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Object name(s):
Fibula
Brief description:
Silver fibula pin with penannular guard ring. The pin has a flat triangular head and is decorated on both sides with black, green and ochre cloisonné enamel in applied filigree surrounds. The front is also set with seven corals in closed mounts. There is a loop riveted to the top of the triangle. The pin is also riveted to the head, at the bottom, and has a loop at its top for the guard. The ring guard is made of thick wire and has a flat coral in a closed mount at each end.
Collection:
Victoria and Albert Museum
Associated concept:
Jewellery
Associated concept:
Metalwork
Associated concept:
Africa
Associated concept:
Islam
Associated concept:
Judaism
Current reproduction location:
https://framemark.vam.ac.uk/collections/2007BN4217/full/!100,100/0/default.jpg
Location type:
Thumbnail
Dimension:
Width
Dimension measured part:
maximum
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
8.7
Dimension:
Length
Dimension measured part:
maximum
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
18.7
Material:
silver
Material:
enamel
Material:
coral
Object name:
Fibula
Object number:
666-1893
Object production date:
1850-1890
Date - association:
made
Date - earliest / single:
1850-01-01
Date - latest:
1890-12-31
Object production person:
Unknown
Object production place:
Kabyle
Place association:
made
Physical description:
Silver fibula pin with penannular guard ring. The pin has a flat triangular head and is decorated on both sides with black, green and ochre cloisonné enamel in applied filigree surrounds. The front is also set with seven corals in closed mounts. There is a loop riveted to the top of the triangle. The pin is also riveted to the head, at the bottom, and has a loop at its top for the guard. The ring guard is made of thick wire and has a flat coral in a closed mount at each end.
Reproduction number:
2007BN4217
Reproduction number:
2007BN4218
Responsible department/section:
MES
Technique:
enamelling
Technique:
Silver enamelled on both sides in dark blue, green and ochre and set with coral cabochons
Text reason:
Collections online record
Text:
This silver fibula would have been worn by a Kabyle woman in the first half of the nineteenth century. The Kabyles are a Berber people from the Atlas Mountains in North Eastern Algeria. The front and back are decorated with a pattern of silver wire forming spaces filled with enamel or coral. To one side of the brooch is a fixed pin with an open ring that would have been used to attach the brooch. It was originally one of a pair, which were worn on the front of the body, just below the shoulders, to hold the wearer’s dress together. The two fibulae would have been linked by a chain attached to the loop at the top. This brooch was probably made by a Jewish silversmith. In the late fifteenth century many Jewish people immigrated to North Africa. The Jewish population dominated the silversmithing profession and bought with them many new jewellery techniques (such as enamelling) which they handed down from generation to generation.
Text reason:
Summary description

Persistent shareable link for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/8068ed61-a06c-31e2-b3ac-c9fb4f3c2a80

Use licence for this record: CC BY-NC

Attribution for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/8068ed61-a06c-31e2-b3ac-c9fb4f3c2a80, Victoria and Albert Museum, CC BY-NC

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