bracteate การใช้
- The bracteate is believed to have been made about AD 500.
- Iconographically related are five gold bracteates found in H黤ingen, Bavaria.
- There are two types of bracteates who dated from BolesBaw's reign:
- Bracts may ( bracteate ) or may not ( ebracteate ) be present.
- Gold was used to make scabbard mountings and bracteates.
- Numerous Bracteates feature swastikas as a common motif.
- Further he supported Thomsen's typology of gold bracteates from the migration period.
- The bracteate depicts a man's head over a four-legged animal.
- The few to many, erect flowers grow on bracteate peduncles in a terminal raceme.
- Thomsen also wrote one of the first systematic treatises on gold bracteates of the Migration period.
- Many of the bracteates feature ruler portraits of Germanic pagan icons giving protection or for divination.
- It was used to produce some very fine goldsmith work including filigree collars and bracteate pendants.
- For this reason the bracteates are a target of iconographic studies by scholars interested in Germanic religion.
- Gold was used to make scabbard mountings and bracteates; notable examples are the Golden horns of Gallehus.
- Depictions found on Migration Period Germanic bracteates are often viewed as Wodan ( Odin ) healing a horse.
- The bracteate was stolen in 1938 from the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities and has not yet been found.
- Racemes are corymbose, densely flowered, ebracteate or rarely lowermost few flowers bracteate, elongated considerably in fruit.
- The inflorescence consists of terminal bracteate racemes that are approximately long when young, extending to a long spike.
- The inscription seems to belong to the big group of C-bracteates with more or less comprehensible charm words.
- Another group of plaques were probably bracteates intended to be sewn onto clothing through the small holes round their edges.
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