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  2. Tara Brooch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tara_Brooch

    The brooch is widely considered the most complex and ornate of its kind and would have been commissioned as a fastener for the cloak of a high-ranking cleric or as ceremonial insignia of high office for a High King of Ireland. The brooch was hidden on the east coast of Ireland some time during the 11th or 12th century, most likely to protect it ...

  3. Hunterston Brooch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunterston_Brooch

    The brooch is cast in silver, mounted with gold, silver and amber decoration. c. 700 AD Rear view Detail of pin-head. The Hunterston Brooch is a highly important Celtic brooch of "pseudo-penannular" type found near Hunterston, North Ayrshire, Scotland, in either, according to one account, 1826 by two men from West Kilbride, who were digging drains at the foot of Goldenberry Hill, [1] or in ...

  4. Celtic brooch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_brooch

    The National Museum of Ireland is clearly not correct in saying that the fashion began after Queen Victoria was presented with a replica of the "Cavan Brooch" on her visit to Dublin to see the Great Industrial Exhibition in 1853; [64] the Royal Collection has two brooches that Prince Albert bought for her from West & Son in 1849 on an earlier ...

  5. Anglo-Saxon brooches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_brooches

    The chunky European bird that faced right became a slender English bird brooch that faced left when made in southern England. [31] The Anglo-Saxon bird brooches date from 500 to 500AD in England. [13] The S-shaped brooches migrated from Continental Europe and can be found throughout Anglo-Saxon England and date from 450—550AD. [13]

  6. Kilmainham Brooch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilmainham_Brooch

    The Kilmainham Brooch is usually dated to the late 8th or early 9th centuries as it is seen as transitional in both style and material. Its annular form and use of filigree place it in the 8th-century Irish tradition, while its use of silver, as opposed to gilding, indicates at earliest an early 9th-century origin, that is in the period after the 795 AD Viking invasions of Ireland, when silver ...

  7. Penrith Hoard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrith_Hoard

    The penannular brooch, originally a common utilitarian clothes fastening—normally of base metal—in Roman Britain, developed in the post-Roman period into highly elaborate and decorative marks of status in Ireland and Scotland. The brooches, worn by both men and women, were made in precious metals and often decorated with gems.

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