Buckle
Buckle
Place of OriginCyprus, excavated by 1873
Date1050-310 BCE
Dimensions9/16 × 15/16 in. (1.4 × 2.4 cm)
Mediumbronze
ClassificationMetalwork
Credit LineGift of Edward Drummond Libbey
Object number
1916.146
Not on View
DescriptionCast bronze.
Label TextThis small object marks a formative moment in the Toledo Museum of Art’s “teenage years.” In 1916, the museum made a deliberate decision to collect Greek and Roman antiquities more systematically, acquiring a group of eighty-eight ceramic, bronze, and glass objects from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. All were excavated on Cyprus by Luigi Palma di Cesnola (1832–1904), the Met’s first president, and entered Toledo’s collection when the institution was still defining the scope of its antiquities holdings.
The bronze objects (1916.134–1916.149) reflect Cyprus’s early mastery of copper, a resource so central to the island that its Latin name, cuprum, derives from Cyprus itself. Bronze Age weapons, including a dagger (1916.149), attest to early casting traditions, while later Roman-period tools reveal long-term continuity in everyday practices. Tweezers (1916.147), cosmetic implements (1916.144–145), mirrors (1916.135–136), and a rare buckle (1916.146) point to routines of personal care across centuries.
The glass vessels (1916.150–1916.165) document a different technological transformation. Most are Roman blown glass, produced after the invention of the blowpipe in the first century BCE, a development that shifted glassmaking from a luxury craft to large-scale production. One earlier ribbed bowl (1916.153), formed by slumping glass over a mold, preserves an older and more labor-intensive technique.
The acquisition also included several dozen ceramic vessels. Over time, the scope of the museum’s collection evolved, and most of these ceramics were later deaccessioned. Two Archaic vessels from Cyprus, a stamnos (1916.79) and an oinochoe (1916.96), remain in the collection as representatives of this early phase of collecting.
Comparative ReferencesSee also Myres, John L., Hanbook of the Cesnola Collection of Antiquities from Cyprus, New York, 1914, p. 493, nos. 4887-9.750-650 BCE
about 480 BCE
1st century CE
750-650 BCE
800-650 BCE
1st century BCE-1st century CE (or modern)
750-650 BCE
about 600 BCE
about 490 BCE
about 320 BCE
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