ETHEU K000601

bâton de commandement, calendrier

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K000601
Sword-shaped stick with calendar marks
Norway
18th century
Wood
Gift of Hippolyte Jean Gosse to the Archaeology Museum before 1880
MEG Inv. ETHEU K000601
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Selon le registre des acquisitions cet objet énigmatique a été transmis à notre collection en 1901 sous la dénomination de « calendrier avec inscriptions runiques ». Le bâton, sculpté et poli en forme d'épée droite d'apparat, porte les marques typiques d’un calendrier mais elles sont mêlées avec celles d’un registre de rotation des tâches impliquant différents lignages. Sur le pommeau, un entrelacs décoratif dit « sceau de Salomon » suggère aussi son usage en tant qu’emblème d’autorité et de justice.

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Copie dactylographiée en 13 volumes de l'Inventaire original MEG manuscrit
Registres_inventaire_dactylographie/23.pdf

Registre K
Registre_K/rk 016.jpg

 

Leading, directing and governing

For nineteenth-century peasantry, the hierarchy of living things stretched from earth to heaven, with human beings placed between domination and subordination. Power symbols were a reminder that the balance between prerogatives and duties began at home and from there extended to the locality and society as a whole. Managing a house, leading a flock or directing a meeting required technical skills, ritual knowledge and personal qualities.

Men

Power and authority are social and cultural representations which are embodied in numerous institutions and influence relationships between individuals. In preindustrial Europe, the ideological construction of hierarchies made authority sacred. The mechanisms of political legitimisation went hand-in-hand with the administrative organisation, both for religious beliefs and the perception of history and the environment. The metaphor of the good shepherd is an excellent example: the leader of the flock becomes a leader of men; his simple crook becomes the bishop's crosier, the sceptre and sign of customary law.


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