The circulation of garnets in the North Sea zone, c. 400-700

Garnet-inlaid metalwork is one of the most instantly recognizable emblems of the elite culture that emerged in the North Sea zone during the 5th to 7th centuries. The giving and receiving of such precious objects played a key role in cementing socio-political relationships, by enhancing the honour o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hamerow, H
Other Authors: Quast, D
Format: Book section
Published: Verlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums 2017
_version_ 1826261876659453952
author Hamerow, H
author2 Quast, D
author_facet Quast, D
Hamerow, H
author_sort Hamerow, H
collection OXFORD
description Garnet-inlaid metalwork is one of the most instantly recognizable emblems of the elite culture that emerged in the North Sea zone during the 5th to 7th centuries. The giving and receiving of such precious objects played a key role in cementing socio-political relationships, by enhancing the honour of both donor and recipient (Arrhenius 1985. – Arrhenius 1998. – Bazelmans 1998). The use of garnet inlays derived ultimately from Graeco-Roman lapidary traditions, with the deep purple-red colour of the stones connoting »rank and wealth« (Webster 2012, 59-60. – Adams 2011a). Provenance studies are revealing the sources from which the garnets used in early medieval metalwork probably originated (see, inter alia, Quast / Schüssler 2000. – Perin et al. 2007. – Mannerstrand / Lundqvist 2003. – But see also Adams 2011a for a cautionary reminder of the complexities and challenges involved in such analysis). Remarkably little, however, is known of the conditions in which trade in these gemstones was conducted and how they circulated within northwest Europe and Scandinavia. This paper approaches these questions by considering where garnets are likely to have entered North Sea (and Baltic) exchange networks; what the decline in the availability of garnets – especially the timing of that decline – suggests about the networks by which they circulated; and whether scientific analysis can shed light on how garnets circulated amongst merchants, goldsmiths and clients􀀍
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:27:29Z
format Book section
id oxford-uuid:1c448e14-be39-4d0b-9274-ec34808e33dd
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:27:29Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Verlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:1c448e14-be39-4d0b-9274-ec34808e33dd2022-03-26T11:04:44ZThe circulation of garnets in the North Sea zone, c. 400-700Book sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248uuid:1c448e14-be39-4d0b-9274-ec34808e33ddSymplectic Elements at OxfordVerlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums2017Hamerow, HQuast, DGarnet-inlaid metalwork is one of the most instantly recognizable emblems of the elite culture that emerged in the North Sea zone during the 5th to 7th centuries. The giving and receiving of such precious objects played a key role in cementing socio-political relationships, by enhancing the honour of both donor and recipient (Arrhenius 1985. – Arrhenius 1998. – Bazelmans 1998). The use of garnet inlays derived ultimately from Graeco-Roman lapidary traditions, with the deep purple-red colour of the stones connoting »rank and wealth« (Webster 2012, 59-60. – Adams 2011a). Provenance studies are revealing the sources from which the garnets used in early medieval metalwork probably originated (see, inter alia, Quast / Schüssler 2000. – Perin et al. 2007. – Mannerstrand / Lundqvist 2003. – But see also Adams 2011a for a cautionary reminder of the complexities and challenges involved in such analysis). Remarkably little, however, is known of the conditions in which trade in these gemstones was conducted and how they circulated within northwest Europe and Scandinavia. This paper approaches these questions by considering where garnets are likely to have entered North Sea (and Baltic) exchange networks; what the decline in the availability of garnets – especially the timing of that decline – suggests about the networks by which they circulated; and whether scientific analysis can shed light on how garnets circulated amongst merchants, goldsmiths and clients􀀍
spellingShingle Hamerow, H
The circulation of garnets in the North Sea zone, c. 400-700
title The circulation of garnets in the North Sea zone, c. 400-700
title_full The circulation of garnets in the North Sea zone, c. 400-700
title_fullStr The circulation of garnets in the North Sea zone, c. 400-700
title_full_unstemmed The circulation of garnets in the North Sea zone, c. 400-700
title_short The circulation of garnets in the North Sea zone, c. 400-700
title_sort circulation of garnets in the north sea zone c 400 700
work_keys_str_mv AT hamerowh thecirculationofgarnetsinthenorthseazonec400700
AT hamerowh circulationofgarnetsinthenorthseazonec400700