Yazar
Unknown
Basım Tarihi
1850
Basım Yeri
Egypt (made) -
Konu
Jewellery Africa Metalwork
Tür
Diğer
Dil
Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital
Evet
Yazma
Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar
Diameter: 7cm, Height: 0.5cm
Kütüphane
Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası
295-1904
Kayıt Numarası
295-1904
Lokasyon
Middle East Section
Tarih
1850
Notlar
Bracelets were part of traditional costume in most Islamic cultures, and were always originally worn in matching pairs. Silver ones like this, either solid or hollow, are typical of the traditional jewellery worn by the nomadic peoples of the Sahara. The polyhedral ends, made from a cube with the corners cut off, are often found on earrings as well as bracelets, and are one of the most distinctive aspects of the jewellery worn on the southern edges of the Sahara, from the Red Sea to the Atlantic. This example was described as âModern Egyptianâ when it was acquired by the Museum in 1904. The details of the decoration show that it comes from Nubia, the region overlapping the south of Egypt and northern Sudan.
Malzemeler ve teknikler
Cast silver with applied filigree Silver Incising Filigree
Fiziksel açıklama
Heavy silver penannular bracelet of circular section with a cube, with truncated corners, as a terminal at each end. The three outside facets of each terminal are decorated with a lozenge of incised lines with a lobed ring in the centre, and the body of the bracelet has sections of chased and incised decoration separated by incised lines. There are three filigree lozenges applied to the outer edge, each containing a quatrefoil on which rests a large flattened knob, with a smaller flattened disc on each side in the two extreme corners of the lozenge. There is a small collar of three twisted wires between the terminal and the rest of the bracelet.