Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T02:56:21.753Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Fist-and-Phallus Pendants from Roman Catterick

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2015

Adam Parker*
Affiliation:

Abstract

A collection of six fist-and-phallus amulets from excavations at Catterick, North Yorks., is here reconsidered alongside their unique context. The group consists of five amulets from a single infant inhumation and a sixth found separate from the rest. All exhibit features defining them as a clear group of objects; they are all curved with a phallus and a fist making the manus fica joined in the centre by a scallop shell. There are three left-handed and three right-handed fists. The traditional interpretation of fist-and-phallus type amulets relates to military ideas of strength and virility, but in the context provided by this small group it is clear that their apotropaic function should be given additional credence. No other context in Roman Britain directly associates the fist-and-phallus type and infant inhumation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2015. Published by The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Allason-Jones, L. 1989: Women in Roman Britain, LondonGoogle Scholar
Barber, B., and Bowsher, D. 2000: The Eastern Cemetery of Roman London: Excavations 1983–1990, MOLAS Monograph 4, LondonGoogle Scholar
Biro, M.T. 2009: ‘Historischer überblick der beinschnitzerwerkstatten in Intercisa’, Archaeologiai Ertesítö 134, 6379CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bishop, M. 1988: ‘Cavalry equipment of the Roman army in the first century AD’, in Coulston, J.C. (ed.), Military Equipment and the Identity of the Roman Soldier. Proceedings of the Fourth Roman Military Equipment Conference, BAR International Series 394, Oxford, 67195Google Scholar
Cool, H.E.M., Lloyd-Morgan, G., and Hooley, A.D. 1995: Finds from the Fortress, Archaeology of York Series 17, Fascicule 10, LondonGoogle Scholar
Coulston, J.C.N., and Phillips, E.J. 1988: Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani. Great Britain Volume 1, Fascicule 6 – Hadrian's Wall West of the North Tyne, and Carlisle, LondonGoogle Scholar
Crummy, N. (ed.) 1983: The Roman Small Finds from Excavations in Colchester 1971–79, Colchester Archaeology Report 2, Colchester, http://cat.essex.ac.uk/reports/CAR-report-0002.pdf (Accessed 17/01/2015)Google Scholar
Crummy, N. 2010: ‘Bears and coins: the iconography of protection in Late Roman infant burials’, Britannia 41, 3793CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crummy, N., and Crossan, C. 1992: ‘Excavations at Butt Road 1976–79, 1986, and 1988’, in Crummy, N., Crummy, P. and Crossan, C. (eds), Excavations of Roman and Later Cemeteries, Churches and Monastic Sites in Colchester 1971–1988, Colchester Archaeology Report 9, Colchester, 4163Google Scholar
Deschler-Erb, E., and Božič, D. 2002: ‘A late Republican bone pendant from the Münsterhügel in Basel (CH)’, Instrumentum Bulletin 15, 3940Google Scholar
Eckardt, H. 2014: Objects and Identities: Roman Britain and the North-Western Provinces, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Green, M. 1978: Small Cult-Objects from the Military Areas of Roman Britain, BAR British Series 52, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greep, S. 1983: ‘Note on bone fist and phallus pendants’, in Crummy 1983, 139–40Google Scholar
Greep, S. 1994: ‘Antler roundel pendants from Britain and the North-West provinces’, Britannia 25, 7997CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greep, S. 2012: ‘Five little fishes … or more?’, Lucerna 43, 810Google Scholar
Greep, S. 2014: ‘Some more fishes’, Lucerna 45, 13Google Scholar
Henig, M. 1977: ‘Death and the maiden: funerary symbolism in daily life’, in Munby, J. and Henig, M. (eds), Roman Life and Art in Britain: A Celebration in Honour of the Eightieth Birthday of Jocelyn Toynbee, Part ii, BAR British Series 41ii, Oxford, 347–65Google Scholar
Henig, M. 1984: Religion in Roman Britain, LondonGoogle Scholar
Johns, C. 1982: Sex or Symbol: Erotic Images of Greece and Rome, LondonGoogle Scholar
Johns, C., and Wise, P. 2003: ‘A Roman gold phallic pendant from Braintree, Essex’, Britannia 34, 274–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merrifield, R. 1969: Roman London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Mikler, H. 1997, Die römischen Funde aus Bein im Landesmuseum Mainz, Monographie Instrumentum 1, MontagnacGoogle Scholar
Ottaway, P. 2013: Roman Yorkshire: People, Culture and Landscape, PickeringGoogle Scholar
PAS: Portable Antiquities Scheme, www.finds.org.uk (Accessed 17/11/2014)Google Scholar
Philpott, R. 1991: Burial Practices in Roman Britain: A Survey of Grave Treatment and Furnishing AD 43–410, BAR British Series 219, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Plouviez, J. 2005: ‘Whose good luck? Roman phallic ornaments from Suffolk’, in Crummy, N. (ed.), Image, Craft and the Classical World. Essays in Honour of Donald Bailey and Catherine Johns, Monographies Instrumentum 29, Montagnac, 154–64Google Scholar
RCHME 1962: Eburacum, Roman York, LondonGoogle Scholar
RCHME 1928: ‘Appendix 1: Burials in Roman London’, in An Inventory of the Historical Monuments of London, Vol. III, Roman London, London, 159–69, http://www.british-history.ac.uk/rchme/london/vol3/pp152-169 (Accessed 17/01/2015)Google Scholar
Toynbee, J.M.C. 1964: Art in Britain under the Romans, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Unz, C., and Deschler-Erb, E. 1997: Katalog der Militaria aus Vindonissa: Militärische Funde, Pferdegeschirr und Jochteile bis 1976, BruggGoogle Scholar
Wellbeloved, C. 1881: Handbook to the Antiquities in the Grounds and Museum of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society, YorkGoogle Scholar
Wilson, P. 2002a: Cataractonium – Roman Catterick and its Hinterland: Excavations and Research 1958–1997, Part 1, CBA Research Report 128, YorkGoogle Scholar
Wilson, P. 2002b: Cataractonium – Roman Catterick and its Hinterland: Excavations and Research 1958–1997, Part II, CBA Research Report 128, YorkGoogle Scholar
Witts, P. 2010: Mosaics in Roman Britain: Stories in Stone, StroudGoogle Scholar
YORYM: York Museums Trust (Online Collections Catalogue), http://yorkmuseumstrust.org.uk/collections/ (Accessed 01/12/2014)Google Scholar