Artres Treasure

Artres Treasure
Part of the Artres Treasure displayed in the British Museum
Material Gold and precious stones
Created 6th Centuries AD
Period/culture Merovingian
Present location British Museum
Identification 1897 AF.514a-b; AF.515; AF.518; AF.524-525; AF.3328;
The Artres Treasure is an important Merovingian hoard found at Artres, northern France in the nineteenth century. Most of the treasure is now in the collection of the British Museum in London.[1]

Discovery

The rich grave group was found in 1855 under a small mound near the town of Artres in Pas-de-Calais, northern France. Dating to the middle of the 6th Century AD, it probably belong to an affluent and powerful Frankish women. Most of the hoard was purchased by the curator and philanthropist Augustus Wollaston Franks, who bequeathed it to the British Museum in 1897.[2]

It has recently been shown that a gold disk pendant (now in the Ashmolean Museum) was also part of the hoard.

Description

The Artres Treasure for the most part includes luxurious jewellery fashionable at the Frankish court. It is composed of two large gilded silver fan-shaped brooches, a pair of small gold and garnet encrusted brooches in the shape of a bird, a pair of matching earrings, a crystal ball pendant and a small silver bracelet. Other items in the hoard included a finger ring and a large crystal ball; the whereabouts of these objects are unknown.

See also

References

Further reading

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