Roman Bronze Crossbow Fibula

£ 350.00

A Roman bronze crossbow fibula featuring a thick arched bow leading to a rectangular footplate. At the top, the crossbar is decorated with vertical ribs on the sides and three spherical, collared terminals that taper to a slight point, two on either side and one to the top. The curved bow is adorned with a vertical band of intricate geometric engraving. The foot of the brooch disguises a D-shaped catch plate, with its outer face decorated with groups of  concentric circles and a thin vertical band of hatched engravings. A rectangular protrusion with a rounded profile extends from the lower register of the footplate. The reverse of the brooch displays a fully intact pin.

Date: Circa 1st - 3rd Century AD
Provenance: From an important European private collection, 1980s-2000s.
Condition: Fine condition. Signs of wear as consistent with age, such as missing points on the terminals, surface pitting, scratches, and minor chips. Earthly encrustations and a beautiful dark patina to the surface. The pin and catch plate are complete and intact, but fixed in place.

In antiquity, fibulae were originally used for fastening garments, particularly cloaks, and served both a decorative and practical purpose. The brooches came in a variety of shapes, but all were based on the safety pin principle. The crossbow design reached the height of its popularity both in Italy and in the Western European provinces at a later stage in the Empire’s history. Worn almost exclusively by men, the crossbow brooch came to represent civil and military authority, with famous Roman generals, such as Stilicho, having been depicted wearing crossbow fibulae. They were the basis for more complicated and highly decorated brooches, modelled in bronze, silver and gold and further enriched with precious and semi-precious gemstones. Simpler versions made with cheaper materials were then popularised by Roman soldiers, thus allowing for their spread into the provinces where they became a staple of Romano-Celtic fibula design. Fibulae are the most common artefact-type in burials and settlements throughout much of the continental Europe, though by the Middle Ages, the Roman safety pin type of fibula had fallen into disuse.

To discover more on Roman and Celtic brooches, please see our relevant blog post: Roman and Celtic Fibulae

Weight 85.7 g
Dimensions L 10 x W 5.1 x H 3.1 cm
Region

Southern Europe

Metal

Bronze

Reference: For a similar item, The Cleveland Museum of Art, item 1970.87

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