bunn: (Mollydog in the snow.)
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I think sighthounds make very attractive shapes that remind me of Anglo Saxon objects.

For example, isn't this lovely and perfectly greyhound-like?


A late Anglo-Saxon zoomorphic strap-end -   Circa 9th to 11th century
http://www.ukdfd.co.uk/ukdfddata/showrecords.php?product=4004&cat=109



This amazing  ninth-century ring bezel  - surely that is a sighthound?  Though one with a plumy tail and feathers so maybe a little more like a saluki.

http://www.fabiandemontjoye.com/rings/middle-age/705-early-medieval-ring-gold-niello-saxon-art-century.html

This awesome silver ring shows a more short-muzzled animal - maybe more like a boxer? But it still has that amazing curve to the chest and those fabulous legs.


Silver ring 775-850, found in the river Thames at Chelsea
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:BLW_Silver_Anglo-Saxon_ring.jpg

Here are lots and lots of dogs on this brooch:

The Strickland Brooch, mid-9th century.  
These are more doggy dogs - they could almost be exaggerated spaniels with their short bodies, round noses and feathered paws and tails.
The British Museum thinks that 'The Anglo-Saxons did not have pets like we do today, but dogs were used for hunting and protecting the home.'   This strikes me as an extremely dubious statement. How can they possibly know that? *Frowny face*

http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/young_explorers/discover/museum_explorer/anglo-saxon_england/birds_and_beasts/the_strickland_brooch.aspx


Does anyone know when this sort of elaborately knotted animal image got the label 'Celtic' stuck on it?  And why?

(I agonised over how to do these links - should I make copies of the images, thus breaking the owner's copyright but preserving their bandwidth, or hotlink so they have control over where they are displayed?)  In the end I hotlinked on the grounds that not many people are likely to be looking at this page -  but if you own one of these images and would like this changed, just let me know).

Date: 2011-09-14 05:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] puddleshark.livejournal.com
Occasionally when excavating the Romano-British graves in this area, the archaeologists will come across a woman or child buried with a puppy...

But I suppose the Anglo-Saxons were a very different culture. Time for me to do some reading up!

Date: 2011-09-14 08:25 am (UTC)
ext_189645: (Mollydog goes boing)
From: [identity profile] bunn.livejournal.com
I believe Anglo Saxon graves of the 7th and 8th century often contain dogs as well, though I suppose that doesn't necessarily say anything about their relationships with the dogs, other than that they were valued for some reason. One could probably argue that was for their value as hunting tools rather than as companions.

But I think archaeology isn't really very helpful when it comes to understanding how people *felt* which I think is the main question here. For that you need documents, which so far as I am aware, are pretty thin on the ground, particularly in the earlier Saxon period.

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