These six gold bracelets were found in 1884 during quarrying for building materials at Morvah, on the north-western coast of the Penwith peninsula in Cornwall. In design, the bracelets bring together two traditions of Bronze Age ornament. The three with 'cupped', or hollowed terminals are distinctly Irish in style; over thirty examples of this type are known from Ireland, while only ten come from Britain. These examples, like many of this type, have a hollow band with a join along the inner curve. They are also decorated with finely executed incised lines. In two cases it is confined to the terminals, but the third has neat geometric panels at intervals around the band. By contrast the three simpler bracelets are British in style. The two with flat ribbon-like bands have different terminals, coiled on one, buffer-like on the other. Both these and the lozenge-sectioned bracelet are types predominant in southern Britain, with only rare examples from Ireland. Such East-West associations are not confined to the Irish Sea coasts, but the western tip of Cornwall nevertheless is a fitting place for these styles of different origins to come together.
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