The Dacian silver bracelet is one of the characteristic artworks of this period, and the most representative ornament on them is the snake protome. Dacian bracelets have mainly been thought of as women's adornments but it can not be excluded that some types of bracelets, especially the multi-spirals ones, represented insignia of politico-military and
sacerdotal functions and therefore worn by men. Bracelets became part of the objects that Dacians selected as votive offerings deposited outside settlements. Such offerings have been found in a fountain at
Ciolanestii din Deal, Teleorman County, where silver bracelets and vases dated to 2nd or 1st century BC were found, and finds beside a lake in a forest at
Contesti, Argeș County, where bracelets, pearls, and a
drachma were found. Types of the La Tène II period (150 BC – 100 AD) include: • Bracelets with the ends curled back around the bracelet's wire i.e.
Cerbal (Hunedoara County) and Remetea (Timis County) • Bracelets made of multiple twisted wires i.e. at
Cerbăl In the La Tène Age, this type appears to have been developed from the twisted types of the Bronze Age IV from Spalnaca. • Bracelets with double torsade i.e.
Cerbăl • Bracelets made of decorated band with circles and dotted lines i.e.
Cerbăl • Bracelets made of ribbed bar • Bracelets with single- or multi-spirals terminating with snake heads File:Dacian bracelets rolled ends.jpg|Dacian bracelet from Transylvania; each end is coiled on the circlet's wire itself La Tène III ) File:Silver decorated band Dacian Cerbal.jpg|Silver decorated band bracelet from
Cerbăl dated to La Tène File:Dacian band decorated bracelet hook-and-eye Cerbal.jpg|Decorated band hook-and-eye-bracelet
Cerbăl dated to La Tène File:Dacian bracelet type Slimnic3.jpg|Dacian bracelet -Transylvania;
Slimnic type (Iron Age II) File:Dacian bracelet twisted bar.jpg|Silver Dacian bracelet from Transylvania
Regional finds According to Horedt (1973), silver Dacian treasure finds can be typologically categorized into north and south groups, divided by the
Târnava River. In the contact zone between them the artifacts are common to both zones. In this classification the silver multi-spiral bracelets that are ornamented with palmettes and snake protomes would belong to the southern group.
East of the Carpathian Mountains The Dacian bracelets that have been found East of the Carpathians can be categorized into two main types: • Non-joined ends i.e. those found at
Poiana (Galați County) and Gradistea (
Brăila County). Numerous specimens are made of bronze, such as those found at Brad, Racatau and Poiana. • Overlapped ends that are coiled onto the wire itself. This type has ornamentation consisting of geometrical motifs and sometimes of snake protomes. The characteristic metals used for bracelets found in the area of the
Siret River valley are bronze and iron, though silver was also probably used; a silver bracelet was found with a treasure of coins buried after 119–122 AD. In the Prut-Dniester region sub-types have been identified such as: • Bronze bracelets such as those found at
Trebujeni,
Mașcăuți and
Hansca • Non-joined ends, bar with vegetal décor such as those from
Palanca-Tudora • Bracelets made of 3–6 twisted bronze wires with flattened ornaments in the middle. • Multi-spiral types, such as the bracelets from the treasure found at
Mateuți (
Rezina District) dated to the 4th century BC. This treasure includes two silver bracelets, one with five spirals and one with three.
Moesia Superior Dacian bracelets have been found in deposits from
Tekija,
Bare,
Veliko Središte and
Paraćin. The style and type of the bracelets from Tekija and Bare are similar to the Dacian silver types; i.e. bracelets made of twisted wire and bracelets with overlapped ends that are coiled around the wire itself. Even though the origins of this type should not necessarily be located in Dacia itself, since bracelets of this type are scattered throughout the entire Balkan-Danube area, the earliest dated bracelets from Tekija and Bare are very large, as were those typical of the Dacian cultural complex. Bracelets with ends shaped as a head of, or tail of, a serpent are well represented in the Dacian deposits that are found at the Bare. The Dacian bracelets that are decorated with spiral end-pieces, i.e. Belgrad—
Guberevac (Leskovac), along with thin Dacian silver necklaces found in East Serbia, characterize the presence of a Dacian La Tène culture at
Paraćin in Serbia. File:Dacian bracelet from Transylvania.jpg|Silver bracelet – Transylvania (Iron Age II) File:Vindobona Hoher Markt-121.JPG|Bracelet from lower Danube area (Serbia), 1st century BC - 1st century AD (Moesia) File:Dacian bracelet cord type.jpg|"Torsades" type of silver bracelet from
Cerbăl (Hunedoara County) dated to La Tène III File:Bracelet twisted wire Spalnaca.JPG|Twisted wires bracelet from
Spalnaca (Bronze Age IV) that evolved into
Cerbăl twisted wires type, by the La Tène times.
Bracelets with cord ornaments An important category of the jewelry in the Daco-Getic environment are bronze bracelets with cord ornaments, whose typology consists of three types held in the Blaj Museum and in Simleul Silvaniei. Such
circlets had been discovered at Ardeu, Cuciulata (Brasov), Costesti (Hunedoara), Ocnita (Valcea), Pecica (Arad), Simleul Silvaniei (Sălaj), Tilisca (Sibiu) and in the Orăstie Mountains. These ornaments do not seem to be specific to pre-Roman Dacia, as they were widely spread in contemporary Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary and Slovenia—all during the La Tène period. Since their diameter is around 10 cm, apart from those found in Simleul Silvaniei and Orăstie which are 6 cm and 7.5 cm, they were probably worn on the arm or as anklets. They have been found mainly in fortresses or important centers of pre-Roman Dacia, and appear to have been prestige items of the local aristocracy.
Bracelets with a double torsade This type have been found with treasures from Cerbăl (Hunedoara County), Bistrița (Bistrița-Năsăud County),
Drăgești (Bihor County),
Oradea-Sere (Bihor County),
Saracsău (Alba County), and
Tilișca (Sibiu County). The bracelets are made of wire turned two or three times to form a semicircular terminal. The three-turns style is seen only with a single bracelet from Cerbăl. These terminals are always decorated with stamped-dotted lines and are dated to the 1st century BC. This type was designed and preferred by the intra-Carpathian regions. Only one presence occurs in the Danube area, at Iron Gates. Since this bracelet appears to have been a prestige ornament, its presence south of the Carpathians is seen as a component of the relationships between the elites of the two neighboring regions.
The material of bracelets ) In the Bronze Age IV and Hallstatt periods Dacia was characterized by gold treasures and by a particular gold art, whereas archaeological finds dated to the La Tène period are mostly made of silver. This is a common characteristic of the Illyrian and Eastern Alps regions of the time, and not limited to the Dacian area. Some scholars, such as Glodariu, explain the scarcity of gold ornaments and bracelets in Dacian treasures by a custom of the Dacians, Celts, Germans and Romans in reserving golden ornaments for the king alone. Other scholars, such as Florescu, put forth the hypothesis of religious restrictions regarding the use of gold in the period of the Dacian state. The golden Dacian bracelets, and indeed most of the jewelry, that has been found so far are made of unrefined gold from the
Apuseni Mountains. The silver of the Dacian bracelets and other ornaments of the time always contain between 0.63 and 6.35% gold. In some scholars opinions, such as Oberländer-Târnoveanu, it was obtained by melting Greek and Roman coins as well as importing from Balkan sources. Others, Popescu for example, support the thesis of a local extraction of silver from the Apuseni Mountains. The work and typology of the silver multi-spirals snake-headed bracelets suggests the existence of a large manufacturing center, located most probably near the Dacian sites of the
Orastie Mountains. From there silver artifacts spread throughout the entire area of modern-day Transylvania; and, as archaeological finds prove, these art works become later known in areas that encompass the modern regions of
Moldavia,
Muntenia and
Oltenia. In the second phase of La Tène, reasoned on the basis of finds, Dacia appears to have experienced a temporary "silver crisis", probably related to an increase in the minting of silver
denarii; therefore, bracelets dated to that time had been made of mild alloy and only plated with a silver layer about 0.1 mm (0.004 inch) thick. The layer was so well welded that the welding can not be identified by the naked eye, even in cross sections. Specimens of the group include finds from
Sarmasag (Salaj County) and
Dersca (Botosani County). There were also similar finds at
Slimnic (Sibiu County) and Herastrau Bucuresti.
Representations depicting the wearing of Dacian bracelets depicts warriors wearing bracelets The Dacian phalera from
Lupu-Cergău, Alba County, depicts a feminine divinity wearing some circlets on her arms. Some scholars identified these with a representation of the Dacian bracelet types. In 1820 at
Cioara (today Săliștea) a fragmentary gilded silver plaque was discovered, dated to La Tène III, and primitively decorated
au repousse ("by embossing"), with representations of two human characters, probably warriors. Hatched bands are visible on the arms and wrists that resemble regular bracelets. Even though the motifs of the plaque do not seem to be local, since it differs in some respects from those depicted on
Trajan's Column, the silver-work itself seems to be Dacian. Other than the Dacians, no-one was working in this style at that time. The silversmith who made it is probably the same one who made the well known Dacian snake-headed bracelets from Hunedoara County. A fragment from the Forum of Roman Emperor Trajan (2nd century AD) in Rome has a relief of a seated female, probably a Dacian (
Dacia Capta – "the conquered Dacia"). She is depicted wearing a bracelet on each arm below the shoulder.
Bracelets with a snake-motif type (La Tène Age) This motif is found with both the multi-spiral bracelets and also with the simple bracelets. • Multi-spiral silver bracelets terminating with portions of
palmettes and snake
protome terminals at each end, i.e. those found at
Cojocna,
Bălănești (Mărunței),
Rociu,
Coada Malului Drauseni (Cața) (destroyed by 1941),
Feldioara and
Orastie. The endings of some of the bracelets were gilded: i.e.
Coada Malului and
Orastie. • Multi-spiral bracelets with snake-heads at each terminal, but whose terminals do not have the palmettes, that are plaques decorated with large scales, i.e. those from
Herastrau (Bucuresti) dated to the 1st century BC. A bracelet from
Bunesti (
Vaslui County) is similar to the one from Herastrau, but it is dated earlier than the 1st century BC. • Simple bracelets, where stylized snake heads terminate the ends. The ends are either in the shape of an animal's head summarily but adroitly stylized, as in the case of the
Slimnic bracelets, or in other cases the animal's head is suggested by a few engraved lines, and the decorated ends were gilded. Finds include those from:
Ocnita (Valcea County),
Poiana (Tecuci), Săcălăsău Nou (Bihor County), in Romania; and also from
Jakabszállás in Hungary. • Bronze bracelets cast and incised with snake
protomes, i.e. those found in
Râșnov,
Brașov County, and dated to the 2nd or 1st century AD.
Description of the silver multi-spiral bracelets with palmettes and protomes at both terminals (
Arges County) There are about 27 known Dacian silver or silver-gilt multi-spiral bracelets terminating with rectangular plaques and snake head
protomes. They are exhibited or kept in repositories and museums in Bucharest (Romania), Budapest (Hungary) and Belgrade (Serbia). Additionally the
Kunsthistorisches Museum holds Dacian silver bracelets such as the one found at
Orastie (Hunedoara County) and the one from Feldioara (Brasov County). All of these silver works are characterized by their large size. For example, the one found at
Senereuș, now in the
Brukenthal Museum weights around 0.4 kilograms (0.88 pounds). The wire used is 206 cm (6 feet 9 inches) long and 0.4 cm (0.157 inches) thick, while the heads are 21 cm each (8.26 inches). The inside diameter of the coils is 12.5 cm (4.92 inches) with an outside diameter of 13.3 cm (5.2 inches). These large diameters and the heavy weight of these armlets would suggest wearing them on the upper arm or on the leg. The coils of the specimen from
Cluj Napoca have an even bigger outside diameter at 16 cm (6.3 inches); therefore, it is supposed that it was worn on the thigh or forearm over clothes The specimen from the Transylvanian Museum at Cluj weighs 0.358 kilograms (0.79 pounds). It has been made by hammering a silver bar of a circular cross-section. It has 4 spirals and the ends are flattened, decorated with seven palmettes made by punching. The surfaces of the palmettes, and their extremities, are decorated with the "fir-tree" motif and incised circles. The multi-spiral from Belgrad Museum has an interesting particularity in that the impression of the palmette motif has two
puncheons of different dimensions. This might have been done in order to avoid the stereotypy of models.
Origins Snakes are depicted in Dacian toreutics from the 6th and 5th centuries BC, and also in the later period. Both types of bracelets with snake protomes, those of simple and multiple spirals, show an ancient Thracian tradition from the Hallstatt period (the Geto-Thracian period) of Geto-Dacian art evolution. Snake-shaped bracelets, and other ornaments of the same kind, speak not only of the spread of the decorative motif but also of a symbol and significance of this motif in the Dacian period. Some scholars suppose that the Scythians provided the model of the snake décor found in the Classical Dacian bracelets, on the basis that the semi-spiraled Scythian snake type rings, were common in Dacia after the Hallstatt period. Those rings might have been continuously used until the La Tène period, or perhaps until the Roman era, as can be seen with a necropolis from
Cașolț, Sibiu County. If this was the case, Shchukin suggests it was a matter of transferred ideas rather than of imports. These bracelets types can be explained by the typology of the local tradition of the Hallstattian period; and there were similar bracelets in the Thracian world of today's Romania and Bulgaria. Such examples include a mid-3rd-century BC spiral dragon-headed ring; a spiral snake-headed ring from
Nesebar (Messembria); 4th century BC spiraled bracelets from
Aitos; and a 3rd-century BC snake-headed ring of unknown origin in the British Museum. The manufacture of the spirals, by wrapping the silver wire several times, belongs to the traditions of the Bronze Age; but those with their ends flattened, and decorated on the outside with
intaglio palmettes, belong to a more modern style according to Popescu. The way in which these dragon patterned bracelets were developed by the Dacians was new, while its resemblance to the workmanship and style of other countries are so few, that these bracelets might very well be considered as specifically Dacian. It can be distinguished as a Dacian style since they remained faithful to their own geometric representations, and the palmette motif is not found in the neighboring areas. File:KunsthistorischesMuseumDacianGold2 bracelet.jpg|Dacian La Tène, gold-plated silver bracelet from
Orastie Romania Repository Vienna Kunsthistorisches Museum File:Dacian_bracelet.jpg|Dacian silver bracelet dated to the 1st century BC; Museum of Transylvania
Cluj-Napoca. File:Ring serpent-headed finds Dacia.JPG|
Scythian Hallstatt Scythian type rings from Dacia, believed to be a "source" for Dacian snake-headed bracelets. File:Dacian Silver Jewelry from Darlos -Sibiu.JPG|Silver ornament found at
Dârlos (
Sibiu County) File:Dacian silver bracelets from Hetur and Vaidei.JPG|Bracelets Vaidei (Hunedoara County) and Hetiur (Mures County). File:Snake-head of Dacian bracelet.jpg|Detail, snake-head and rectangular plaque 'mane' of the gold bracelets, 1st century BC File:Dacian_Gold_Bracelet_Head_at_the_National_Museum_of_the_Union_2007.jpg|Protoma head and mane of a gold bracelets, 1st century BC Sarmizegetusa File:Dacian bracelet repository MN Budapest.jpg|Silver Dacian bracelet from Transylvania (La Tène age) National Museum – Budapest.
The dragon and snake-head motif as depicted on the
Trajan's Column Within the multi-spiral group of bracelets with palmette scales, two sub-groups can be stylistically identified – one represented by the Feldioara find and the other by the Orastie find. These sub-groups show that the snake and dragon types were not absolutely immutable in the imagination of the Dacian silversmiths. Two variants were introduced: mammal head – snake head and crest – mane, as well as some transitional versions. ,
Vaidei (Romos) and
Darlos Romania The bracelet discovered around 1856 at
Orăștie consists of a single silver wire, with a circular cross-section, coiled into eight equal spirals terminating in a dragon head at both ends. It is analogous to the bracelet from Feldioara but its head is different in that the head is almost triangular. It has been made in a richer figurative manner than others. The multi-spiral bracelet with zoomorphic (snake?) ends, found in 1859 with a treasure from
Feldioara, is different because of the widened muzzle of the
protome terminals. In the middle of the snake head the Dacian silversmith engraved braids, by the use of puncheons, consisting of two rows of small, oblique, divergent traits. The snake's eyes are depicted as two circles. A strong profile separates the head from a relatively rectangular plaque with rounded corners, and slightly arched edges representing the mane of the
Dacian dragon. The profiled relief edges of the bracelet's rectangular plaque and its decoration with two rows of divergent slashes are suggestive of the mane of a dragon or wolf. The bracelets from the Museum of Transylvania found in Cluj, Hetiur (
Mureș County) and
Ghelința are characterized by a more
trenchant cutting and a more prominent relief for modeling the head. These traits are unlikely to represent a specific ophidian form and the longitudinal axis is marked by a stylistically different means. The zoomorphic motif of the bracelets depicts a fantastic animal with the head and body of a serpent but the muzzle of a mammal, pointed or square, with a thick mane flowing on its back prolonged by a poly-lobed (multiple palmettes) body. The analysis of these Dacian symbols, performed by scholars—such as Florescu (1979), Pârvan (1926), and Bichir (1984)—conclude that the symbol of the snake or dragon appears on the Geto-Dacian La Tène bracelets and on the
Dacian standard (flag) that can be seen on
Trajan's Column. The Dacians dragon probably combines two meanings: the agility and redoubtable ferocity of the wolf with the protective role of the snake. It was supposed to encourage the
Getae and to scare their enemies. It also appeared to have been the only one known representation of the religious character of the Dacians of the time. Scholastic interpretations vary between considering this a representation of a "flying dragon", related to a
Sky God, or a
chthonic symbol. Some bracelets from south of the Carpathians, such as those from
Coada Malului,
Bălănești and
Rociu; and some from north of the Carpathians such as those from
Dârlos and
Vaidei (Romos)) do not have decorative elements to mark the median line on the rectangular plaque (the wider and flat portion coming next to the head). They instead have wavy lines, finely engraved, suggesting a mane or ridge. A similar style is seen in specimens from
Senereuș,
Dupuș (Sibiu County) and from the unknown Transylvanian site, the fragment of which is kept at the Budapest Museum. On the latter, the beam of wavy lines has been replaced by horizontal, short and dense, finely engraved lines. The rectangular portion of the bracelets from Bălănești and Transylvania show a tendency to split into two teardrop-shaped lobes. On the subgroup of bracelets from
Coada Malului, the fir-tree is depicted only schematically. It was also noted that the snakes from the Agighiol artifacts of the 4th century BC, especially the depicted heads of snakes, have a stylization similar to that of the Dacian bracelet protomes; they have the same triangular form, and the same distribution of the decorations that mark the eye of the snake.
The leaf motifs of the multi-spiral bracelets Museum The flattened bands of the bracelets are decorated externally with a chain of geometrized palmettes that have been struck in much the same way as coins. It seems that the leaf-like ornaments have been made by impression, using ready-made moulds, as used in the manufacture of Dacian cups from the La Tène
Crasani (com. Balaciu) site. Scholars, such as Popescu, related the chain of successive palmettes of the Dacian bracelets to the decoration of the borders on the Scythian Melgunov dagger sheath from the 6th century BC. Others consider that several multi-spiral bracelets, i.e. from
Balanesti (Olt), have the same palmette motif as the typical decorations of the 4th-century BC Thracian-Getic helmet from
Agighiol (com. Valea Nucarilor),
Tulcea. In the opinion of Berciu, the palmette motif was adopted from the Greeks of the Black Sea coast during the Geto-Thracian Art period. Dacian bracelets exhibit four decorative types of leaf-like triangular lobes: first is the most complex is of oval or triangular palmettes; the second is interpreted as representing fern leaves (e.g. the Orastie bracelet); the third is the fir-tree motif, where the rounded lobes become straight lines resembling a fir-tree branch; and the fourth whose shape preserves only the medial
vein and the circles, suggesting the spiral arching of the lobes (e.g. the Feldioara bracelet). The palmettes are more precisely outlined and more faithfully preserve the original lobes and palmette character, with several bracelets such as those from the Cluj Museum, Hetiur and Ghelinta. They are farthest away from a schematic fir-tree motif. A stylized ivy leaf-like style is common to the group of bracelets from Coada Malului, Rociu and Bălănești (
Argeș County), and Dupuș. It is formed using carved lines doubled with a fine series of dots.
The same motif seen in other ornaments The decorative snake style has been adopted in other types of ornaments, such as earrings from
Răcătău and spiral rings from
Sprâncenata and
Popești-Novaci. The silver ring from
Măgura, Teleorman has four-and-a-half multi-spirals with snake-head terminals and a chain of five palmettes. It belongs to a small silver treasure—comprising three
denarii that could be dated between 148 and 106 BC, and one ornament (the ring) —fortuitously discovered in 2005 and 2006 in a spot 330 m from Măgura village. The ring is considered by some, e.g. Mirea (2009), to be a miniaturized representation of the typical multi-spiral bracelets terminating with palmettes and snake protomes. There are particular analogies with the bracelets from Bălănești–Olt and Rociu–Argeș; as well as analogies with the spiral rings from Sprâncenata and Popești. The decorations are similar to a motif of the gold multi-spiral bracelets discovered in 1999–2001 at
Sarmizegetusa Regia.
Significance and archaeology of the silver multi-spiral bracelets with palmettes and protomes The multi-spiral bracelets made of plates with zoomorphic extremities, all of them made of silver and sometimes gilded, are characteristic of the north-Danubian Dacian elite, in particular ones from Transylvania. Also, according to Medelet (1976), one Dacian silver bracelet from
Malak Porovets (
Isperih Municipality Bulgaria) and one Dacian silver bracelet from
Velika Vrbica (Serbia), belong to the same typology. Some of this type of bracelets, such as the one in the
Cluj-Napoca Transilvanias History Museum and the two others in the National Museum Budapest (Hungary), are from unknown Transylvanian sites. It is possible the big silver multi-spirals were used with clothes worn for special celebrations, though they do not seem to have a simply decorative use. The context of burying these prestige aristocratic insignia suggests that the treasures they compound were rather votive deposits than funeral offerings (
cenotaph?). The silver snake-headed multi-spiral bracelets are found in the context of the so-called Dacian silver treasures. A significant fact regarding these treasures is the specificity of the time frame, from around 125 BC – 25 AD (one century). In historical terms, they are contemporary to the reigns of
Burebista,
Deceneus and
Comosicus. It is probable that the hoards of silver bracelets and ornaments of the late Geto-Dacian began to be produced just prior to the reign of
Burebista, a possible example being the one from Sâncrăieni. The manufacturing of silver ornaments continued during his reign, although to a lesser extent (perhaps due to his authoritarian, despotic and purist nature), and mostly after his suppression of the manufacture (44 BC – 46 AD); therefore the silver hoard production lasted almost a century. The burying of these Dacian silver jewelry items and bracelets (those made between 44 BC and 46 AD) occurred in the same period of time that was characterized by a scarcity of silver due to the turbulent situation in Dacia. This particular type of design has a unitary typology and a highly standardized character. It does not contain goods that had been accumulated over years, but only sets of certain objects. Also, they have not been found in the context of settlements but outside them, on carefully prepared deposits. These objects had not been temporarily concealed or hidden, because of some exposure to dangerous situations, but they were rather supposed to preserve the symbolic attributes of the social status in the afterlife. Several Dacian bracelets reached the collections of the Kunsthistorisches Vienna Museum through various channels: administrative, auctions, purchases, and donations. Though they were found in Transylvania, and belong to the similar archaeological context of the other Dacian silver treasures, they are rather accidental discoveries from the west and south of the Transylvanian plateau—both in the areas of the greatest concentration of Dacian culture in the
Orăștie and
Apuseni Mountains, where precious metal mineral deposits were, and are, to be found. == Gold multi-spiraled dragon-headed and animal protome bracelets ==