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Lyre bridge and tuning peg

600/699

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

Music was very much part of Anglo-Saxon life, although finds of musical instruments are rare. High status graves occasionally contain metal fittings and fragments of wood from lyre-like stringed instruments. The remains of two Anglo-Saxon musical instruments have been found - one in the ship burial at Sutton Hoo, the other in the princely grave at Taplow. Both were made of maple and are straight-sided with a long sounding box.These two copper-alloy finds from Scole are a tuning key and a bridge. The tuning key was used to turn the pegs on which the strings of the instrument were wound. It was designed with a flattened oval head for ease of handling. It has a longish shank with a hollow end. Interestingly, unlike modern instruments, this is round, suggesting that the pegs too must have been round, perhaps tapering for good grip.The bridge lifted the strings away from the sounding board so that they resonated to produce a clear sound. It is a remarkable casting of two animals, possibly stallions, standing tail to tail, with their stylized heads turned elegantly backwards so that their extended muzzles touch. Placed on their rumps, linking their bodies, is a straight bar with grooves for six strings.

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  • Title: Lyre bridge and tuning peg
  • Date Created: 600/699
  • Physical Dimensions: Length: 3.40cm; Height: 2.60cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: cast
  • Subject: animal
  • Registration number: 1982,0601.1
  • Place: Excavated/Findspot Oakley
  • Period/culture: Early Anglo-Saxon
  • Material: copper alloy
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Purchased from Morley, R
British Museum

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