Description
Reproduction Terslev Brooch
Reproduction pewter Terslev brooch based on an original from Torksey, Lincolnshire
This Borre-style brooch has been identified by Jane Kershaw as a Terslev Type V variant. Terslev style, where Scandinavian ring-chain patterns are the main decorative component, is a subcategory of the Borre style and takes its name from the silver hoard discovered in Terslev, Denmark. The decoration comprises a series of ring-knots related to the Borre ring-chain. The Terslev style occurs mainly on brooches and pendants, including both high-quality gold and silver jewellery as well as lower-end base-metal items. The cast base-metal ornaments, such as those made of copper alloy, were intended to imitate the higher-end gold and silver jewellery, and often employed techniques such as gilding to achieve this. The Terslev designs that occur in England extend the repertoire by introducing new Scandinavian motifs hitherto unrecorded in Scandinavia.
For more information on Scandinavian jewellery in England check out our blog: Brooches, Pendants and Pins: Scandinavian Dress Accessories in England.
Object Type
- Brooch
Date
- circa 900 — 1000
Style
Ascribed Culture
Original/Reproduction
- Reproduction
Material
Collection
- Viking Objects
Current Location
- Private Ownership
Keywords
- Anglo-Scandinavian, Borre, brooch, jewellery, Lincolnshire, pewter, Portable_Antiquities_Scheme, reproduction, Terslev, Torksey, women
Further information
You can see the original at Private Ownership.
This object is related to
Torksey, Lincolnshire.
Find out about Torksey, Lincolnshire.
Acknowledgements
Made by Adam Parsons of Blueaxe Reproductions
(c) Centre for the Study of the Viking Age
References
Brooches, Pendants and Pins: Scandinavian Dress Accessories in England.
Kershaw, Jane F. Viking identities: Scandinavian jewellery in England. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), p. 20-25, 27-28, 65-66.