A ROMAN SHEET BRASS SKULL SECTION OF A CAVALRY HELMET
A ROMAN SHEET BRASS SKULL SECTION OF A CAVALRY HELMET
A ROMAN SHEET BRASS SKULL SECTION OF A CAVALRY HELMET
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A ROMAN SHEET BRASS SKULL SECTION OF A CAVALRY HELMET
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A ROMAN SHEET BRASS SKULL SECTION OF A CAVALRY HELMET

ANTONINE TO SEVERAN PERIOD, CIRCA 150 A.D.

Details
A ROMAN SHEET BRASS SKULL SECTION OF A CAVALRY HELMET
ANTONINE TO SEVERAN PERIOD, CIRCA 150 A.D.
15 in. (38.2 cm.) long
Provenance
Axel Guttmann (1944-2001), Berlin, acquired by 2000 (Inv. no. AG804/H274).
Antike Helme der Sammlung Axel Guttmann, Hermann Historica, Munich, 19 October 2005, lot 177.
Antiken der Sammlung Axel Guttmann, Auktion 60, Hermann Historica, Munich, 13 October 2010, lot 2183.
Acquired by the current owner from the above.
Literature
M. Junkelmann, Römische Helme: Sammlung Axel Guttmann, vol. 8, Berlin and Mainz, 2000, pp. 150, 190-193, figs. 103-105, pl. XXII.
M. Junkelmann, "Roman Militaria," in M. Merrony, ed., Mougins Museum of Classical Art, Mougins, 2011, p. 258, fig. 58.
M. Merrony, Musée d’Art Classique de Mougins: La Collection Famille Levett, Mougins, 2012, p. 71.
R. D'Amato and A.E. Negin, Decorated Roman Armour: From the Age of the Kings to the Death of Justinian the Great, Yorkshire, 2017, p. 169, fig. 172.
K. Schörle, ed., L'Armée de Rome: La Puissance et la Gloire, Arles, 2018, pp. 68, 81, no. 38.
J. Coulston, "The Power and the Glory," Minerva, March/April 2019, p. 16, fig. 4.
"Roman Military Equipment," (online article, romancoins.info).
Exhibited
Musée d'Art Classique de Mougins, 2011-2023 (Inv. no. MMoCA600).
Arles, Musée départemental Arles antique, L'armée de Rome: La puissance et la gloire, 15 December 2018 - 22 April 2019.

Brought to you by

Hannah Fox Solomon
Hannah Fox Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay

This dynamic skull section of a Roman cavalry helmet is formed of expertly-hammered sheet brass, once plated with tin, with the surface now oxidized to dark brown. The central arching crest, embossed with feathers along each side, terminates at the front in the bust of a goddess, perhaps Minerva, wearing a polos or helmet. The central crest is flanked by two similar smaller crests, each with a lion in relief along its outer edge, with its head positioned at the front of the crest. In the field between the crests are overlapping shields and a serpentine motif. The back features rectangular ornaments with stippling, and along the lower edges are naturalistic wavy strands of hair in relief.

Junkelmann (op. cit.) observes that this helmet is “characteristic of the fantastic eclecticism that prevailed in the design of cavalry helmets in the Antonine-Severan period, which often makes it difficult to assign fragments to a specific type.” Based on its shape, he speculates that the complete helmet did not include cheek-guards and was instead formed of three distinct parts: the skull section (as preserved here), a facial insert and a visor. For other helmets with a similar arrangement of crests flanked by lions, see the example from Theilenhofen, and another from Durostorum (figs. 61 and 179 in D’Amato and Negin, op. cit.). Junkelman (op. cit.) and others considered this to be of Pfrondorf Type, named for a helmet discovered in that German city and now in the Landesmuseum Württemberg, Stuttgart (see fig. 39 and pp. 59-61 in H. Born and Junkelmann, Römische Kampf- und Turnierrüstungen), but while there are some similarities, the Pfrondorf helmet differs in that its skull section was not equipped with crests.

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