Head ornament

Title Head ornament
Author Unknown
Publication Date: 1850
Publication Place Armenia (made) -
Subject Jewellery Metalwork
Type Other
Language Undetermined
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Physical Dimensions Width: 25cm
Library: Victoria and Albert Museum
Library Asset ID 1417-1873
Record ID 1417-1873
Library Location Middle East Section
Date 1850
Notes The Armenians were famous for their silver-work in the 19th century. They were widely dispersed outside their homeland in the south Caucasus, and produced jewellery, particularly filigree, in traditional styles for many other nationalities and faiths (they were proudly Orthodox Christian themselves). This necklace was described as Armenian when it was acquired for the Museum for £1 8s at the International Exhibition, London, 1872, but it could have been worn almost anywhere in the Ottoman Empire. The pattern, of intermeshing discs and diabolos, has been used in Islamic jewellery since the Middle Ages.
İlişki International Exhibition
Malzemeler ve teknikler Silver-gilt plaques with applied filigree decoration on a band of black cloth with granulated pendants Silver Silver-Gilt Cloth Granulation Filigree
Fiziksel açıklama Head band consisting of a rectangular piece of black cloth decorated with silver chain and plaques of gilded sheet silver, with a red cord for fastening attached at each end. Across the front of the band are eight circular silver-gilt discs, alternating with seven rectangles with concave sides, all decorated with rings of twisted wire and granules. These plaques are surrounded with a strip of silver panzer chain. There are 21 small pendants of silver granule lozenges hanging from the bottom edge of the band. A pendant is attached at each end of the band which would have hung down at the side of the face. Each pendant consists of a top piece of three tubes soldered together side by side, with a loop-in-loop chain, ending in a circular disc with twisted wire decoration, attached at each side. Below this is a rosette of loops, with two more chain pendants, one at each side, and a central crescent, from which are suspended two more pendants of silver tubes and discs with twisted wire decoration.
View in source Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - Ottoman library catalog search
Victoria and Albert Museum - Ottoman library catalog search Victoria and Albert Museum

Head ornament

Author Unknown
Publication Date 1850
Publication Place Armenia (made) -
Subject Jewellery Metalwork
Type Other
Language Undetermined
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Physical Dimensions Width: 25cm
Library Victoria and Albert Museum
Library Asset ID 1417-1873
Record ID 1417-1873
Library Location Middle East Section
Date 1850
Notes The Armenians were famous for their silver-work in the 19th century. They were widely dispersed outside their homeland in the south Caucasus, and produced jewellery, particularly filigree, in traditional styles for many other nationalities and faiths (they were proudly Orthodox Christian themselves). This necklace was described as Armenian when it was acquired for the Museum for £1 8s at the International Exhibition, London, 1872, but it could have been worn almost anywhere in the Ottoman Empire. The pattern, of intermeshing discs and diabolos, has been used in Islamic jewellery since the Middle Ages.
İlişki International Exhibition
Malzemeler ve teknikler Silver-gilt plaques with applied filigree decoration on a band of black cloth with granulated pendants Silver Silver-Gilt Cloth Granulation Filigree
Fiziksel açıklama Head band consisting of a rectangular piece of black cloth decorated with silver chain and plaques of gilded sheet silver, with a red cord for fastening attached at each end. Across the front of the band are eight circular silver-gilt discs, alternating with seven rectangles with concave sides, all decorated with rings of twisted wire and granules. These plaques are surrounded with a strip of silver panzer chain. There are 21 small pendants of silver granule lozenges hanging from the bottom edge of the band. A pendant is attached at each end of the band which would have hung down at the side of the face. Each pendant consists of a top piece of three tubes soldered together side by side, with a loop-in-loop chain, ending in a circular disc with twisted wire decoration, attached at each side. Below this is a rosette of loops, with two more chain pendants, one at each side, and a central crescent, from which are suspended two more pendants of silver tubes and discs with twisted wire decoration.
Victoria and Albert Museum - Ottoman library catalog search
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