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Design and Techniques in Early Medieval Celtic Metalwork

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This book examines Early Medieval Celtic design in a European context, its links to Anglo-Saxon and continental art, and its debt to classical traditions. It spans topics including gold origins, an...
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  • 23 May 2024
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Niamh Whitfield is a leading authority on the metalwork of early Medieval Ireland and Scotland . Celtic metalwork of the seventh to twelfth centuries is extremely accomplished technically, and she has aimed at a thorough understanding of its manufacture. She has also been concerned to place Early Medieval Celtic design in its European context, and to analyse its relationship with Anglo-Saxon and continental work, as well as its debt to traditions which ultimately originated in the Classical world.

Dr Whitfield has written about subjects as diverse as the origins of the gold used in early Medieval Ireland and Scotland, the development of animal ornament and geometrical principles of design. Her archival studies have succeeded in identifying the find-spot of the celebrated 'Tara' brooch and in documenting panels of ornament which are now missing. In addition, she has explored early Irish texts for attitudes to jewellery and clothing, considered the brooch as an emblem of status, looked at how brooches were worn, and whether descriptions of clothing and accessories in an early Irish saga provide an accurate description of contemporary finery.
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Price: £150.00
Pages: 648
Publisher: Pindar Press
Imprint: Pindar Press
Publication Date: 23 May 2024
ISBN: 9781904597339
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

ART / History / Medieval, Decorative metalwork, History of art, Precious metal, precious stones and jewellery: artworks and design, Archaeology by period / region

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Preface

GOLD SOURCES AND WORKSHOP TECHNOLOGY

Some new research on gold and gold filigree from early Medieval Ireland and Scotland

ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT OF INSULAR FILIGREE AND ANIMAL ORNAMENT

Motifs and techniques of Celtic filigree: are they original?

Motifs and techniques in Early Medieval Celtic filigree: their ultimate origins

Formal conventions in the depiction of animals on Celtic metalwork

A mount with Hiberno-Saxon chipcarved animal ornament from Rerrick, near Dundrennan, Kirkcudbright, Scotland

The earliest filigree from Ireland

BROOCHES

The original appearance of the Tara brooch

The ‘Tara’ brooch: an Irish emblem of status in its European context

More thoughts on the wearing of brooches in Early Medieval Ireland

Corinthian bronze on the ‘Tara’ brooch?

The filigree of the Hunterston and ‘Tara’ brooches

Hunterston/’Tara’ type brooches reconsidered

The Waterford kite-brooch and its place in Irish metalwork

A Viking-age brooch fragment from recent excavations at Temple Bar West, Dublin

ICONOGRAPHY

Brooch or Cross: The lozenge on the shoulder of the Book of Kells Virgin

The iconography of the Ardagh chalice

REGALIA AND EARLY IRISH LITERATURE

Aristocratic display in Early Medieval Ireland in fiction and in fact: the dazzling white tunic and purple cloak

Some Comments on the Terminology of Metalwork in Old Irish

Index