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Brooches

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from Reay, Caithness

Brooches
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These brass oval brooches were found eroding out of the sand hills at Reay in Caithness, together with other objects typical of those found in Norse pagan graves. They probably came from a woman's grave dating from between 900 and 1000.

Like many oval brooches of the period, these were made from two shells. The outermost shells, pictured here, were an openwork pattern of interlaced animals and projecting knobs. Some of the knobs are missing on each brooch.

Oval brooches are a very distinctive form of Viking ornament, worn by women in pairs on their shoulders to hold up a pinafore. Scandinavian women were buried in their finery and with a range of everyday objects.

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