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Record ID: BM-4E550E
Object type: MOUNT
Broad period: EARLY MEDIEVAL
County: Lincolnshire
Workflow stage: Published
Tubular casting of silver, broken at both ends and with cast decoration on all external surfaces and one glass inlay remaining; maximum length 38mm; width 14.5 mm. There appears to be gilding and this is neither confirmed nor denied by the scientific report. Part of the original upper edge remains together with a broken hole for an attachment rivet, showing that this is a discrete finial or decorative terminal. The broader part of the tube consists of three panels of similar six-strand interlace in low relief which taper slightly to a narrow collar above a prominent rounded collar (le…
Created on: Friday 6th February 2015
Last updated: Wednesday 1st June 2022
Spatial data recorded.
Record ID: DENO-C56C01
Object type: MOUNT
Broad period: POST MEDIEVAL
County: Derbyshire
Workflow stage: Published
TREASURE CASE 2012 T251: A silver-gilt sheet plaque/ mount (?). The etched scene is one of a female, facing forward, holding a hand and flower in her left hand. This appears to be part of a larger scene; the foot, leg, right hand and top of a feather, belonging to a male (?) is visible. The style of the clothing suggests this is a dating of around the 15th-16th century. Around this scene are the remains of a border. The mount is badly damaged around the edges, bent in the middle across the width and cracked along a this bend. Above the females head, through a feather which comes out f…
Created on: Wednesday 4th April 2012
Last updated: Wednesday 6th September 2017
Spatial data recorded.
This findspot is known as 'Chellaston Area', grid reference and parish protected.
Record ID: BM-178A84
Object type: MOUNT
Broad period: POST MEDIEVAL
County: Bath and North East Somerset
Workflow stage: Awaiting validation
Dimensions: Weight: 5.0 grams
Height: 20.2 mm
Width: 20.0 mm
This copper-alloy object of fleur-de-lys design was reported as potential Treasure because it was thought to have been of Iron Age date, as prehistoric objects with any amount of gold or silver fall under the category of Treasure. However, upon examination by the Iron Age curator at the British Museum it was passed to the curators of the Later Medieval and Renaissance Collections, who determined that the mount dates broadly from the 15th to 17th centuries.
The gilding on the mount makes up less than 10% of the total we…
Created on: Friday 21st October 2011
Last updated: Monday 2nd December 2013
Spatial data recorded.
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