2008_Vasos de bronce con asas “a kouroi” en el occidente arcaico: a la luz de un nuevo ejemplar procedente de Cuenca (original) (raw)
Related papers
Side by side with the set of pottery cinerary urns decorated with orientalizing painted elements which is are conserved in the Council Museum of Cabra (Córdoba, Spain) a set of three bronze basins corresponding to the so called “braziers” type, surely coming from the same archaeological site, were donated too. In this paper is approached the study of these bronze findings that are situated between the orientalizing tradition and the Iberian productions. However, so by their typology as well by their chronology and the productions elements these items are nearest to the Iberian Culture, and they can be situated at the end of the Early Iron Age.
Espacio, Tiempo y Forma, Serie I Prehistoria y Arqueología 11, 2018
This paper studies an equestrian set composed by two bronze horse bits and two bit guards, also made in bronze. They are preserved in the Juan Cabré Museum (Calaceite, Spain) corresponding to the collection gathered by the Spanish archaeologist Juan Cabré Aguiló (1882-1947). Data about origin or the way that such objects came to the Cabré Collection are unknown, but their quality and the shortage of this type of objects in the Iberian archaeology underline their interest. The study shows a near relationship with a kind of bronze harnesses that were produced and used in Iberian Peninsula at the end of the Early Iron Age. This kind of bits have good references in the post-Orientalizing Extremadura and in the Iberian high Andalusia, particularly in the Jaén area.
«Braseros» de bronce protohistóricos en Extremadura.Viejos y nuevos hallazgos; nuevas y viejas ideas
Onoba: Revista de Arqueología y Antigüedad, 1, 2013
The updated catalogue for the so called metallic “braziers” coming from the Spanish region of Extremadura, in the southwestern Iberian Peninsula is presented here. It includes from the oldest findings, like the silver one from the Aliseda Treasure to the latest unpublished items. They are already more than 20 vessels coming from nine archaeological sites both from Cáceres and Badajoz provinces, where until a few years such production were ractically unknown. With the presentation of the new repertory, many archaeological theories touching these signaled objects are reviewed too.