprising: two buckle plates with integral elliptical loop; a round-section loop with discoid plaque and curved tongue; a tongue with curved tip, three cells above with pearlescent glass inserts. See Sedov, B.B. Finno-Ugri i Balti v Epokhi Srednevekovija, Moscow, 1987, plate XCIX. 44 grams, 31-47mm (1 1/4 - 2"). Property of an American collector; acquired 1980-2000. [4, No Reserve] Fine condition; one insert absent.
8th-12th century AD. A mixed bronze group comprising: a buckle plaque with kidney-shaped loop, triangular plaque with open centre, ribbed detail, three discoid cells, three loops to the reverse; a c-section ring brooch with scroll tendril detailing. 23 grams total, 32-60mm (1 1/4 - 2 1/2"). From an old Munich collection; acquired on the German art market before 2000. [2, No Reserve] Fine condition.
9th-12th century AD. A mixed group bronze items comprising: a penannular brooch with scroll finials; a penannular brooch with polyhedral terminals; a buckle loop with two beast-heads to the rear; a buckle-loop with four beast to the loop; two buckles with integral plaques. 39 grams total, 19-47mm (3/4 - 2"). Property of an American collector; acquired 1980-2000. [6, No Reserve] Fine condition.
11th-12th century AD. A bronze lentoid-section one-piece comb of Scandinavian type (also widespread in the historical Rus, Upper Dnieper region) with fine-cut teeth, bar to the upper edge with circular holes forming a handle; to one face a group of ring-and-dot motifs. Cf. Korshyn, V.E. Yazcheskye Priveski Drevnei Rusi X-XIV Vekov, volume I, Moscow, 2013, item D.5.01. 8.44 grams, 45mm (1 3/4"). From an important comb collection; acquired in the 1960s. Fine condition.
7th century AD. A bronze box brooch with traces of original gilding, discoid in plan with slightly tapering sidewall with a band of dense interlace; the upper face with a triskele of beasts each executed in three-strand banding with profile bird-head, pellet to the neck and pellet eye, all surrounding a central pellet; hollow to the reverse with catchplate and pin-lug, remains of ferrous pin. Cf. box brooches in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, in MacGregor, A. et al. A Summary Catalogue of the Continental Archaeological Collections, Oxford, 1997, item 1.1; Arwidsson, G. Valsgärde 7, Uppsala, 1977. Supplied with a positive X-Ray Fluorescence analysis certificate. Stylistically the present brooch is a very early type of box brooch, lower and flatter than the examples from the Viking age. These normally feature a slightly domed upper face divided into quadrants with beast-head detailing but this example features a triskele of Style II zoomorphic motifs. The antecedents of the design appear to lie in the Uppland region of Sweden and specifically such items as the shield-boss found in the Mound 7 ship-burial at Valsgärde (Arwidsson, 1977). 33 grams, 44mm (1 3/4"). Property of a gentleman; acquired from an antiques dealer in the 1990s; formerly in a 19th century collection. Extremely fine condition.
11th century AD. A very rare bronze openwork plate brooch with pin-lugs, pin and catchplate to the reverse; the plate an S-curved dragon executed in Urnes Style with latticework of tendrils enmeshing the body. Cf. similar enmeshed dragon on the ring from Lindholm Høje, Denmark in Wilson, D.M. The Vikings and their Origins, London, 1970, fig.107. Supplied with a positive X-Ray Fluorescence analysis certificate. 13 grams, 36mm (1 1/2"). Property of a German collector; acquired in the 1980s and 1990s. "Very fine condition, complete with pin. Very rare."
10th-11th century AD. A bronze boar-head brooch with separate backplate; the body formed as a hollow-cast case with upstanding ears and raised bar to the muzzle separating two panels of three-strand interlace ornament; to the sides and top, panels of scrolled tendrils; backplate attached by five studs, with rectangular slot, pin-lugs, round-section pin and integral catchplate; hole to the brow between the ears to attach a chain, small casting flaw to nasal. Cf. MacGregor, A. et al. A Summary Catalogue of the Continental Archaeological Collections, Oxford, 1997, item 3.17. The form of boar-head brooch with a separately-cast backplate is introduced around 900 AD. Many examples have been pierced to accept an attachment chain from which utensils could be hung in an ostentatious manner. 66 grams, 55mm (2 1/4"). Property of a German collector; acquired in the 1980s and 1990s. Very fine condition.

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389650 item(s)/page