Elham pendant

Its #MuseumMonday and given that our temporary exhibition at Maidstone Museums will be coming to a close in less than two months (to allow for the installation of the new Lives in Our Landscape Gallery), I'll be doing some highlight posts of the objects in our exhibition cases.

First up is the beautiful Elham Pendant, discovered by metal detectorist David Haigh. The cross is incomplete and was probably cut up before it entered the ground (like items in the Staffordshire Hoard). It is thought to date to the first half of the seventh century, not long after St Augustine first arrived in Kent in AD 597. It is likely to have been owned by a woman of high status, many of whom embraced and encouraged the adoption of Christianity in the seventh century.

The digital reconstruction below (by University of Kent's Lloyd Bosworth shows how this pendant may have been worn by its owner.

The central garnet demonstrates to us how precious gems and metals were being recycled in the Anglo-Saxon period with the garnet likely dating to before the middle of the 6th Century AD. This type of circular cut garnet is not used much after that point.

Digital reconstruction of cross as it might have been worn as part of a composite necklace. Credit: Lloyd Bosworth, reproduced under Creative Commons Licence https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Photo of cross from Portable Antiquities Scheme website, copyright Kent County Council (PAS Number KENT-9D33EB).

#archaeology #metaldetecting #museumlife #MuseumObjects #museumstories #recordyourfinds #EarlyMedieval #AngloSaxon

Archaeology in Kent

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Andy Ward

Society Curator

Responsible for the care, management and interpretation of the Society’s object collections.

Secretary of the Archaeology Research Group.

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