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

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2024

Jenna Martin*
Affiliation:
National Museums Scotland Chambers Street Edinburgh EH1 1JF UK Email: jrm495@cornell.edu
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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.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Figure 0

Figure 1. Spiral ring typologies by rod section shape: (left) circular-sectioned; (centre) D-shaped section; (right) rectangular-sectioned. (Centre image © National Museums Scotland; left- and right-hand photographs: author, by kind permission National Museums Scotland.)

Figure 1

Figure 2. Distribution map of spiral rings in Britain and Ireland. *The unidentified rings are those marked on Jope & Wilson's 1957 map but which remain unidentified by me. They are included here so as not to skew the distribution away from southwest England and Wales. (Map: author using GIS online. This map is comprehensive for Scotland and presents a strong representative number of ring findspots in Ireland and England.)

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Figure 3. Reliable deposition date ranges for spiral rings by findspot. Colours represent gold (orange), silver (blue), and CuA (red). (Image: author.)

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Figure 4. Copper alloy rings with use-wear on one side (worn-down or compressed) indicating likely use as finger rings: (left) from Cleaves Cove, Ayrshire (NMS X.HM 50) and (right) from Traprain Law, East Lothian (NMS X.GVM 140). (Photographs: author, by kind permission National Museums Scotland.)

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Figure 5. Internal diameters of the 30 D-sectioned rings compared against the entire dataset of spiral rings, with available measurements. (Image: author.)

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Figure 6. Reliable deposition date ranges for 29 of the 42 D-sectioned rings. Colour represents silver (blue) and CuA (red). (Image: author.)

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Figure 7. Comparison of internal diameter ranges between silver D2, CuA D1 and CuA D2 rings. (Image: author.)

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Figure 8. Vertical or angled ribbing pattern on D2 rings: (left) silver ring from Norrie's Law, Fife (NMS X.FC 35); (right) CuA ring from Dùn An Fheurain, Argyll (NMS X. HD 410). (Left: Image © National Museums Scotland. Right: photograph by author using a Keyence VHX-7000 microscope, by kind permission National Museums Scotland.)

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Figure 9. Lozenge-and-ribbing pattern on D2 rings: (left) silver ring from Traprain Law, East Lothian (NMS X.GVM 147); (right) silver ring from Broch of Howe, Sanday (NMS X.GA 1174). (Images © National Museums Scotland.)

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Figure 10. Microscopic images of (right) a copper alloy ring with a cast ribbing pattern from Hyndford Crannog, Lanarkshire (NMS X.HTA 9) and (left) a silver ring with tooled ribbing pattern produced using a filing tool from Norrie's Law, Fife (NMS X.FC 35). (Photographs: author using a Keyence VHX-7000 microscope, by kind permission National Museums Scotland.)

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Table 1. Silver spiral rings of Britain and Ireland. * = Not examined microscopically by this author.

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