Brooch and pin found on Tiree in 1872

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Summary

1. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 1870–2, 9, p. 446
‘10 June 1872 Tortoise-shaped brooch of bronze and six-inch bronze pin found on Tiree and donated to Museum of Society of Antiquaries’

2. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 1873, volume 10, pp. 554–5 and image on 560
Anderson, J (1873) Notes on the Relics of the Viking Period of the Northmen in Scotland, illustrated by Specimens in the Museum:

‘One of a pair found in the island of Tiree was presented to the Museum in June 1872 by the late Rev Dr Norman MacLeod [1812–1872, a famous Gaelic-speaking minister in Glasgow, who is likely to have known many Tiree people]. Nothing further is known concerning the circumstances of their discovery than that they were found in a grave along with the peculiarly-shaped and massive bronze pin here figured … This brooch measures 41/2 inches in length, 23/4 inches in breadth and 11/2 inches in height. It is double, the under part having a flat rim with a band of lacertine [intertwined] ornamentation in panels. The plain portion of the under shell has been gilt. The upper shell has a raised boss in the centre, pierced with four openings. Two similar bosses are placed at the extremities of the longer and shorter diameters of the oval, and halfway between each pair of these bosses there are spaces for beads or studs, four in number, which have been fastened on by rivets of brass, one of which still remains in situ. From the central boss to the other bosses there are channelled depressions in the metal, in which are laid three rows of a small silver chain formed of two strands of a very fine wire twisted together, and forming a double diamond figure on the oval surface of the brooch. On 15th March 1847 a notice of a similar brooch found in Tiree was read to the Society and the brooch exhibited by Sir John Graham Dalzell [or Dalyell, an Edinburgh advocate with a keen interest in antiquities]. It is described as ‘resembling, to minuteness, several in the Museum’, and as these brooches usually occur in pairs, it was probably found with the one presented by Rev Dr MacLeod.’

3. RCAHMS 1980, no. 236 and plate 3:
‘A pair of ‘tortoise’ brooches and a bronze pin are said to have been found in a grave somewhere on Tiree. One of the brooches and the pin were donated to the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland in 1872 (Accession nos: IL 219 & 220), and what may have been the other brooch was exhibited before the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland in 1847, but it cannot now be traced. No further details of the burial are known’


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Bronze

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