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Collectors & Explorers

Dr Thomas Boyle Grierson

Finger Rings, Holstain

Period:
Iron Age
Description:

A selection of two simple stone finger rings with a slightly oval shape and a central circular hole tapering in from either side.  One has a plain flat face and edge while the other has incised detail around the interior edge.

 

Jewellery in the Iron age

 

Bangles could have been worn around the wrists, but in some parts of northern Europe they were worn as anklets. They could be made out of bronze, but could also be carved out of soft stone such as shale or jet. Rings were also very uncommon, and might be worn on a finger or a toe.

 

Brooches were often very simple and little more than safety pins for holding clothes together. Glass beads were only made in a few places in Iron Age Britain. Most women would have only worn one or two glass beads, if any at all. These were often not worn around the neck, but as earrings or in the hair.

 

Place of Discovery:
Holstane, Durisdeer
Materials/Media:
mineral & jasper /stone
Dimensions:
Ring1: length: 31 mm width: 28 mm diameter (hole): 15 mm depth: 6 mm / Ring 2: diameter (max): 25 mm diameter (internal): 18 mm
Source:
Dumfries Museum & Camera Obscura
Accession number:
DUMFM:1965.65,1965.66
Digital Number:
RPD0324


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