Silver disc brooch of
Ædwen
Anglo-Scandinavian, first half of 11th century
AD
From Sutton, Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire,
England
Inscribed with a curse
A hoard of objects, which included coins, gold
rings and this brooch, was discovered during the ploughing of a
field in 1694. The objects disappeared, but the brooch was
rediscovered in a private collection in 1951 when it was bought by
the British Museum.
The
brooch is made from a hammered sheet of silver. The engraved
decoration is based around four overlapping circles forming
flower-like motifs. At the centre of these flowers are conical
raised bosses, one of which is now missing. Within the circles are
different animals, some four-legged, others like snakes, surrounded
by stylized plant ornament in an English version of the
Ringerike
style.
There
is an inscription in Old English around the edge on the back.
Uniquely, it tells us who owned the brooch. The inscription may be
translated as: 'Ædwen owns me, may the Lord own her. May
the Lord curse him who takes me from her, unless she gives me of
her own free
will'.
The back of
the brooch is also decorated and has a fragment of silver strip
attached, onto which the fixings for the missing pin were mounted.
This strip is engraved with seven imitation Anglo-Saxon runes which
cannot be read. The nature of the damage may indicate that the
brooch was torn quickly and with some force from clothing and then
buried, perhaps at a time of
danger.
The bold but simple
decoration, the size of the brooch and the inscription suggest that
its owner was a woman of some status.
R.I. Page, An introduction to English run, 2nd ed. (Woodbridge, Boydell, 1999)
D.M. Wilson, Anglo-Saxon ornamental metalwo (London, The British Museum Press, 1964)
R.L.S. Bruce-Mitford, 'Late Saxon disc-brooches' in Dark-Age Britain-1 (London, Methuen, 1956)
J. Backhouse, D.H. Turner and L. Webster (eds.), The golden age of Anglo-Saxon, exh. cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1984)