Ourense Torcs

The Ourense Torcs are a pair of Iron Age gold torc neck rings found near Ourense in Northwest Spain in the 1950s. They were acquired by the British Museum in 1960.[1]

Ourense Torcs
MaterialGold
Size13.7cm diameter
Createdc. 300-150 BC
Present locationBritish Museum, London
Registration1960,0503.1-2

Discovery

The exact find spot of the two neck rings has never been confirmed but experts have determined, based on the shape and design of the torcs, that they originate from Ourense in the province of Galicia near the Spanish/Portuguese border.

Description

The two gold torcs are nearly identical with double reel-shaped terminals and circular body. The terminals have a large tapered central depression, with embossed ornamentation around the edge. Their Celtic design is characteristic of the torcs produced in Galicia and northern Portugal, in the Iberian Peninsula.[2]

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gollark: Oh, different things, I see.
gollark: A square wave decomposes into infinitely many sines. Can't do that to sines.
gollark: What do you mean "infinite overtones"? I don't think that's how sine waves work.
gollark: In older swarms their internal networks would mess it up, but any remotely modern one uses EM.

See also

Bibliography

  • M. Lenerz-de Wilde, 'The Celts in Spain' in The Celtic World, London and New York, Routledge, 1995
  • I. Stead, Celtic Art, British Museum Press, 1996
  • Megaw Ruth and Vincent, Celtic Art: From Its Beginnings to the Book of Kells, 2001

References

  1. British Museum Collection
  2. Castro Pérez, Ladislao (1990). Os torques prehistóricos. Santiago de Compostela: Univ. de Santiago de Compostela. pp. 148–180. ISBN 8471916959.
  3. González-Ruibal, "catalogue", fig. 33
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