Disc-shaped brooch with red enamelling, from the Roman site at Newstead, Roxburghshire, 80 - 180 AD
Use
Used as decoration, jewellery.
Collection
National Museums Scotland
Category
Brooch
Jewellery
Acquisition
Accession
X.FRA 823
Source (if not Accessioned)
National Museums Scotland
Notes
Loan
Made/Created
Time Period
1st - 2nd century
Ethnography
Cultural Region
Continent
Europe
Culture/Tribe
Celtic
Lexicon
Nomenclature 4.0
Nomenclature Secondary Object Term
Brooch
Nomenclature Primary Object Term
Pin, Clothing
Nomenclature Sub-Class
Clothing Accessories
Nomenclature Class
Clothing
Nomenclature Category
Category 03: Personal Objects
Other Names and Numbers
Other Numbers
Number Type
Previous Accession Number
Other Number
II.15.324
Material
Bronze, Glass, Enamel
Color
Green, Red
Condition
Overall Condition
Good
Exhibition
Permanent Exhibition
Interpretative Labels
Label Type
Exhibition Caption
Label
Brooches were clothing-fasteners worn like safety pins, by men and women. They also served as fashion accessories and symbols of status. They were made in many different designs. The ‘dragonesque’ type with animal heads is influenced by Celtic art and is typical of Roman Britain. The trumpet-shaped brooches are also British designs.