Our database is free to use for all history and archaeology enthusiasts. If you use our database, please do not forget to cite correctly:
Mägi, Marika; Palm, Piia Sandra. Archaeological Artefacts of Saaremaa. Foundation Osiliana / Tallinn University. Accessed: date.
The Osiliana Archaeological Database presents artefacts from Saaremaa and the surrounding small islands.
The database contains mainly Iron Age and Medieval finds that can be classified.
Undated metal or other pieces were generally excluded from the database.
Ceramics are represented by isolated examples.
The database is a work in progress and is constantly being updated.
Fragment of artefact, copper alloy.
Fragment of artefact, copper alloy. Rhombic in cross-section. Possibly a fragment of the bow of a penannular brooch, in which case it would date to the 12th–13th centuries.



Simple ring, copper alloy. Simple bands, decorated with an ornament of notches running along the hoop. A similar example has been found in burial CCLXII at the Siksälä cemetery, dated to 1300–1450 (Valk et al. 2014, 287). Rings of this type were more widely distributed in the 13th–15th centuries (Valk & Laul 2014, 118–120).
Valk, H. & Laul, S. 2014. Siksälä kalme I: Muistis ja Ajalugu. Tartu ülikool, Ajaloo ja arheoloogia instituut, Tallinn.;Valk, H., Ratas, J., Laul, S. 2014. Siksälä kalme II. Matuste ja leidude kataloog. Tartu Ülikool: Tartu.

Cubic chain distributer, copper alloy. Chain distributors held together belts composed of metal rings, which have been found in several 13th-century inhumation burials, for example at Valjala (Mägi et al. 2019, 98–99). Such chain belts have been recovered mainly from women’s and children’s graves, and both the chains and the associated cubic chain distributers have been dated to the 12th–13th centuries (Kurisoo et al. 2023, 220–221).
Mägi, M., Malve, M. & Toome, T. 2019. Early Christian burials at Valjala churchyard, Saaremaa. – Archaeological Fieldwork in Estonia, 2018, 93–118.;Kurisoo, T., Posti, M.-L., Jegorov, S. & Kangert, N. 2023. New public discoveries in 2022 against a backdrop of concerns about reporting and processing finds. – Archaeological Fieldwork in Estonia 2022, 217–238.



Fragment of pin, copper alloy. The shaft widens and has a perforation. Such loops are known, for example, on the 9th-century ring-headed pins (Mägi 1997). However, the object survives only as a fragment, and the identification cannot be considered entirely certain, especially since no other finds of such an early date are currently known from the surroundings of the Muhu hillfort.
Mägi, M. 1997. Eesti merovingi-1 ja viikingiaegsed rinnanõelad -võõrapärased ja omad. – Eesti Arheoloogia Ajakiri 1997, I, 26-83.


Simple ring, copper alloy. Simple bands from Medieval or Early Modern period.
Fragment of buckle or brooch, copper alloy.



Fragment of buckle or brooch, copper alloy. Casted, with an ornament of notches on one side. Probably medieval.


Fragment of artefact, copper alloy. Open-work, more precisely undetermined.



Fragment of artefact, copper alloy. With a segment-shaped cross-section; the end is decorated with incised lines, and one edge bears rounded notches.

Finger-ring, copper alloy. Closed, undecorated. Medieval or Early Modern (see, for example, Russow et al. 2019).
Russow, E., Randoja, K., Bernotas, R., Tvauri, A.,Rammo, R., Reppo, M., Ratas, J., Kreem, J., Lõugas, L. 2019. A late medieval treasure trove of Tallinn. Salvage excavations of the 15th-century landfill between the Jahu and Väike-Patarei streets. AVE 2018, 185−218.
The negative value refers to time Before Christ.