Anthropomorphic Swords from the British Museum
Here are photos I took at the British Museum a year ago. The description is from the display card.


Iron Swords with Cast Bronze Anthropoid Hilts

----------

400-200 BC, Found near Sulmona, Aquila, Italy

The hilt was cast in three separate sections with the head securing them onto the tang. This early example is extremely stylised demonstrating how it was developed from earlier antennae hilt shapes.

PRB 1890 12-31

----------

300-100 BC, Salon, Aube, France

The hilt was cast in two components joined at about the waist-line. The head modelled in the round to depict a clean-shaven male with a miserable expression.

PRB ML1669

----------

I did not photograph the card for the third sword.


 Attachment: 30.78 KB
bm_anthro01.jpg
Anthropomorphic Swords at The British Museum

 Attachment: 57.93 KB
bm_anthro02.jpg
Anthropomorphic Swords at The British Museum

 Attachment: 56.99 KB
bm_anthro03.jpg
Anthropomorphic Sword at The British Museum
Thank you, an idea is growing in my mind, as unruly as Athena in Jupiter's head ...
Bruno Giordan wrote:
Thank you, an idea is growing in my mind, as unruly as Athena in Jupiter's head ...


Mr Giordan
To go completely off-topic, wouldn't that be Minerva in Jupiter's head, or Athena in Zeus' head (or did you mean to imply that the idea was so unruly as to be cross-cultural)?
Regards
Geoff
P.S. lovely photographs.
I'm reminded of the Al Massey and Jake Powning rendition

http://www.myArmoury.com/nateb_swor_mass_anth.html?7

IIRC, this sword changed hands in the past year. I hope it went to a good home and doesn't just fade from memory.

Thanks for posting these Nathan. I don't think I have ever seen them together in context before. My ancestry being primarly Celtic, these have always been of interest to me.

Cheers

GC
Great Pics Nathan. Don't know how I missed seeing these when I was there this summer. Thanks for posting!
Geoff Wood wrote:
Bruno Giordan wrote:
Thank you, an idea is growing in my mind, as unruly as Athena in Jupiter's head ...


Mr Giordan
To go completely off-topic, wouldn't that be Minerva in Jupiter's head, or Athena in Zeus' head (or did you mean to imply that the idea was so unruly as to be cross-cultural)?
Regards
Geoff
P.S. lovely photographs.


Greeks and Romans exchanged so much ... philosophy, slaves, statues, artists,religion, myths, boys ... err...

At a certain point Graecia capta ferum victorem cepit, so confusion was total
Under my august feet it lies the territory of Nortehrn Italy: so swords like this can be hiden where I walk.


Now it is just a matter of lookig for a cheap minesweeper ...

Page 1 of 1

Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum




All contents © Copyright 2003-2006 myArmoury.com — All rights reserved
Discussion forums powered by phpBB © The phpBB Group
Switch to the Full-featured Version of the forum