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Celtic Sword, Iron Age, mid-1st century B.C.
La Tène III
Iron blade with copper alloy hilt and scabbard; L. 19 3/4 in. (50 cm)
Rogers Fund, 1999 (1999.94)

Description

This magnificent anthropomorphic Celtic sword is also one of the best preserved. The beautifully modeled head that terminates the hilt is one of the finest surviving images of a Celtic warrior. The human form of the hilt—appearing as a geometric reduction of a classical warrior—must have had the function not only of enhancing the power of the owner but also of bearing a talismanic significance. The face is emphatically articulated with large almond eyes and the head with omega-shaped ears and finely drawn hair.

Although the scabbard has become amalgamated to the iron blade, affecting parts of the surface, its ornamentation and the exquisitely worked hilt make the whole an evocative statement about the technical ability of the Celts, the powerful conquerors of ancient Europe. The sword is of a type associated with the La Tène culture, named after the important archaeological site on Lake Neuchâtel in present-day Switzerland and eastern France. Other related anthropomorphic swords from diverse finds in France, Ireland, and the British Isles demonstrate the expansion of the Celts across Europe. As the first such object in the Museum's collection, the sword is a superb and singular example that richly adds to a select group of Celtic works of art.

(Entry written by Charles T. Little)

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