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Scythian Bronze Harness Decoration Depicting a Horse

SKU OF.045
Circa

600 BC to 400 BC

Dimensions

1.5″ (3.8cm) high x 3.25″ (8.3cm) wide

Medium

Bronze

Origin

Central Asia

Gallery Location

UK


 

This elegant harness adornment was made by – or for – the Scythians, a semi-nomadic Central Asian group who originated in Iran but roamed across much of the Ukraine, Russia and the Pontic Steppe from about 1000 BC through the period of classical antiquity. They are known historically from Greek records, and archaeologically on the basis of their extravagantly ornate metalwork in burial mounds from above Greece all the way to Central Asia. They appear in the historical sources of other peoples – including the Assyrians, who they tried to invade in 770 BC, and the Persians, who tried to return the favour in 512 BC – but have left no written evidence of their own. Socially they are hard to assess, given the fairly mobile nature of their way of life, although there is epigraphic and graphic evidence of their appearance and some of their customs. Inevitably, their funeral behaviour is well understood, while much of their technology seems in fact to have been acquired or commissioned from settled communities. Their main period of prosperity was in the second half of the first millennium BC, fading away in the face of competition from the Sarmantians and the Celts, then attacks by the Goths, at the turn of the millennium.

Herodotus mentions a “Royal Dahae” which was the ruling elite of the Scythian forces, and which might well have existed if the riches of the burial mounds are any indication. Local governance was carried out by elites with control over local armies, who were sometimes hired out as mercenaries – especially archers – to more sedentary groups. They were by all accounts a martial and fierce people, much associated with noble barbarism, where women fought alongside men (seemingly with similar status) and both sexes were regularly tattooed with zoomorphic designs that also appear in their artwork. As a mobile way of life was not conducive to metalworking or other craft/art pursuits, most Scythian masterworks – of which there are an inordinate number – were designed by the Scythians but actually made by the Greeks. These include jewellery, horse harnesses and weapons, and include a large proportion of works in gold, which they highly valued and viewed as a status symbol. It is from the imagery on these items that the Scythians gain their glamorous if sanguineous reputation, although later works demonstrate that they had started to adopt Greek clothing and customs. Zoomorphic and anthropomorphic imagery abounds, combined with more mundane themes (milking cattle) and some geometric motifs.

This piece is simply yet elegantly constructed from bronze strapwork, comprising a prone hollow rectangle decorated with hatched incised lines. In the centre of the rectangle – and supported by small frets that run from the main frame inwards – is the figure of a horse. It is depicted in a highly cubistic form, made up of large circles for the haunches and shoulders, an angular head with open mouth, a staring eye in high relief, and a rope bridle picked out and highlighted with incised decoration. The tail appears to have been braided, and acts to support the horse within the frame. The legs are bent, to imply that the horse is kneeling or in the process of getting up/down. There are fragments of rivets or pins at each of the four corners, which would have been used to secure the piece to its leather backing. This is an elegant, well- constructed piece of art from a dynamic and fascinating period in Central Asian history, and a worthy element in any such collection. – (OF.045 (LSO))

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