Yazar
Unknown
Basım Tarihi
1850
Basım Yeri
Armenia (made) -
Konu
Jewellery Metalwork
Tür
Diğer
Dil
Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital
Evet
Yazma
Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar
Overall length: 23cm
Kütüphane
Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası
1414-1873
Kayıt Numarası
1414-1873
Lokasyon
Middle East Section
Tarih
1850
Notlar
Pieces of jewellery like this, with S-shaped elements strung closely together to make a choker, are part of the traditional costume in many places, from Algeria to Armenia. This particular one is most likely to be Armenian, as it was described when it was acquired. In North Africa these necklaces usually have long elaborate crescentic pendants, and in the Balkans and the eastern Mediterranean they tend to have pendants made from coins, or sheet silver shapes. The hollow stamped pendants on this piece, shaped like ears of corn, but often fish-shaped, are typical of the necklaces worn in eastern Anatolia and the Caucasus. Necklaces in that region often have a prominent central plaque, sometimes set with a coloured paste, but this is a simpler form. These were worn across the forehead, as well as round the neck. It was bought for ten shillings at the International Exhibition, London, 1872.
İlişki
International Exhibition, 1872
Malzemeler ve teknikler
Stamped hollow silver elements on a band of red cloth Silver Ribbon Moulding
Fiziksel açıklama
38 S-shaped hollow silver slides and two shell-shaped terminals strung on a band of plaited red cloth. There is a loop at the bottom of each slide, from which hangs a hollow pendant shaped like an ear of corn, with a ring separating it from the slide. Six of the pendants have a further loop at their bottom.