Roman Treasures Found in Provence

Roman ring

(Photo: A Roman ring seen at the French brocante last weekend.)

The French brocante offers more than disregarded dusty old things from someone's attic, and it offers more than hopeful boxes of disheveled, could-be treasures. The French brocante is not just a place to find unbeatable prices or the chance to find a Picasso. It is a living museum with touch-able history, where you can be the digger in an archaeological site, and best of all, it can be taken home.

 

 

Roman artifacts

 

Last weekend at the brocante, my cousin Robin, French Husband and I met a dealer who specialized in Roman artifacts. The dealer has been collecting for years, and he started selling not so long ago. His stand was full of rare, interesting pieces. He freely shared his knowledge and stories. I felt like a sponge, soaking up every word. I think I must have asked two thousand questions, mostly: "What is this?"

 

Roman coin

(Photo: A Roman coin found at the brocante last year.)

 

I must admit I usually spend most of my time looking for things that speak in muted color romance, old things that have more than their fair share of age, and brocante items that have little monetary value but rather tell a story, depict a feeling. I guess you could say I am a sucker for worn beauty and uneven certainty strikes a balance within me.

 

Poppy fields provence

Old coins, especially Roman artifacts, the dealer at the brocante told me, are often found in fields, where Roman roads traversed he mentioned that when a field has recently been toiled bits and pieces from the past are brought to the surface.

Driving home, I looked at the poppy fields with new insight. Battles fought, lives lost, bits and pieces of  unknown stories, and memories, buried within… and red poppies bloom.

 

 

Roman artifacts provence

Thank you for your guesses yesterday. Most of you were on the right track with guesses such as pins, tie backs, hooks, buckle…

Since I said the winner would be the first one who knew the name and the meaning of the object the winner is: Violet Cadbury,

Violet Cadburry said…

"A Fibulae. Ancient Roman safety pin."

Since Paulita hit the nail on the head first with her answer, I feel she too should have a prize.

Paulita said…

… it holds a toga in place for ancient Romans. Wow, they left a lot of toga holders in Provence.

The creative answer goes to Georgie who wrote:

"It is part of pony's bridle, to hold the reins and you are sending me a pony for the correct guess!!"

Clever Georgie, I'll send a pony!

_______________________________________

Winnners please send me your addresses  by emailing me, and I will send off a bit of brocante to you.



Comments

18 responses to “Roman Treasures Found in Provence”

  1. Congratulations to the winners, well done! 🙂
    I came late to the party yesterday and smiled when I saw Violet’s answer.
    The fields around the place I grew up regularly give up treasures of the Roman past, mostly shards of pottery. A few years ago, archeologist excavated the foundations of a large Roman villa. Lacking funds to establish a museum and for the upkeep, it was decided to cover everything with soil again, to protect it for future generations. My brothers still walk the fields, during autumn and winter mostly, to hunt for treasures.

  2. Congratulations winners!
    That’s why brocante hunting is so interesting and addictive, you never know what you are going to find.

  3. So excited that I won (even if I didn’t know the right name)!
    Your post today made me start thinking about what we will leave behind for others to find. Pieces of things in the soil that they will find after it is tilled.
    Here in Ohio, we sometimes find arrowheads from the Native Americans who lived her before.

  4. Brenda L. in TN.

    Congratulations to Violet and Paulita!!

  5. Toga pin??? Wow, imagine that. I always thought they just draped them but of course not. What a brilliant find. Hmm, wonder how they constructed diapers?

  6. Congratulations, Paulita and Georgie! Who knew going to a broacante could be so educational. I hope you and your cousins are cramming as much into your remaining days as you can. Have fun ladies!

  7. Jean(ne) P in MN

    Love your going back to the brocante! I live in an old farmhouse and we have lots of artifacts–the garden was made on top of the junk pile, so we’re always finding old metal, spark plugs & junk. 100 yrs from now, will they know what a spark plug is?

  8. Melrose

    Congrats to the winners! How fun!
    My husband operates a backhoe and often he brings me home bottles, plates, etc…they just float to the top of the dirt pile when he moves the dirt. It really is amazing what you can find, isn’t it?

  9. Yay for the winners! I just love your guessing games. 🙂

  10. Patty G

    Wonderful treasures and stories!

  11. I love the relics! That Crusader’s cross hit me especially. I’d wear it when I went out on my own “crusades” for the arts (and when I protest and complain about yet ANOTHER sports stadium).

  12. Annie vanderven

    Hi Corey
    These fields beg for metal detector.

  13. Congratulations Violet! I am sorry I missed your name before, who knew it was called a fibulae

  14. I held my breath while reading of your finds. Roman treasures for sale in a brocante? I have heart palpatations just viewing them behind glass. After many years of brocanting, do you have a personal, favorite find that is too special to part with?

  15. Chef and writer Anthony Bourdain said on his show “No Reservations” that vegetables in France tasted so good because the soil contained so many dead Romans. Interesting thought; continously inhabited European landscapes have seen alot of history. Those poppies may be nourished by the same…

  16. Congrats to Violet, the first and Georgia too! That was fun!

  17. jend’isère

    Several British Great War poems pay tribute to poppy fields, which are recited for Remembrance Day:
    http://www.ppu.org.uk/learn/poetry/poetry_ww1_1.html
    Congratulations to your winners.

  18. My husband operates a backhoe and often he brings me home bottles, plates, etc…they just float to the top of the dirt pile when he moves the dirt. It really is amazing what you can find, isn’t it?

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