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Bracteate, ca. 1180, 5th–6th century
Scandinavian
Gold; Diam. 1 7/8 in. (4.8 cm)
Purchase, Gift of Dr. Mortimer D. Sackler, Theresa Sackler and Family, and John W. Byington Trust Gift, 2001 (2001.583)

Description

This thin gold pendant, known as a bracteate, displays a deft and spirited design defined by bold, sweeping lines. Picassoesque in its expressive simplicity, the central face exemplifies the exuberant, highly abstract style of early medieval Scandinavian artists. The border zone, formed by intricate and orderly rows of repeated punchwork, reveals the great technical competency of goldsmiths working in northern Europe during the fifth and sixth centuries.

The manufacture of bracteates probably originated with Roman and Byzantine portrait medallions, presented by the emperor as gifts to important figures. Here, however, the imperial image has been transformed into a depiction of a god, perhaps Odin, chief of the Nordic pantheon; his oversize face is balanced atop a galloping horse with horns. With their fine workmanship and allusions to the Roman and Byzantine worlds, gold bracteates conveyed both the sophisticated taste and the high social status of their owners, who wore them as fine jewelry and hoarded them as treasure.

(Entry written by Melanie E. Holcomb)

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