A ROMAN IRON AND BRONZE ALLOY CAVALRY PARADE HELMET AND MASK
A ROMAN IRON AND BRONZE ALLOY CAVALRY PARADE HELMET AND MASK
A ROMAN IRON AND BRONZE ALLOY CAVALRY PARADE HELMET AND MASK
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A ROMAN IRON AND BRONZE ALLOY CAVALRY PARADE HELMET AND MASK
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PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE COLLECTOR
A ROMAN IRON AND BRONZE ALLOY CAVALRY PARADE HELMET AND MASK

CIRCA MID 1ST CENTURY A.D.

Details
A ROMAN IRON AND BRONZE ALLOY CAVALRY PARADE HELMET AND MASK
CIRCA MID 1ST CENTURY A.D.
10 5⁄8 in. (27 cm.) high
Provenance
Axel Guttmann (1944-2001), Berlin, acquired by 1997 (Inv. no. AG599/H229).
The Art of Warfare: The Axel Guttmann Collection, Part 1, Christie’s, London, 6 November 2002, lot 96.
Literature
H. Born and M. Junkelmann, Römische Kampf- und Turnierrüstungen, Mainz am Rhein, 1997, pp. 21, 84-88, pls. IX-XI, XXXII, figs. 67, 97-100, 124.
M. Junkelmann, “Paradehelme? Zur funktionalen Einordnung frühkaiserzeitlicher Maskenhelme im Lichte von Neufunden und praktischen Versuchen,” in M. Kemkes and J. Scheuerbrant, eds., Fragen zur römischen Reiterei: Kolloquium zur Ausstellung "Reiter wie Statuen aus Erz: Die Römische Reiterei am Limes zwischen Patrouille und Parade" im Limesmuseum Aalen am 25.-26.02.1998, Stuttgart, 1999, p. 39, fig. 1.
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, pp. 180-181, fig. 187.
Exhibited
Stuttgart, Limes Museum Aalen, Reiter wie Statuen aus Erz: Die Römische Reiterei am Limes zwischen Patrouille und Parade, 25-26 February 1998.

Brought to you by

Rowena Field
Rowena Field Junior Specialist & Cataloguer

Lot Essay

This cavalry sports helmet, composed of two distinct elements – a helmet and a mask – belongs to the so-called Kalkriese type. Named for a helmet discovered at that 9 A.D. battle site in Germany, the type is characterized by a plain mask without ears and a centered hinge above the arching brows, slivered eye openings, and prominent nose. Originally, this helmet would have featured forward-curving cheek-guards attached to the Weisenau type helmet, as seen on an example formerly on display at the Museum Carnuntinum in Bad Deutsch-Altenburg, Austria (see http://romancoins.info/MilitaryEquipment-Facemasks.html).

The helmet is richly decorated in repoussé, depicting a central wreath tied with ribbons and flanked by two stags, with the goddess Victory, depicted with large wings, holding their reins. While stags are an unusual animal to be featured on Roman helmets, they were more frequently observed on objects originating from eastern Celtic, Thracian and Scythian cultures, regions where members of the Roman auxiliary cavalry originated from.

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