fibulae

     

A Fibula is an ancient brooch. (Plural: fibulae). Technically, the latin term fibulae refers specifically to Roman brooches, however, the term is wiely used to refer to brooches from the entire ancient and early medieval world. Unlike modern brooches, fibulae were not only decorative, they originally served a practical function: to fasten clothes, including cloaks. Fibulae replaced straight pins that were used to fasten clothing in the Neolithic period and Bronze Age. In turn, fibulae were replaced as clothing fasteners in the Middle Ages by buttons. Their descendent, the modern safety-pin, remains in use today.

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Tweets about fibulae

  • Open Access: Two Liburnian fibulae from TroĊĦenj-grad #archaeology
  • Help us raise money for the new Human Anatomy Learning Centre - $2,500 will get your name on one of my fibulae, radii, ulnae or tibiae!
  • @starlightaloud @ahencyclopedia @Medievalists Saxon/frankish fibulae being Rome soldier statement brooch Returning to interlacing