The Efficacy of Roman Silver in Iron Age Scotland: An Object Trajectory for Spiral Rings

IF 1.6 2区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
Jenna Martin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This paper uses material efficacy as an analytical position to consider how silver helped to shape large-scale historical trajectories in Iron Age Scotland. Roman silver entered Scotland as imperial matter beginning in the first century ad and later inspired an assemblage of indigenous wearable silver in the fourth–fifth centuries. I investigate the human–silver collaborations involved in the transition from hoarding Roman silver coins to recycling Roman Hacksilber. By tracing the object trajectory of spiral rings, I show how silver's material properties and entanglements played a role in developing Scotland's earliest silver products. Around the fourth century, a diversity of spiral rings was replaced by a specific style of silver spiral finger ring. Silver brought to Iron Age Scotland by the Romans inspired and afforded individuals in northern Britain a new and empowering regional socio-political identity. Material efficacy, as explored in this case study, has relevance beyond Iron Age/Roman studies to any anthropological investigation of underrepresented human agency.

铁器时代苏格兰罗马银器的功效:螺旋环的物体轨迹
本文以物质功效为分析立场,探讨银器如何帮助塑造了铁器时代苏格兰的大规模历史轨迹。从公元一世纪开始,罗马银器作为帝国物质进入苏格兰,后来在公元四世纪至五世纪激发了本土可穿戴银器的集合。我研究了从囤积罗马银币到回收罗马银器过程中人与银器之间的合作。通过追踪螺旋环的物件轨迹,我展示了银的材料特性和纠葛如何在开发苏格兰最早的银制品中发挥作用。大约在四世纪,多种多样的螺旋指环被一种特定样式的银质螺旋指环所取代。罗马人将银器带到铁器时代的苏格兰,启发并赋予了不列颠北部的个人一种新的、有力量的地区社会政治身份。本案例研究中探讨的物质功效,其意义超出了铁器时代/罗马研究,也超出了对代表性不足的人类机构的任何人类学调查。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
8.30%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The Cambridge Archaeological Journal is the leading journal for cognitive and symbolic archaeology. It provides a forum for innovative, descriptive and theoretical archaeological research, paying particular attention to the role and development of human intellectual abilities and symbolic beliefs and practices. Specific topics covered in recent issues include: the use of cultural neurophenomenology for the understanding of Maya religious belief, agency and the individual, new approaches to rock art and shamanism, the significance of prehistoric monuments, ritual behaviour on Pacific Islands, and body metamorphosis in prehistoric boulder artworks. In addition to major articles and shorter notes, the Cambridge Archaeological Journal includes review features on significant recent books.
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