Jewellery_PDF.pdf

"In the 5th–7th centuries AD, members of the female population in Scandinavia frequently wore a costume adorned with conspicuous items of jewellery. Many of the items, such as brooches and clasps, were dress-accessories used to fasten these garments. Some of them, moreover, were popular over an...

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Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Cappelen Damm Akademisk/NOASP (Nordic Open Access Scholarly Publishing) 2021
Διαθέσιμο Online:https://press.nordicopenaccess.no/index.php/noasp/catalog/book/132
id oapen-20.500.12657-50342
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-503422023-07-14T09:03:52Z The Language of Jewellery Røstad, Ingunn Marit Jewellery, Scandinavia, Migration Period, Dress-accessories, Costumes bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HD Archaeology "In the 5th–7th centuries AD, members of the female population in Scandinavia frequently wore a costume adorned with conspicuous items of jewellery. Many of the items, such as brooches and clasps, were dress-accessories used to fasten these garments. Some of them, moreover, were popular over an extended area of Europe, and have been found in Scandinavia, Anglo-Saxon England and on the Continent alike. This book provides an analysis of more than 1,800 such items of jewellery from Scandinavia. It explores the contextual and geographical distribution through time of four major types of dress-accessory: cruciform brooches, relief brooches, wrist-clasps and conical brooches. Detailed analysis reveals distribution patterns and variations that provide new insights into the multifaceted reality of the Scandinavian pre-Viking period. The author argues that in a time characterized by social stress and upheaval, women played an important role in the negotiation of identities through the use of costume adorned with dress-accessories. These negotiations were part of a continuous, complex and ever-changing discourse of identity, in which different dimensions of multiple identities were generated, articulated and transformed. In some instances, a common identity is manifest even at a date which precedes by several centuries the unification of much the same areas into single medieval kingdoms, while social and political conditions could equally trigger either the material expression or the disappearance of shared identities at local, regional, and even pan-European levels. This book also offers a more nuanced view of ethnic groupings during the 5th–7th centuries by examining the inter-connectedness of the flexible and mobile ‘warrior nations’ of the Migration Period, and the territorially rooted, often historically documented ‘peoples’, who are reflected in the practices of female dress." 2021-08-12T09:21:26Z 2021-08-12T09:21:26Z 2021 book 9788202716202 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/50342 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Jewellery_PDF.pdf https://press.nordicopenaccess.no/index.php/noasp/catalog/book/132 Cappelen Damm Akademisk/NOASP (Nordic Open Access Scholarly Publishing) 10.23865/noasp.126 10.23865/noasp.126 bf7b42a4-6892-42e3-aaf8-8f32c8470a8b 9788202716202 394 Oslo open access
institution OAPEN
collection DSpace
language English
description "In the 5th–7th centuries AD, members of the female population in Scandinavia frequently wore a costume adorned with conspicuous items of jewellery. Many of the items, such as brooches and clasps, were dress-accessories used to fasten these garments. Some of them, moreover, were popular over an extended area of Europe, and have been found in Scandinavia, Anglo-Saxon England and on the Continent alike. This book provides an analysis of more than 1,800 such items of jewellery from Scandinavia. It explores the contextual and geographical distribution through time of four major types of dress-accessory: cruciform brooches, relief brooches, wrist-clasps and conical brooches. Detailed analysis reveals distribution patterns and variations that provide new insights into the multifaceted reality of the Scandinavian pre-Viking period. The author argues that in a time characterized by social stress and upheaval, women played an important role in the negotiation of identities through the use of costume adorned with dress-accessories. These negotiations were part of a continuous, complex and ever-changing discourse of identity, in which different dimensions of multiple identities were generated, articulated and transformed. In some instances, a common identity is manifest even at a date which precedes by several centuries the unification of much the same areas into single medieval kingdoms, while social and political conditions could equally trigger either the material expression or the disappearance of shared identities at local, regional, and even pan-European levels. This book also offers a more nuanced view of ethnic groupings during the 5th–7th centuries by examining the inter-connectedness of the flexible and mobile ‘warrior nations’ of the Migration Period, and the territorially rooted, often historically documented ‘peoples’, who are reflected in the practices of female dress."
title Jewellery_PDF.pdf
spellingShingle Jewellery_PDF.pdf
title_short Jewellery_PDF.pdf
title_full Jewellery_PDF.pdf
title_fullStr Jewellery_PDF.pdf
title_full_unstemmed Jewellery_PDF.pdf
title_sort jewellery_pdf.pdf
publisher Cappelen Damm Akademisk/NOASP (Nordic Open Access Scholarly Publishing)
publishDate 2021
url https://press.nordicopenaccess.no/index.php/noasp/catalog/book/132
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