Braganza Brooch | |
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Braganza Brooch | |
Material | Gold |
Size | 14 cm long |
Created | 3rd Century BC |
Present location | British Museum,London |
Registration | 2001,0501.1 |
TheBraganza Brooch is a gold ornamentalfibula that was made in the third century BC by a Greek craftsman for a Celtic Iberian client. Since its discovery in unknown circumstances in the nineteenth century in Portugal, it has belonged to a variety of owners, including various members of theHouse of Braganza, for which it is named, before being purchased by theBritish Museum in 2001.[1]
This heavy gold brooch is dominated by the figure of a naked warrior who wears aCeltic helmet and protects himself with a Celtic shield and sword from a hunting dog which jumps up to him. Each end of the fibula is decorated by a dog's head and it once furnished a spring and pin which is now lost. The form, style and technique suggest that it was made in the third century BC by a Greek jeweller for a Celtic patron who lived on theIberian Peninsula. Contemporary Iberian brooches were usually made of silver and were often decorated with warriors on horseback accompanied by hunting dogs. In this unique gold version, the craftsman has simplified the hunting scene and added a boar's head, which once served as the sliding catch for the now missing pin. The brooch measures approximately 14 cm long.
The brooch was once in the collection of the RoyalHouse of Braganza and was perhaps collected byFernando II, consort of Queen Maria of Portugal. Most of the jewellery of the Braganza dynasty was inherited in 1919 by HRHNevada of Portugal, Princess d'Braganza and Duchesse d'Oporto who later emigrated to America. On her death in 1941, the collection was sold to Warren Piper of Chicago. The brooch was in turn purchased by Thomas F Flannery Jr in 1950. After being loaned to the British Museum for 7 years, it was purchased by the museum in 2001.