Helmet

Thracian ca. 1500 BCE to 46 CE/AD
On View

in

Ancient Greek and Roman, Level 2, South Wing

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About the Artwork

This spectacular helmet was formed from a single piece of silver, its surface skillfully embossed and chased by the smith. A pair of eyes stare outward from the wearer’s brow. A goat emblazons the left cheek, while an eagle flies across the right, grasping a hare in its talons and a fish in its beak. The helmet was among the grave goods of a Thracian nobleman or king whose territories lay along the Danube River in southeastern Europe. It is strikingly similar in style and imagery to other sumptuous silver items, including a beaker worked with the very same tools (Metropolitan Museum of Art) and two helmets from tombs in present-day Romania, leading scholars to identify them with the same workshop. Such a royal atelier attested to the ruler’s command of precious natural resources and of artistic talents.

Helmet

4th century BCE

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Unknown

Thracian

Silver

Overall: 9 1/2 × 7 1/8 inches (24.1 × 18.1 cm)

Arms and Armor

Greco-Roman and Ancient European

Founders Society Purchase, Sarah Bacon Hill Fund

56.18

This work is in the public domain.

Markings

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Provenance

Until 1931, Franz Trau [1881–1931] (Vienna, Austria). 1931, by descent to his estate (Vienna, Austria). November 16, 1954, sold through (Galerie Fischer, Lucerne, Switzerland), to (Dr. Hubert A. Cahn of Münzen und Medaillen A.G., Basel, Switzerland)

By 1956, helmet owned in partnership between (Cahn) and (Elie Borowski, Toronto, Canada)

1956-present, purchase by the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

For more information on provenance and its important function in the museum, please visit:

Provenance page

Exhibition History

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The exhibition history of a number of objects in our collection only begins after their acquisition by the museum, and may reflect an incomplete record.

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Published References

Bulletin of the DIA 36, no. 3 (1956-57): p. 68 (ill.).

Piggott, S. Ancient Europe. Chicago, 1965, pp. 224-6 (ill.) [as Dacian 3rd-2nd second century B.C.]

"Arta Traco-Getica," Bibliotega de Archeologie, vol. 14. Bucharest, Editura Academiei Republicii Socialiste Romania, pp. 83-88 (ill.).

Rosu, L. Consiliul Culturii si Educatiei Socialiste Revista Muzeelor si Monumentalor. Bucharest, 1975, no. 12, 2:55-59 (ill.).

Nickel, H. Ullstein Waffenbuch. Frankfurt, 1974, p. 60 (ill.).

Farkas, Anne E. "Style and Subject Matter in Native Thracian Art," Metropolitan Museum Journal, vol. 16 (1981): pp. 33-48, p. 34 [for mention of helmet associated with the Getae and Triballi tribes of northern Thrace].

Meyers, Pieter. "Three Silver Objects from Thrace: A Technical Examination," Metropolitan Museum Journal, vol. 16 (1981): pp. 49-54.

Goldman, B. "A Scythian Helmet from the Danube," Bulletin of the DIA 42, no. 4 (1963) pp. 63-71 (ill.).

Goldman, B. "Late Scythian Art in the West: The Detroit Helmet," IPEK, vol 22 (1966-69): pp. 67-76.

Rosu, L. "Thraco-Getae-Dacian Art Works In The Detroit Institute of Arts," Romanians Celebrating Ontario: Heritage Festival. Toronto, 1984, pp. 166-168.

"Family Art Game: Details, Details, Details," The Detroit Free Press (April 29, 1990): p. 25 (ill.) [DIA Advertising Supplement].

Henshaw, Julia P., ed. A Visitors Guide: The Detroit Institute of Arts. Detroit, 1995, p. 101 (ill.).

Fol, A., et al. The Rogozen Treasure. Sofia, 1989, p. 42 [compares Rogozan Beaker #165 to the Metropolitan Museum beaker, the two cups from Aghigol and the Detroit helmet in the iconography of the horned bird of prey which symbolizes ad deity with supernatural powers to defeat evil], p. 194 [Author says that the Metropolitan Museum beaker and the Detroit helmet may have been found near Rogozen].

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Catalogue Raisoneé

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Credit Line for Reproduction

Thracian, Helmet, 4th century BCE, silver. Detroit Institute of Arts, Founders Society Purchase, Sarah Bacon Hill Fund, 56.18.

Helmet: Main View of Collection Gallery
Helmet: 1 of Collection Gallery Helmet: 2 of Collection Gallery

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Helmet
Helmet