from Newstead, Roxburghshire
The enamelled bronze brooch, also known as a fibula, was found during excavations at the Roman fort at Newstead in Roxburghshire. It combines two types of brooches. The object was used sometime between 80 and 180 AD.
The brooch consists of a head-stud brooch with enamel decoration. Around this has been fastened a bronze penannular brooch, perhaps to take the place of a broken pin on the head-stud brooch.
Fibulae were used to fasten clothing, and are understandably a common find on Roman sites. During the Roman occupation of Britain, Romano-British styles of brooches developed, fusing Roman forms and native ornamentation in enamel.
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