
by Ancient Celtic (Unknown), -1900
Celtic The Mold Gold Cape is a solid gold garment from Bronze Age Britain, made around 1900-1600 BCE. Shaped to fit over shoulders and upper arms, it was beaten from a single gold ingot and decorated with rows of bosses and ribs resembling multiple strings of beads or amber.
The cape was discovered in 1833 at Mold in Wales, inside a burial mound. It was broken into fragments and distributed among finders. The British Museum spent years reassembling over 300 pieces. The complete cape weighs 560 grams of pure gold. It would have severely restricted arm movement, suggesting ceremonial rather than practical use. The wearer was probably a religious or political leader of outstanding status.

Ancient Celtic (Unknown), 625
British Museum, London

Leonardo da Vinci
British Museum, London

John Singer Sargent
British Museum, London

Ancient Greek (Unknown), -350
British Museum, London
Luxury wall art with the same mood and energy. Gallery-quality canvas, no museum crowds.
Browse Collection