Bronze Lion-Head Coffin Handles with Rings Mounted Above the Mane Found near Ibreika

First-known example of overhead ring placement suggests handles were designed as lifting grips for Roman-period wooden coffins, not decorative door knockers.

 Reconstruction of the lion-head discs as handles to carry a wooden coffin. (photo credit: Illustration: Y. Shmidov. Atiqot 117)
Reconstruction of the lion-head discs as handles to carry a wooden coffin.
(photo credit: Illustration: Y. Shmidov. Atiqot 117)

A salvage excavation conducted for Israel Railways just south of Khirbat Ibreika on the Sharon plain revealed eight stone-lined cist graves dating to the first or second century CE. Only Tomb 6, sealed beneath a compact cap of ḥamra soil, preserved grave goods, yet those few objects have re-opened an old debate about how Romans in Syria-Palaestina equipped their dead. Excavators Elie Haddad and Elisheva Zwiebel recovered four bronze discs cast in the form of lion masks accompanied by heavy suspension rings. Unlike every published parallel, each ring is welded to the crown of the lion’s head, just above the mane, rather than threaded through the open jaws. The authors describe this attachment as “unique in the corpus,” arguing that the new configuration finally clarifies the practical function of such bronzes in funerary contexts.

The find-spot leaves little doubt that the masks belonged to a now-perished wooden coffin. Fragments of iron nails still bearing wood traces were scattered among the collapsed stone lining, and twelve intact glass vessels lay at the coffin’s mid-section. All four lion heads, identical in diameter at roughly 15.5 cm and weighing about half a kilogram each, were discovered stacked neatly at the narrow southern end of the pit. That arrangement implies they had been removed from the coffin immediately before burial and deposited as a set, perhaps so that the costly bronze could accompany the deceased symbolically while remaining recoverable if the tomb were ever reopened by relatives.

The unusual ring location represents more than a metallurgical curiosity. By fixing the ring above the mane, the caster granted it a much wider arc of movement than the standard mouth-ring type known from Pompeii, Herculaneum, the ships of Caligula at Lake Nemi, and closer Levantine parallels at Ramat Efrayim and Tel Dor. The overhead joint allows a pole to pass cleanly through two opposing rings without snagging on the lion’s lower jaw, making it ideal for bearing weight as pall-bearers lift or lower a coffin. Haddad and Zwiebel therefore conclude that at least some lion-mask bronzes were engineered as functional handles rather than as purely decorative “door knockers,” a role often assigned to them in museum catalogues.

X-ray fluorescence shows the masks are composed of more than fifty percent copper alloyed with tin and lead, matching high-quality Roman castings elsewhere in the province. Fine chisel work around the mane differs subtly from disc to disc, indicating that all four handles were finished individually in the same workshop. The stylistic closeness suggests a single commission rather than the reuse of random fittings, reinforcing the interpretation that the deceased enjoyed exceptional status—possibly a wealthy landowner or veteran who could afford imported craftsmanship.

The novelty of the Ibreika pieces becomes clearer in regional context. Prior Levantine examples always carry the ring in the mouth and have consequently been interpreted either as apotropaic guardians of the tomb or as hardware salvaged from public buildings. Because lion symbolism served Jews, Samaritans, pagans and followers of Mithras alike, scholars have struggled to tie the fittings to any single ethnic group. The new overhead-ring variant, however, occurs in only one grave within the cemetery and does not recur elsewhere in the excavated area, suggesting that its use reflects an individual choice rather than a communal rite. The authors propose that the interred person’s relatives selected the handles for their practical utility during the funeral procession and for the protective connotations of the lion image, combining pragmatism with display. 

The discovery carries implications beyond Ibreika. If rings placed above the mane betray a lifting function, conservators and curators may need to re-examine wear patterns on mouth-ring masks. Microscopic striations or deformation aligned with pole-pressure could reveal that many pieces held in museum storerooms as architectural ornaments once served as coffin hardware. Such a reassessment would shift the geographic distribution of Roman funerary technology, extending it from well-known Syrian and Anatolian centres to the southern coastal plain of Israel and perhaps farther into the Negev 

Haddad and Zwiebel advocate for targeted residue analysis on the interior surfaces of other lion-mask rings to detect traces of wood resins or textile fibres that might confirm attachment to coffins. They further suggest that isotopic study of the metal could identify production zones, thereby testing whether workshops along the Sharon plain fabricated these fittings locally or imported them from northern foundries. Whatever their origin, the four masks from Tomb 6 illuminate a previously unrecognised design choice that emphasised utility over iconographic convention, and in doing so they restore a small but telling detail to our picture of Roman funerary practice in the Levant.

The article was written with the assistance of a news analysis system.