Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Diana's Curse, Meleager's Glory: The Boar as Elite Symbol in Imperial Rome

by Mary Harrsch © 2026


Exploring more of my images from the Dallas Museum of Art icame across this exquisite little bronze spout in the form of a boar's head, a testament to the extraordinary artistry that Roman craftsmen brought even to functional domestic objects. The carefully rendered bristle crest, alert ears, open mouth, and prominent tusks speak to a workshop of considerable skill, and the quality of execution points firmly to an elite household.

A bronze spout in the forma of a boar, Roman, 1st century CE
 📍 Dallas Museum of Art | Loan from the David T. Owsley Collection | Accession no. 156.1994.45



My research revealed the boar was one of the most richly layered animals in the Graeco-Roman symbolic imagination. The great mythological touchstone was the Calydonian Boar Hunt: King Oeneus of Calydon had failed to honor Diana in his annual harvest sacrifices, and the goddess, refusing to overlook the insult, dispatched a monstrous boar to destroy crops and terrorize the land. Meleager then assembled a band of heroes to hunt it and eventually killed it himself, though a quarrel over the spoils led to war and ultimately to his own death. This myth, told memorably by Ovid in the Metamorphoses, was enormously popular in 1st-century Rome and appears across sarcophagi, mosaics, and the decorative arts.

Hunting wild boar was a privilege reserved for the nobility, and representations of heroic hunts from the mythic past served to validate and glorify aristocratic hunting culture in the eyes of contemporaries. The wild boar held a special place in Roman culture as a symbol of strength, courage, and martial virtue — an association that extended to the emperors themselves. The emperor Hadrian is depicted on horseback about to strike a boar with a spear in the famous Hadrianic tondi on the Arch of Constantine, and his passion for the hunt was so celebrated that he founded a town in ancient Mysia — Hadrianotherae, meaning "Hadrian's Hunt" — to commemorate a particularly successful expedition in the neighborhood. For a wealthy Roman household, a boar-headed spout was thus simultaneously a mythological allusion, a celebration of the hunt, and a quiet assertion of aristocratic identity.

The Hercules connection would have added further resonance for any educated Roman viewer. The capture of the Erymanthian Boar was one of the Twelve Labors, and the 1st-century writer Heraclitus the Grammarian interpreted the myth allegorically, arguing that the boar represents human lack of self-restraint — making its conquest a symbol of heroic virtue and rational self-mastery.

As a spout, this piece would most plausibly have served on a fountain fitting in a domestic garden or atrium — Romans were famously fond of elaborate water features — or on a bronze ewer or mixing vessel used in a triclinium (dining room), where the boar imagery would have resonated perfectly with the culture of aristocratic feasting and the hunt. Liquid emerging from the open mouth, especially red wine, would have made the mythological reference delightfully literal.


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Power, Prestige, and Bronze: Elite Horsemanship in Pre-Etruscan Italy

by Mary Harrsch © 2026


This morning I was reviewing images I took at the Dallas Museum of Art back in 2006 and came across this ornate Villanovan bronze horse bit dating between the 8th and 7th centuries BCE. My research revealed this extraordinary bronze horse bit exmplifies the remarkable technical virtuosity and artistic ambition of Villanovan craftsmen working at the dawn of Etruscan civilization in central Italy.

Cast bronze Villanovan horse bit 
📍 Dallas Museum of Art | Gift of Mrs. John Leddy Jones | Accession no. 1969.6


Rather than simple functional forms, the Villanovan smith has populated every surface with cascading openwork zoomorphic figures — small stylized animals clambering over one another in interlocking composition — topped by elegantly curved arms terminating in distinctive disc-headed finials. Below the mouthpiece, pendant elements hang in layered chains, themselves decorated with miniature figural forms that would have caught light and produced subtle movement and sound when the horse was in action.

In 8th–7th century BCE Villanovan and Etruscan society, horses carried enormous prestige as markers of elite status, and this social weight translated directly into the elaboration of the bits themselves — objects that functioned simultaneously as practical tack and as public declarations of wealth and power. The significance of horses is underscored by the frequency with which bronze bits appear as grave goods in the large Villanovan cemeteries situated just outside major settlements.

Technically, the bit displays the hallmark Villanovan snaffle construction with a jointed cannon and large, architecturally complex cheekpieces rendered through sophisticated lost-wax casting. The density of figural decoration — with what appear to be horse, bird, and possibly anthropomorphic motifs woven together — aligns closely with the Geometric artistic vocabulary shared across the central Mediterranean during this period, while remaining distinctly Italic in character.

The Villanovans didn't acquire bronze casting from any one culture, but rather inherited and developed the tradition through several overlapping channels:

Central Italy saw continuous development from the Bronze Age through the Villanovan period (900–700 BCE) into the Etruscan era — local evolution rather than foreign migration or wholesale cultural replacement. However, Bronze-working knowledge was already present in the Italian peninsula before the Villanovan period properly began.

Trans-Alpine and Balkan connections were significant early on. Bronzeworks indicate contact with Sardinia, central Europe, and the Balkans, and these links brought about a more advanced metallurgy.

Greek contact then accelerated sophistication. The culture came into contact with the wider Mediterranean via the arrival of Greek settlers, especially Euboeans, in the mid-8th century BCE, who were eager to exploit the mineral-rich region that would become Etruria.

Elite demand drove innovation. The great variability of formal features and techniques in Villanovan bronze production — from cast fibulae and weapons to hammered sheet bronze armor and vessels — is closely connected to the display expressions of new elites within proto-urban communities. In other words, the social ambitions of a rising aristocratic class pushed craftsmen to ever greater levels of elaboration

This piece represents a cultural threshold: by around 750 BCE the Villanovan culture had transitioned into the Etruscan culture proper, making objects like this living witnesses to that transformation. It is simultaneously a functional tool, a status object, and one of the finest examples of small-scale sculpture produced in pre-Roman Italy

📍 Dallas Museum of Art | Gift of Mrs. John Leddy Jones | Accession no. 1969.6
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Monday, May 25, 2026

Rethinking Iron Age Britain: Hillforts, Oppida, and the Origins of Urban Assembly

by Mary Harrsch © 2026

This morning I was listening to a podcast about Iron Age Britain and was surprised to learn hillforts and oppida are two very distinct architectural developments. I had always thought about these terms as interchangeable but the functional and morphological differences between the hillfort and the oppidum are far more significant than casual usage of these terms tends to suggest.

A reconstruction of the Basel oppidum  in Switzerland, 80 BCE  (CCO 1.0)

My research revealed the hillfort, dominant across the Middle Iron Age (c. 400–100 BCE), is characterized by its elevated topographic position, a single continuous defensive circuit of timber-laced ramparts and ditches, and a relatively homogeneous internal layout of roundhouses and grain storage features. These ramparts typically employed a box or fach construction — a wooden latticework filled with rubble and fronted by stone or compacted clay — effective, but vulnerable over time to fire and decay. Sites such as Maiden Castle (Dorset) and Danebury (Hampshire) exemplify this form. Their primary logic was defensive consolidation and the visible expression of communal territorial authority at a local or clan level: a single, unbroken perimeter through which no entry was possible without passing a defended gate.
The oppidum (pl. oppida), emerging in the Late Iron Age from roughly 150 BCE onward, represents a qualitatively different phenomenon in nearly every dimension — including its fortification technology. Rather than the timber-laced rampart of the hillfort tradition, oppida frequently employed the murus Gallicus ("Gallic wall"), the most sophisticated defensive construction of the Iron Age. As described by Julius Caesar, this technique involved horizontal timber beams laid perpendicular to the wall face, pinned by iron nails, and sandwiched between a dressed drystone facing and a rubble core. The result was a structure that was substantially more fire-resistant and structurally robust than its predecessors — and the quantity of iron required for its construction was itself a conspicuous signal of accumulated wealth and organizational capacity.
Equally significant is the strategic philosophy underlying oppidum defenses. Where the hillfort enclosed a single hilltop within a neat, unbroken ring, the oppidum deployed multiple, discontinuous linear earthworks to control movement across a much larger and more irregular landscape. These are perhaps best described as enclosed but not fully encircled — defended by a discontinuous system rather than a single perimeter. Camulodunum (Colchester) illustrates this well: situated on a low plateau rather than a prominent peak, three sides of the site benefit from natural protection afforded by marshland and the River Colne, while the landward approach is blocked by a series of massive linear earthworks — Gryme's Dyke and Berechurch Dyke among them — stretching for several miles. Large areas within this defensive zone remain open, and the logic of the system is the control of movement through defined corridors rather than the creation of a fortress.
Internally, oppida reflect an emerging proto-urbanism that stands in sharp contrast to the hillfort's relative homogeneity: zoned quarters for residential occupation, specialist craft production (including on-site coin minting), and — of particular interpretive interest — large open areas understood as deliberative or assembly spaces. It is this last feature that marks the oppidum as a central place in a genuinely political sense: a site where regional elites, tribal councils, and wider populations convened for governance, dispute resolution, and ceremonial life.
The transition between these two settlement forms tracks closely with intensifying continental contact, the influence of Gaulish oppida described by Caesar, and the growth of long-distance exchange networks linking Britain to the wider Mediterranean world. It is no coincidence that Roman administrators later adopted many of these same sites as their provincial and regional capitals.
For those who want to explore this further, The Ancients podcast covered this material in an accessible and well-researched episode — well worth a listen.
Image: Basel oppidum reconstruction, Switzerland, c. 80 BCE (CC0 1.0)
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Thursday, May 7, 2026

Beyond the Antonine Wall: Rome’s Forgotten Frontier in the Highlands

 by Mary Harrsch © 2026

I was listening to "The Ancients" podcast on Amazon Music while I exercised this morning and the guest historian mentioned the remains of over 150 Roman forts have been identified in Scotland. I researched this a little further and discovered while over 150 Roman forts have been identified, the total number of Roman sites in Scotland, including temporary camps and other installations, is over 330. The concentration of Roman remains in Scotland is the direct result of two major, but ultimately unsuccessful, military campaigns to conquer the tribes of the north, known to the Romans as the Caledonii 

Reconstruction of a Roman fortlet from Gask Ridge 1st century CE courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Veleius, colorized by the author

These campaigns left behind a complex landscape of military architecture, which can be grouped into three main categories:

  • The Forts (Over 150 Identified): These permanent bases were garrisoned by auxiliary soldiers to control the local population and patrol the frontier. They varied in size from "slight" fortlets holding 50 men to large military complexes that could house a 500-strong cavalry regiment .
  • The Walls: The Romans built two famous linear barriers. Hadrian's Wall (started 122 AD) was the empire's northern boundary. Later, the Antonine Wall (started 142 AD) was pushed further north, running between the Firth of Forth and the Firth of Clyde, effectively cutting Scotland in two.
  • The Temporary Camps: These were marching camps built of turf and earthworks, thrown up by legionaries at the end of each day's march. Scotland is one of the best places in the former Roman Empire to study these camps because they are so well-preserved and numerous

Before the construction of the Antonine Wall, Flavian forces constructed what has become known as the Gask Ridge Frontier. This line of forts and watchtowers between Dunblane in Stirling and the River Tay in Perthshire was constructed in the 70s or 80s CE, predating the more famous German frontiers, making it a prototype for how Rome controlled its borders. The fortifications run along a 10-16 mile (16-37 km) ridge of high ground that naturally separates the Scottish Lowlands from the Highlands. The name itself comes from the Scottish Gaelic word gasg, meaning a "projecting tail or strip of land.”

The Main Forts (from south to north):

  • Camelon
  • Doune
  • Glenbank (fortlet)
  • Ardoch (a major fort and likely supply depot)
  • Kaims Castle (fortlet)
  • Strageath
  • Bertha (near modern Perth)
  • Cargill (fort and fortlet)
  • Inchtuthil (the massive legionary fortress—more on this below)
  • Cardean
  • Stracathro

The Watchtowers

A distinctive feature of the Gask Ridge is its series of timber watchtowers (signal stations). One of the best-preserved examples is Muir o' Fauld, where you can still see the circular mound, ditch, and outer bank that surrounded the original timber tower.

Forts like Drumquhassle, Bochastle, Dalginross, and Fendoch, known as the Glenblocker Forts, were positioned at the exits of Highland glens. Older scholarship saw these as a separate "staged withdrawal" line, but modern research views them as an integrated part of the same frontier system, controlling access to the major valleys that lead into the Highlands.

The largest installation in the system, Inchtuthil was a full-scale legionary fortress built to house the Legio XX Valeria Victrix. Its size and strategic position (with access into Braemar and beyond) made it the major deterrent and potential springboard for further invasions northward.

Based on the historical account of the Roman governor Gnaeus Julius Agricola (father-in-law of the historian Tacitus) and archaeological evidence, Initial construction began under governor Petilius Cerealis in 70 CE. The fortifications were subsequently used during Agricola’s campaigns in Scotland from 79-80 CE and during 84 CE when Agricola defeated Calgacus at the Battle of Mons Graupius. Abandonment and withdrawal south did not occur until 86-87/88 CE. Archaeological excavations have revealed that many of the forts and watchtowers were rebuilt, sometimes twice, without evidence of destruction by warfare. This suggests the Romans actually stayed in the area for up to 15 years.

However, during the Antonine Period (c. AD 142-165): Forts such as Ardoch, Strageath, Bertha, and Dalginross show evidence of reuse, contemporary with the Antonine Wall further south. The area was again under Roman occupation during Emperor Septimius Severus's campaigns (208-211). This time, the focus was on the legionary fortress at Carpow, downstream from modern Perth.

 Dr. David Woolliscroft, Director of the Roman Gask Project, has proposed instead of a frontier built solely for conquest and defense against hostile Caledonian tribes, Gask Ridge may have served a protective and trading function:

  1. Defense of harbors: The system guarded strategically important harbors at the Firths of Tay and Forth, critical for Roman supply lines.
  2. Protection of trading partners: Rather than fighting all locals, the Romans appear to have established trading relationships with farming communities, exchanging Roman goods (wine, olive oil) for local products (beer, mutton). The Gask Ridge may have been built to protect these allied farmers from cattle raiders sweeping down from the Highlands.
  3. Supervision, not blockade: The Glenblocker forts lacked the manpower to stop a major invasion, but they were well-positioned to monitor and control movement through the glens.

Archaeological evidence supports this: native Iron Age settlements show no signs of destruction, and farming appears to have flourished during the Roman presence. 

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Sunday, March 29, 2026

Harnessing the Soul: Butterflies, Grasshoppers & the Art of the Roman Intaglio

by Mary Harrsch © 2026 

I saw this whimsical Roman carnelian sea dated between the 1st century BCE and the 1st century CE and did a little more research on the symbolism it represented. I was aware of butterflies often representing human souls but I wasn't sure about a grasshopper driving the team.

Carved from reddish-brown carnelian — a stone whose crystalline structure doesn't stick to wax — intaglios like this one from the 1st century BCE - 1st century CE were pressed into softened wax to seal letters and documents. Image courtesy of (Bertolami Fine Art)

This extraordinary carnelian intaglio — small enough to fit in the palm of your hand — is one of the most charming survivals of Roman gem-carving, depicting a grasshopper driving a chariot pulled by butterflies. It repays close looking.

The stone itself is significant. Carnelian was among the most prized materials for Roman intaglios, associated with vitality, good fortune, and protection. Pliny the Elder singled it out for its practical virtue as a seal stone: wax simply does not adhere to it.
The grasshopper (*gryllus* / *locusta*) was a richly layered symbol in the Greco-Roman world. Athenians wore golden grasshopper pins as markers of autochthony — indigenous aristocratic identity — a resonance Roman owners would have recognized. The insect was also linked to Apollo and the Muses through its song, embodying poetic inspiration and the aristocratic ideal of *otium* (cultivated leisure).
The butterflies are doing something philosophically serious. The Greek word Ψυχή (*Psyche*) meant simultaneously "soul," "breath of life," and "butterfly" — these were not distinct concepts. Butterflies appear regularly in Roman funerary art at the moment of the soul's departure from the body. To harness them as draft animals, guided by the grasshopper-charioteer, is to picture *reason directing the soul* — a strikingly visual rendering of Plato's chariot allegory in the *Phaedrus*, in which the charioteer represents intellect governing the competing forces of the psyche. For a Roman owner educated in Greek philosophy, this reading would have been immediately available.
The piece belongs to the well-documented genre of *grylloi* — fantastical, often humorous intaglio scenes in which insects, animals, and hybrid creatures act out human roles. These were wildly popular in this period and operated on multiple registers at once: as displays of wit and *urbanitas*, as apotropaic objects (the grotesque was believed to deflect the evil eye), and as vehicles for genuine philosophical reflection.
What makes this gem so compelling is precisely that layered ambiguity. It is funny, beautiful, philosophically serious, and magically protective — all carved into a stone no larger than a thumbnail. Roman glyptic art at its finest.
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