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Chalcidian-Type Helmet

Greekca. 500 BC (Classical)

The Walters Art Museum

The Walters Art Museum
Baltimore, United States

The form of this helmet, known as Chalcidian, is distinguished by the curved cheekpieces, which are attached here by pins terminating in snake heads. For a Greek youth, the acquisition of a helmet was a long-awaited badge of manhood. Each helmet had to be custom-made and was typically lined with leather. A helmet was customarily hung on the wall of the owner's house during his lifetime and, especially in early times, would also be buried with him. The advance in Greek technology that made possible the widespread production of hammered bronze helmets also led to the mass production of shields. As a result, on the battlefield individual duels were superseded by the phalanx, a form of combat in which warriors advanced together as an almost impenetrable wall of weaponry.

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  • Title: Chalcidian-Type Helmet
  • Creator Lifespan: -0399/0300
  • Creator Nationality: Greek
  • Date Created: ca. 500 BC (Classical)
  • Physical Dimensions: w18.5 x h30.1 x d23.5 cm
  • Type: helmets
  • Rights: Museum purchase, 1966, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
  • External Link: The Walters Art Museum
  • Medium: bronze
  • Provenance: Peter Gwynn of Ronald A. Lee Works of Art, Surrey, England [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Walters Art Museum, 1966, by purchase.
  • Place of Origin: Greece
  • ExhibitionHistory: The Allure of Bronze. The Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore. 1995; Highlights from the Collection. The Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore. 1998-2001
  • Artist: Greek
The Walters Art Museum

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