South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Martingale depicting British coins meant to adorn horse

- By Helaine Fendelman and Joe Rosson

Q: Enclosed are photos of a belt with ornaments on it. There are six circles on it, and I think each one must have a special meaning. Can you tell me what they mean? Why was this made? What organizati­on does it represent? Sincerely,

— C. H., Whitefield, New Hampshire

A: One of the photos shows the owner bending this around in a circle like a belt, but the circumfere­nce is so small it would not fit even a person with a wasplike waist. This is not a belt, and it was never meant for humans to wear.

This was designed to adorn a working draft horse as it pulled a wagon or some other conveyance, often in a parade or on May Day. The six circles are known to collectors as “horse brasses.” They were used on a variety of horse tack including terrets, swingers, faceplates, rosettes, nameplates and martingale­s.

The piece is part of a martingale, but it probably never adorned a horse. Unfortunat­ely, we are not horse people, so we can only relate what our research tells us. But a martingale is a strap (i.e. a harness strap) that is sometimes called a breaststra­p.

The strap is the perfect place to display the decorative brasses, which might consist of geometric designs (moons, stars, hearts, etc.), political and royal portraits, castles, crowns, lions, horses, wheat, symbols for brewing companies, Masonic symbols, colorful centers or bells that actually ring.

This example features representa­tions of British

What the owner called a belt really is a martingale, consisting of horse brasses. coins. One is a halfpenny with a date that looks like

1943, a sixpence dated

1953, a penny with the image of Britannia dated

1903 and a farthing with a wren dated 1968. This last one is a fantasy coin since the last British farthing was minted in 1956. Interestin­gly, the wren is symbolic because it is Britain’s smallest bird on Britain’s smallest coin.

It is possible that the

1953 sixpence piece was made to commemorat­e Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation, but this is only conjecture. Collecting horse brasses became a hobby sometime around

1880, but the horse brass itself traces its history back to the European Iron Age. In Roman times, they were called phalerae.

Examples made from cast brass are generally earlier than those made from stamped brass. For a time, modern examples were sold at tourist attraction­s and gift shops because they were very British and very horsey. C.H.’s martingale with six horse brasses was made sometime after 1968, and we would give it a circa (plus or minus 10 years) date of 1970.

This makes it about 50 years old, but horse brasses are abundant and have a modest monetary value. Currently the retail value appears to be between $50 and $85 and might be of interest to a horse brass collector or a numismatis­t.

Helaine Fendelman and Joe Rosson have written a number of books on antiques. Do you have an item you’d like to know more about? Contact them at Joe Rosson, 2504 Seymour Ave., Knoxville, TN 37917, or email them at treasures@knology.net. If you’d like your question to be considered for their column, include a highresolu­tion photo of the subject, which must be in focus, with your inquiry.

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