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Si us plau utilitzeu sempre aquest identificador per citar o enllaçar aquest document: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/227601
Broches de cinturón de la serie bizantina hallados en la necrópolis de la villa de Los Villaricos (Mula, Murcia) (siglo VII d. C.)
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En este trabajo se estudian dos broches de cinturón del siglo VII d. C. procedentes del cementerio tardoantiguo que se sitúa sobre la pars urbana de la villa romana de los Villaricos (Mula, Murcia). A partir de la segunda mitad del siglo V, dicha necrópolis se emplazó junto al antiguo triclinium, convertido en edificio de culto. Se trata de dos piezas de indumentaria personal, variantes de los tipos Hippo Regius y Siracusa de la serie bizantina habitual en todo el Mediterráneo. El estudio formal, técnico, decorativo y arqueometalúrgico plantea su producción en un taller hispánico. Su hallazgo durante las últimas campañas de excavación y, con ello, el hecho de que cuenten con un contexto espacial y cronológico preciso respaldado por dataciones radiocarbónicas, ofrecen una nueva base para el análisis, dado que gran parte de los broches conocidos hasta ahora en la península ibérica son hallazgos antiguos o pertenecen a colecciones de origen diverso.
The aim of this paper is to present two 7th-century AD belt buckles from the late antique cemetery located on the pars urbana of the Roman villa of Los Villaricos (Mula, Murcia). From the second half of the 5th century onwards, this necròpolis was established near the former triclinium, that became a sacred building during this period. The buckles represent two items of personal attire, which are variations of the Hippo Regius and Syracuse types of the Byzantine series common throughout the Mediterranean. The formal, technical, decorative, and archaeometallurgical analysis suggests that they were produced in a Hispanic workshop. Their discovery during the most recent excavation campaigns, along with their precise spatial and chronological context, further supported by radiocarbon dating, provides a new basis for analysis. This is significant because most belt buckles previously known in the Iberian Peninsula are ancient finds or belong to collections of diverse and uncertain origin.
The aim of this paper is to present two 7th-century AD belt buckles from the late antique cemetery located on the pars urbana of the Roman villa of Los Villaricos (Mula, Murcia). From the second half of the 5th century onwards, this necròpolis was established near the former triclinium, that became a sacred building during this period. The buckles represent two items of personal attire, which are variations of the Hippo Regius and Syracuse types of the Byzantine series common throughout the Mediterranean. The formal, technical, decorative, and archaeometallurgical analysis suggests that they were produced in a Hispanic workshop. Their discovery during the most recent excavation campaigns, along with their precise spatial and chronological context, further supported by radiocarbon dating, provides a new basis for analysis. This is significant because most belt buckles previously known in the Iberian Peninsula are ancient finds or belong to collections of diverse and uncertain origin.
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GONZÁLEZ FERNÁNDEZ, Rafael, et al. Broches de cinturón de la serie bizantina hallados en la necrópolis de la villa de Los Villaricos (Mula, Murcia) (siglo VII d. C.). Lucentum. 2025. Vol. 44, num. 259-273. ISSN 0213-2338. [consulted: 30 of May of 2026]. Available at: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/227601