NO·22 San Bernardino di Briona: Difference between revisions

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|type_object=gravel
|type_object=gravel
|material=stone
|material=stone
|dimension=length 17 cm, width 16 cm
|dimension=length 17 cm, width 16 cm, thickness 15 cm
|dimension_max=17 cm
|dimension_max=17 cm
|condition=complete
|condition=complete
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|date_derivation‎=typology, archaeological context
|date_derivation‎=typology, archaeological context
|site=San Bernardino di Briona
|site=San Bernardino di Briona
|sortdate_find=2004
|sortdate_find=1989
|date_find=2004?
|location=Musei Reali – Museo di Antichità (Torino)
|location=Musei Reali – Museo di Antichità (Torino)
|inventory_number=none
|inventory_number=57457
|source_detail=Rubat Borel 2006: 205 & 207 (fig. 3)
|source_detail=Rubat Borel 2006: 205 & 207 (fig. 3)
|checklevel=3
|checklevel=3
|problem=see Spagnolo Garzoli & Gambari 2004: 218-220 for further information!
|problem=Gambari, La necropoli di S. Bernardino di Briona : revisione critica alla luce dei risultati preliminari dei nuovi scavi, in Quaderni
della Soprintendenza Archeologica del Piemonte 6, 1987, 61-95
}}
}}
== Commentary ==
== Commentary ==
Images in {{bib|Arcà & Rubat Borel 2024}}: 36, fig. 9 (photos).
Images in {{bib|Gambari 1998}}: 291, fig. 276 (photo = {{bib|Rubat Borel 2005}}: 49), {{bib|Rubat Borel 2011b}}: 392, fig. 7.23 (photo), {{bib|Arcà & Rubat Borel 2024}}: 36, fig. 9 (photos and drawing).


Large, irregular roundish river pebble of serpentinite, from a grave near Cascina Pierina destroyed by agricultural work in the 1980s. The stone has been used as grave marker. Cf. [[Li 1.2 Genova]].
Large, irregular roundish river pebble of serpentinite, found during earthworks on the western side of the necropolis of [[San Bernardino di Briona]], south of Cascina Pierina, in the mounds of soil which were heaped up during the agricultural levelling of the area in 1918. According to {{bib|Gambari 1998}}: 291, 300 f., n. 18, the stone was pulled from a clod of earth on the northern slope of tumulus XXXII, close to where an aniconic and anepigraphic specimen had been found in 1980 atop a chamber grave. Like the latter example, the stone was used as grave marker (cf. also [[Li 1.2 Genova]]). It features a drawing, executed with a hammering technique like the [[NO·22|inscription]], of a figure of a warrior stepping out and holding aloft a shield and spear, for which {{bib|Gambari 1998}}: 291 compares the figures on the Hochdorf kline. Dating based on the larger archaeological context of the necropolis and the iconography ({{bib|Gambari 1998}}: 291, {{bib|Rubat Borel 2011b}}). See '''{{bib|Spagnolo Garzoli & Gambari 2004}}: 218–220'''.
{{bibliography}}
{{bibliography}}

Latest revision as of 00:19, 18 March 2025

Object
Classification: gravel

Material: stone
Size: length 17 cm, width 16 cm, thickness 15 cm
Condition: complete
Autopsy by: Corinna Salomon
Date of autopsy: Apr 24 2024

Archaeological culture: Golasecca II, Golasecca III A 1
Date: late 6th–early 5th c. BC
Date derived from: typology, archaeological context

Site: San Bernardino di Briona (fraction of: Briona, Novara, Piemonte, Italy)
Coordinates (approx.): 45° 31' 12.00" N, 8° 32' 45.60" E [from site]
Find date: 1989
Current location: Musei Reali – Museo di Antichità (Torino)
Inventory no.: 57457

Inscription: NO·22 (quormsklp)

Alternative sigla: none

Sources: Rubat Borel 2006: 205 & 207 (fig. 3)

Commentary

Images in Gambari 1998: 291, fig. 276 (photo = Rubat Borel 2005: 49), Rubat Borel 2011b: 392, fig. 7.23 (photo), Arcà & Rubat Borel 2024: 36, fig. 9 (photos and drawing).

Large, irregular roundish river pebble of serpentinite, found during earthworks on the western side of the necropolis of San Bernardino di Briona, south of Cascina Pierina, in the mounds of soil which were heaped up during the agricultural levelling of the area in 1918. According to Gambari 1998: 291, 300 f., n. 18, the stone was pulled from a clod of earth on the northern slope of tumulus XXXII, close to where an aniconic and anepigraphic specimen had been found in 1980 atop a chamber grave. Like the latter example, the stone was used as grave marker (cf. also Li 1.2 Genova). It features a drawing, executed with a hammering technique like the inscription, of a figure of a warrior stepping out and holding aloft a shield and spear, for which Gambari 1998: 291 compares the figures on the Hochdorf kline. Dating based on the larger archaeological context of the necropolis and the iconography (Gambari 1998: 291, Rubat Borel 2011b). See Spagnolo Garzoli & Gambari 2004: 218–220.

Bibliography