A female bust(?) depicted on this #AngloSaxon c. 9th c. disc brooch found in Kent. @caitlinrgreen your opinion appreciated.pic.twitter.com/FqcMaH7TpI
History, archaeology, place-names & early lit. Main research on post-Roman Britain & Anglo-Saxon England; also long-distance trade, migration & contact.
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A female bust(?) depicted on this #AngloSaxon c. 9th c. disc brooch found in Kent. @caitlinrgreen your opinion appreciated.pic.twitter.com/FqcMaH7TpI
@hookmoor can you think of any parallels in the Roman coinage? In my almost non existent knowledge of the series I can only think of J Domna
Crispina a good shout. The larger beads w/in the pelleted border (broken by the bust) I think represents lettering...pic.twitter.com/NHT3uo5mFq
...as on this nummular found in Costessey, South Norfolk. PAS NMS-C7A205.pic.twitter.com/xSlV4Jtnot
This Anglo-Saxon gold solidus names the Roman Empress Helena. From Anna Gannon 'The Iconography of Early Anglo-Saxon Coinage', p.39pic.twitter.com/4QaGsKdUS5
Finally again from CNG from Thessalonica with quite different hairstyle - quite likely Christians would be using St Helena rather than some random Empresspic.twitter.com/4ZinTkQ4YR
OTOH, the Mercian coins of Cynethryth now thought to be based on those of Faustina... :)
Interested to hear the arguments for this. Can you give me a pointer ...
The identification is that of Rory Naismith :)https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HDTrSWTyP4IC&pg=PA63&lpg=PA63#v=onepage&q&f=false …
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