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  2. Celtic brooch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_brooch

    "Annular" means formed as a ring and "penannular" formed as an incomplete ring; both terms have a range of uses. "Pseudo-penannular" is a coinage restricted to brooches, and refers to those brooches where there is no opening in the ring, but the design retains features of a penannular brooch—for example, emphasizing two terminals.

  3. Ballinderry Brooch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballinderry_Brooch

    The Ballinderry Brooch is an Irish penannular brooch dated to the late 6th or early 7th centuries. It was found in the 1930s, along with a number of similar objects, underneath a timber floor of the late Bronze Age Ballinderry Crannóg No.2, on Ballinderry lake, County Offaly. [1]

  4. 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 ...

  5. Anglo-Saxon brooches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_brooches

    The quoit brooch combines the annular and penannular form with a double ring, and is intricately decorated. [24] The descriptive name originates from the rings thrown in the game of Quoits. The earliest of these jewellery items were large, opulent silver brooches made in Kent in the mid-fifth century. The quoits were probably worn alone.

  6. Londesborough Brooch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Londesborough_Brooch

    The Londesborough Brooch is a Celtic pseudo-penannular brooch from Ireland. Dating from the late eighth or early ninth century, it is a particularly elaborate example of a dress fastener dated to Ireland's artistic golden age, when objects such as the Tara Brooch and Ardagh Chalice were produced.

  7. Penannular - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penannular

    Penannular means in the form of an incomplete circle or ring and may refer to: Penannular brooch or Celtic brooch, a type of brooch clothes fasteners, often rather large Pseudo-penannular brooch, a related type that appears to be penannular, with two large terminals, but actually forms a complete circle

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