Quoit brooch - définition. Qu'est-ce que Quoit brooch
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Quoit brooch - définition


Quoit brooch         
  • British-made Roman bracelet from the [[Hoxne hoard]] with similar animals
  • Mucking]] archaeological site, 5th century
  • Romano-British or Anglo-Saxon belt fittings from Mucking, 5th century
TYPE OF ANGLO-SAXON BROOCH, OR THE STYLE OF ORNAMENT TYPICAL OF THESE
Quoit Brooch Style; Quoit (brooch); Sarre Brooch; Jutish Style A
The quoit brooch is a type of Anglo-Saxon brooch found from the 5th century and later during the Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain that has given its name to the Quoit Brooch Style to embrace all types of Anglo-Saxon metalwork in the decorative style typical of the finest brooches. The brooches take their modern name from the rings thrown in the game of quoits, and have the form of a broad ring, or circle with an empty centre, usually in bronze or silver (sometimes inlaid with silver or gold respectively), and often highly decorated.
Ædwen's brooch         
  • George Hickes]], '' Thesaurus of Ancient Languages of the North'', 1705)
11TH-CENTURY SILVER BROOCH
Aedwen's brooch
Ædwen's brooch (also known as Sutton brooch, British Museum 1951,10-11,1) is an early 11th-century Anglo-Scandinavian silver disc brooch with an inscription on the reverse side. It was discovered in 1694 during the ploughing of a field in Sutton, Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire, along with a hoard including coins and gold rings.
Celtic brooch         
  • The [[Breadalbane Brooch]], Irish, 8th century, converted from its original pseudo-penannular form in 9th century Scotland.<ref>Youngs, 94–95</ref>
  • Brooches made in Scandinavia, mostly in base metal
  • Viking period brooch in silver from the [[Penrith Hoard]]
  • Detail of the [[Londesborough Brooch]] (late 8th- or early 9th–century)
  • Early medieval Irish brooch, bronze and glass. The pin lies entirely in front of the ring in this example.
  • [[Viking]] period pennannular brooches from the [[Penrith Hoard]], three of the "[[thistle]]" type.
  • S-shaped enamelled brooch, 1st century, Trinity College Dublin. Celtic and Romano-British tradition
  • Mock-up with modern fabric, showing how the brooches were used.<ref>At the British museum; [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7G98BCWl8vU this You Tube video shows the operation from about 1:20]</ref>
  • Cashel Brooch, 9th or 10th century, from the [[Rock of Cashel]].
  • [[Tara Brooch]], rear view.
  • Pictish art]] and metalwork.<ref>Swift, Catherine. "[https://www.academia.edu/1285310/English_and_Pictish_Terms_for_Brooch_in_an_8th_century_Irish_Law_Text?auto=download English and Pictish Terms for Brooch in an 8th-century Irish Law-Text]". ''Medieval Archaeology'', 2004. Retrieved 29 October 2021</ref>
  • The [[Rogart Brooch]], National Museums of Scotland, FC2. [[Pict]]ish penannular brooch, 8th century. Silver with gilding and glass. Classified as Fowler H3 type.<ref>Youngs, no. 111; Laing, 310</ref>
  • National Museum of Ireland]]
  • [https://www.huntmuseum.com/explore/item/97d6216a-0317-33fd-9330-fc3dd1bf4dbe/?s%3Dhca+508&pos=1 Silver brooch in thistle pattern], 9th-10th century AD. The [[Hunt Museum]] ([[Limerick]], Ireland)
  • Silver gilt "trumpet" brooch with Celtic spirals similar to those in the [[Book of Durrow]]. British, 1st or 2nd century, [[Trinity College Dublin]]
JEWELRY FOR FASTENING CLOTHING CONSISTING OF AN OPEN OR BROKEN RING AND PIN
Celtic brooches; Penannular brooch; Pennanular brooch; Pseudo-penannular; Penannular brooches; Pseudo-penannular brooch; Thistle brooch; Kite brooch
The Celtic brooch, more properly called the penannular brooch, and its closely related type, the pseudo-penannular brooch, are types of brooch clothes fasteners, often rather large; penannular means formed as an incomplete ring. They are especially associated with the beginning of the Early Medieval period in Ireland and Britain, although they are found in other times and places—for example, forming part of traditional female dress in areas in modern North Africa.