The shield was discovered in Beith, North Ayrshire, around 1779 during peat harvesting on Luggtonrigge Farm. It was found in a ring with five or six other bronze shields, suggesting they had been deposited together for ritual or ceremonial purposes.
The shield is made of a single sheet of bronze about 27 inches in diameter and just .5mm thick. It has a central boss with a handle riveted to the back of it. There were also two tabs on the back to which a shoulder strap would have originally been attached. It is decorated with 29 concentric rings of small studs bosses alternating with ribs. It dates to ca. 1300-1100 B.C.
There are only 22 shields of this type known, almost all of them found in Britain. One of the 22 was found in Denmark, but archaeologists believe they were produced in Britain and Ireland. The shields were made in a complex process that required hundreds of rounds of hammering, heating and cooling. It required a high level of expertise and can only have been achieved by specialists with years of experience.
Zildjian?
ReplyDeletesabian
ReplyDeleteThey are beautiful. Must have been ornamental as 0.5mm sheet would not protect from much. Perhaps they were backed by wood or leather armor.
ReplyDeleteI thought the first image was an end-on view of automotive cigarette lighter from mid-1050s Fords, Chevys and Plymouths. I’m actually a classy guy, really.
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