'Barbaric Splendour: The Use of Image Before and After Rome' comprises a collection of essays comparing late Iron Age and Early Medieval art. Though this is an unconventional approach, there are obvious grounds for comparison. Images from both periods revel in complex compositions in which it is hard to distinguish figural elements from geometric patterns. Moreover, in both periods, images rarely stood alone and for their own sake. Instead, they decorated other forms of material culture, particularly items of personal adornment and weaponry. The key comparison, however, is the relationship of these images to those of Rome. Fundamentally, the book asks what making images meant on the fringe of an expanding or contracting empire, particularly as the art from both periods drew heavily from - but radically transformed - imperial imagery.
Author(s): Toby F. Martin, Wendy Morrison (eds.)
Series: Access Archaeology
Publisher: Archaeopress
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: VIII+140
City: Oxford
Preface vi
Barbaric tendencies? Iron Age and early medieval art in comparison / Toby F. Martin 1
In the eye of the dragon: how the ancient Celts viewed the world / Laurent Olivier 18
Variations on a theme? Examining the repetition of patterns on British Iron Age art / Jody Joy 34
Changing perspectives in southwest Norwegian Style I / Elna Siv Kristoffersen and Unn Pedersen 47
Helmets and headaches: thoughts on the Staffordshire Hoard helmet / George Speake 61
'Magnificent was the cross of victory': the great gold cross from the Staffordshire Hoard / Chris Fern 78
The materiality of faces / Charlotte Behr 102
Insular numismatics: the relationship between ancient British and early Anglo-Saxon coins / Anna Gannon 121