Ring, copper alloy. The ends are narrowing. Its function is unclear; however, a similar small brooch is known, for example, from burial no. 11 at Vilkmuiža in Dundaga (late 13th–early 14th century), where the pin has also been preserved (Muižnieks & Žeiere 2021, 335, Fig. 23: 1).
Mount, tin. Medieval or Early Modern. Tin mounts occur in a wide variety of shapes; however, at Siksälä, mounts of this particular form have been found in burials 22 and 33, both dated to the 14th century (Valk et al. 2014, 43, 54).
Literature:
Valk, H., Ratas, J., Laul, S. 2014. Siksälä kalme II. Matuste ja leidude kataloog. Tartu Ülikool: Tartu.
Mount, tin. Medieval or Early Modern. Tin mounts occur in a wide variety of shapes; however, at Siksälä, mounts of this particular form have been found in burials 22 and 33, both dated to the 14th century (Valk et al. 2014, 43, 54).
Literature:
Valk, H., Ratas, J., Laul, S. 2014. Siksälä kalme II. Matuste ja leidude kataloog. Tartu Ülikool: Tartu.
Century:
14
Discovery code:
SM 10973:464
Muhu
Triangular-headed pin with leaf ornamentation, copper alloy.
Triangular-headed dress pin, copper alloy. With hat-shaped end knobs and leaf decoration. Such dress-pins were in the 10th century widespread especially in Saaremaa, W- and NW-Estonia (Mägi 1997). Pins with similar shape but different decoration were common in Couronia and Semigallia. Indrek Jets has argued that the leaf-shaped decoration was a local offshoot from Scandinavian Animal art that decorated similar 8th-9th-century pins in Estonia (Jets & Mägi 2015). Such pins were presumably used both by women and men. Some triangular-headed pins with leaf decoration are known from the Livic areas, especially from graves where other Saaremaa-like artefacts are present. Single ones have also been found in several places in southern Scandinavia, Gotland and the island of Rügen (Mägi 2018, 297-300). It cannot be excluded that they were still in use in the beginning of the 11th century.
Literature:
Mägi, M. 1997. Eesti merovingi- ja viikingiaegsed rinnanõelad – võõrapärased ja omad. – Eesti Arheoloogia Ajakiri 1997, I, 26-83.; Jets, I. & Mägi, M. 2015. Local shape, foreign decoration. Shared culture values in pre-Viking Period Baltic Rim as indicated in the decoration of triangular-headed pins. – Fornvännen 2015, 4, 257-266.; Mägi, M. 2018. In Austrvegr: The Role of the Eastern Baltic in Viking Age Communication across the Baltic Sea. Brill; Leiden.