George Speake, FSA is an English art historian and archaeologist.[2][3] He is an Honorary Research Fellow at the Institute of Archaeology at Oxford,[2][3] and "a leading authority on Anglo-Saxon animal art."[2] Currently Speake is the Anglo-Saxon Art and Iconography Specialist for the Staffordshire Hoard conservation team,[4] and is working on the reconstruction of the Staffordshire helmet.[5][6]
Speake specialises in Anglo-Saxon art and iconography.[10] As of 2016 he is working on the reconstruction of the more than 1,000 pieces of the Staffordshire helmet,[4][5] following work on the Prittlewell burial, and teaching fine art and art history.[2] In 2014 he coauthored a book on the Staffordshire Hoard, Beasts, Birds and Gods: Interpreting the Staffordshire Hoard, identifying among other characteristics an "eyeless, open-jawed serpent" depicted on the helmet's cheek guard.[11] A paper on the helmet is due to be published in 2018.[6] He is also an Honorary Research Fellow at the Institute of Archaeology at Oxford.[2]
Speake's 1980 work Anglo-Saxon Animal Art and its Germanic Background,[12] written as the basis for his Ph.D.,[7] is considered "a major break-through in Anglo-Saxon style studies".[13] It provided a comprehensive look at "style II" art,[14] the form of zoomorphic decoration used in Northern Europe from the middle of the sixth century AD to the end of the seventh.[8] Hitherto the least understood style of Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian animal art,[15][8] style II is thought to have been reserved for the upper classes and is found prominently on the objects found in the Sutton Hooship-burial and in the Vendel boat graves.[16][17] Speake's work was credited with discussing every known example of the style through 1974—the date of his Ph.D.—and with proving that it was introduced to England from Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.[18]
Hawkes, Sonia Chadwick; Speake, George & Northover, Peter (December 1979). "A Seventh-Century Bronze Metalworker's Die from Rochester, Kent". Frühmittelalterliche Studien. 13: 382–392. doi:10.1515/9783110242126.382.
Speake, George (1982). "A Romano-British sculptured relief from Stonesfield, Oxon". The Antiquaries Journal. LXII (2). Society of Antiquaries of London: 377–379. doi:10.1017/S0003581500065975.
Speake, George (1989). "A Saxon Bed-Burial on Swallowcliffe Down". English Heritage Archaeological Reports. 10. London: Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for England. ISBN1-85074-211-1.
Dickinson, Tania M. & Speake, George (1992). "The Seventh-Century Cremation Burial in Asthall Barrow, Oxfordshire: A Reassessment". In Carver, Martin (ed.). The Age of Sutton Hoo: The seventh century in north-western Europe. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. pp. 95–130. ISBN0-85115-330-5.
Speake, George (2007). "Interlace: Thoughts and Observations". In Henig, Martin & Smith, Tyler Jo (eds.). Collectanea Antiqua: Essays in Memory of Sonia Chadwick Hawkes. British Archaeological Reports. Vol. 1673. pp. 127–131. ISBN978-1407301082.
Speake, George (2012). "An Early Romano-British Villa at Combe East End". Oxoniensia. LXXVII. Oxfordshire Architectural and Historical Society: 1–90. ISSN0308-5562.
Fern, Chris; Speake, George (2014). Beasts, Birds and Gods: Interpreting the Staffordshire Hoard. Warwickshire: West Midlands History. ISBN978-1-905036-20-2.
Speake, George. Aspects of the Staffordshire Hoard Helmet (forthcoming).[6]
References
^Henig, Martin; Smith, Tyler Jo (2007), "Introduction", Collectanea Antiqua: Essays in Memory of Sonia Chadwick Hawkes, BAR International Series, no. 1673, BAR Publishing, p. 2
Hawkes, Sonia Chadwick (September 1983). "Review: Anglo-Saxon Animal Art and its Germanic Background". The Antiquaries Journal. LXIII (3). Society of Antiquaries of London: 446–448. doi:10.1017/S0003581500067019.
Higgitt, John (1982). "Review: Anglo-Saxon Animal Art and its Germanic Background". Journal of the British Archaeological Association. 135 (1): 62–64. doi:10.1179/jba.1982.135.1.62.
Hills, Catherine (November 1981). "Review: Anglo-Saxon Animal Art and its Germanic Background". Antiquity. LV (215): 225–226. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00044288.