Guldgubbe pendant with kissing couple.
This charming amulet in the shape of a so-called Guldgubbe shows a kissing couple and is very suitable as a small gift of love.
The model for the Guldgubbe pendant comes from the
Germanic Iron Age and was found on the Danish island of Bornholm. It dates back to the 6th century A.D.
Link to the original Guldgubbe...
The Guldgubbe pendant
measures 3 x 1.5 cm.
You can buy this Viking pendant in high-quality
bronze or real
silver-plated.
Alternatively, also available in 925
sterling silver (Please note the delivery time).
Alloy...
A black
leather strap of 1 m length is included.
Guldgubbers are one to two centimetre tall figures made of sheet gold. They appear
exclusively in Scandinavia and were very common in the Germanic Iron Age with 3000 finds in Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Most of the Guldgubbers were recovered on the Danish island of Bornholm.
Three main motifs can be distinguished: Man, woman,
kissing couples and animals. It is not clear what function the gold men had. They could have been votive offerings or means of payment in a ritual context. In rare cases, the gold plates are pierced for sewing on and some Guldgubbers even have eyelets.
The guldubbers were made of small, often extremely
thin pieces of gold sheet and often show a pair of lovers embracing, which is interpreted as a fertility motif or as a depiction of a pair of gods.
The first gold plate figurines were created in the
Germanic Iron Age from around 375 and continued to be used until the Viking Age, with the heyday of the Guldgubbers reaching its peak in the Vendel period between 550 and 800 AD.