Roman Miniature Glass Juglet Pendant

£ 135.00

A delicate Ancient Roman black glass pendant in the form of an intricate juglet. The pendant features a piriform shape, tapering at the neck before an everted rim, and at the base towards a circular foot. An applied trail of white glass encircles the centre of the body in a ‘zig-zag’ pattern and wraps below the rim. A handle of applied black glass with brown tones reaches from the rim to the base of the body. Some wear and flaking to the surface, particularly at the rim near the handle and to one side of the trail decoration. Minor earthy encrustations throughout.

Date: Circa 4th Century AD
Provenance: Important collection SM Mayfair London, 1970-99.
Condition: Very good. Minor damage to the trail decoration and earthy encrustations to the surface.

In stock

As in many ancient societies, jewellery was an important social marker used to demonstrate wealth. Following the spread of the Roman Empire, Roman jewellery became increasingly elaborate in the designs and materials used. By the 1st century AD, the technique of glass-blowing had revolutionised the art of glass-making, allowing the quantity of production to be increased, whilst the price reduced. It also allowed for new flexibility and artistic freedom, with glass now becoming a decorative luxury to rival pottery. It was this novel mass production of the material in imperial Rome that prompted the development of glass jewellery, though its valuable properties today derive in large part from the ageing process. Miniature items such as these were often used as charms for necklaces, bracelets and earrings.

To find out more about Roman glass please see our relevant blog post: Ancient Roman Glass and Collecting Roman Glass

Weight 2.7 g
Dimensions L 1.6 x W 1 x H 2.1 cm
Culture

Glass

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Region

Reference: For a similar item,The Metropolitan Museum of Art, item 95.15.292

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