No. 83488759

No longer available
Terracotta Terracotta savings box (piggy bank) - 8 cm
Bidding closed
5 weeks ago

Terracotta Terracotta savings box (piggy bank) - 8 cm

Unusual biconical children's money box with flat base, the belly top with rectangular groove is adorned with a wheat stalk at the angles, in between them dented zig-zag decoration 8 cm high Note Most of these money-boxes have been found in the western half of the Roman World, in Italy, France, Germany, England, and the Netherlands. Four main Roman types are known. Some bear the inscription 'annum novum fastum, felicem' (a happy an prosperous New Year) which indicates that they were given as New Year's presents. The practice of children having received such a savings-banks as New Year's presents were going about the streets and soliciting contributions survived until modern times. Provenance Private collection, Switzerland, acquired in the late 1970s Exhibition Musée d'art et d'histoire, Geneva, 2002 until 2021 Literature Hans Graeven, die thönerne Sparbüchse im Altertum, in: Jahrbuch Des Kaiserlich Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, 16, 1901, 160-189 David M. Robinson, Some Roman terra-cotta saving-banks, in: AJA 1924, vol. 28, no. 3, 239-250 Condition Mold from two parts, hairline crack from one angle of the groove to the shoulder, otherwise in very good state of preservation

No. 83488759

No longer available
Terracotta Terracotta savings box (piggy bank) - 8 cm

Terracotta Terracotta savings box (piggy bank) - 8 cm

Unusual biconical children's money box with flat base, the belly top with rectangular groove is adorned with a wheat stalk at the angles, in between them dented zig-zag decoration
8 cm high

Note
Most of these money-boxes have been found in the western half of the Roman World, in Italy, France, Germany, England, and the Netherlands. Four main Roman types are known. Some bear the inscription 'annum novum fastum, felicem' (a happy an prosperous New Year) which indicates that they were given as New Year's presents. The practice of children having received such a savings-banks as New Year's presents were going about the streets and soliciting contributions survived until modern times.

Provenance
Private collection, Switzerland, acquired in the late 1970s

Exhibition
Musée d'art et d'histoire, Geneva, 2002 until 2021

Literature
Hans Graeven, die thönerne Sparbüchse im Altertum, in: Jahrbuch Des Kaiserlich Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, 16, 1901, 160-189
David M. Robinson, Some Roman terra-cotta saving-banks, in: AJA 1924, vol. 28, no. 3, 239-250

Condition
Mold from two parts, hairline crack from one angle of the groove to the shoulder, otherwise in very good state of preservation

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