Abstract
A unique gold finger ring, dated stylistically toc.ad580–650, was discovered by metal-detecting in Essex in 2011. The ‘northwest Essex Anglo-Saxon ring’ is highly decorated with Style II art and shows a distinctive juxtaposition of ‘pagan’ and ‘Christian’ imagery including birds of prey and an anthropomorphic figure holding a long cross in the right hand, a raptor in the left. In this article, I consider the possibility that the object provides further evidence that falconry was practised in early Anglo-Saxon England. I begin by examining the finger ring itself and the imagery upon it, situating this within an Anglo-Saxon and broader Continental context. I then explore the possible social context of the ring, focusing on the ‘ideology of predation’ within which falconry, as a high-status hunting pursuit, may have been performed. Evaluating the hybrid ‘pagan’ and ‘Christian’ elements of the imagery, I suggest that falconry, and the ring itself as a high-status and possibly royal object, may have played important roles in the dynamics of pagan–Christian ‘discursive space’.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Archaeology,Cultural Studies,Archaeology
Reference95 articles.
1. Geake, H. , 2012. Portable Antiquities Scheme Report for HM Coroner. ref.: 2011 T855 (Rec. no. 7732). Saffron Walden Museum Archive.
2. The Origin and Earliest History of Falconry
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