Anglo-Saxon Beads: Redefining The “Traffic Lights”

Many thousands of glass beads have been excavated from Early British cemeteries of the fifth and sixth centuries AD. Amongst these beads is a type that was particularly common: decorated polychrome beads in red, yellow, and green glass in a variety of styles and combinations. Birte Brugmann, in her...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sue Heaser
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EXARC 2022-12-01
Series:EXARC Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10664
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849236661689384960
author Sue Heaser
author_facet Sue Heaser
author_sort Sue Heaser
collection DOAJ
description Many thousands of glass beads have been excavated from Early British cemeteries of the fifth and sixth centuries AD. Amongst these beads is a type that was particularly common: decorated polychrome beads in red, yellow, and green glass in a variety of styles and combinations. Birte Brugmann, in her 2004 analysis of Saxon-period glass beads (Brugmann, 2004), named these beads “Traffic Light” (TL) beads because of the colours and drew attention to the fact that they were probably made in England as they do not appear on the continent.
format Article
id doaj-art-868b7b267b7148e38e33ff77d9129fa6
institution Kabale University
issn 2212-8956
language English
publishDate 2022-12-01
publisher EXARC
record_format Article
series EXARC Journal
spelling doaj-art-868b7b267b7148e38e33ff77d9129fa62025-08-20T04:02:10ZengEXARCEXARC Journal2212-89562022-12-012022/4ark:/88735/10664Anglo-Saxon Beads: Redefining The “Traffic Lights”Sue HeaserMany thousands of glass beads have been excavated from Early British cemeteries of the fifth and sixth centuries AD. Amongst these beads is a type that was particularly common: decorated polychrome beads in red, yellow, and green glass in a variety of styles and combinations. Birte Brugmann, in her 2004 analysis of Saxon-period glass beads (Brugmann, 2004), named these beads “Traffic Light” (TL) beads because of the colours and drew attention to the fact that they were probably made in England as they do not appear on the continent.https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10664beadjewelleryglassearly middle agesunited kingdom
spellingShingle Sue Heaser
Anglo-Saxon Beads: Redefining The “Traffic Lights”
EXARC Journal
bead
jewellery
glass
early middle ages
united kingdom
title Anglo-Saxon Beads: Redefining The “Traffic Lights”
title_full Anglo-Saxon Beads: Redefining The “Traffic Lights”
title_fullStr Anglo-Saxon Beads: Redefining The “Traffic Lights”
title_full_unstemmed Anglo-Saxon Beads: Redefining The “Traffic Lights”
title_short Anglo-Saxon Beads: Redefining The “Traffic Lights”
title_sort anglo saxon beads redefining the traffic lights
topic bead
jewellery
glass
early middle ages
united kingdom
url https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10664
work_keys_str_mv AT sueheaser anglosaxonbeadsredefiningthetrafficlights