Plate Fibula with Incised Catchplate

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Artist
NameUnknown
Basic Info
PeriodGeometric period
Created inAncient & Byzantine World, Europe, Macedonia or Thessaly
Century8th century BCE
CultureGreek
Dimensions6.9 x 9 cm (2 11/16 x 3 9/16 in.)
Harvard Museum
DepartmentDepartment of Ancient and Byzantine Art & Numismatics
DivisionAsian and Mediterranean Art
Contactam_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu

Context

The closest parallels for this incised plate fibula come from Philia and Pherai, Thessaly (1). Five beaded elements constitute its arched body. The first, third, and fifth beads have flattened sides, while the second and fourth are ovoid. Each bead is separated from the other by raised rings with sharp edges. The central bead has a projecting cylindrical boss surmounted by a sharp-edged, raised ring of a larger diameter. The pin is a progressively tapered extension of the body, rhomboid in section, and is looped before projecting straight to the catchplate, which is now missing its bent-up bottom edge. The two incised surfaces of the catchplate juxtapose a horse with an elaborate meander. Side A presents the horse with its head at the top of the field. Its head is down and its front legs are shown slightly apart. A triangular object filled with cross-hatchings rests on the groundline between the rear legs. Much of the body has a texture of close parallel lines on either side of a wider band of parallel lines, which divide the animal vertically from the back to the abdomen. Multiple borders of lines enhanced with tremolo frame the horse. At the edges of the catchplate, a line of double semicircles with central punched dots appears within double borders. The decoration on side B shows a double meander filled with hatch marks enclosing a small rectangle that frames three downward facing loops, with one small loop between two larger ones. As on side A, a line of double semicircles with central punched dots appears within double borders along the edges. NOTES: 1. For the type, see K. Kilian, Fibeln in Thessalien von der mykenischen bis zur archaischen Zeit, Prähistorische Bronzefunde 14.2 (Munich, 1975) 130, no. 1502, pl. 54; and Chr. Blinkenberg, Lindiaka 5: Fibules grecques et orientales, Historisk-filologiske meddelelser 13.1 (Copenhagen, 1926) type III 12a. For the incised decoration, see Kilian 1975 (supra) 120, no. 1389, pl. 50. Michael Bennett

TechnicalDetails

Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, David M. Robinson Fund