Roman Gold Earrings with Granules

£ 445.00

A fine pair of Roman gold earrings featuring a hoop which tapers to a point and wraps around a small loop on the other end. A gold, concave boss sits at the front of the earring. Underneath is a cluster of five small granules creating an upside-down pyramid shape.

Measurements are roughly between the pair.

Date: Circa 2nd-3rd century AD
Provenance: Ex Japanese private collection, deceased, 1970-2010.
Condition: Very fine condition, slight denting to the discs and hoops consistent with age. Some encrustation to the surface.

In stock

SKU: LD-925 Category: Tag:

Ancient Roman jewellery was an essential public display of wealth. Roman jewellery at first followed the trends set by the Etruscans. As the Roman empire grew, jewellery designs and materials became even more elaborate, incorporating different cultural styles from Greece, Egypt, North Africa and the East. Earrings such as this fine example, would have been worn by straightening the pointed, gold wire through the pierced ear and then twisting it so that the earring would not open again.

Granulation (from the Latin ‘granum’ meaning ‘grain’) was the technique used by Roman jewellers to create the miniature gold spheres which adorn the hoops. It involved making tiny gold granules and then attaching them individually to the base piece. The oldest known examples made with this process date back to 2500BC and were found in the tombs of Ur, in Mesopotamia. From there, the technique spread through Near East and reached its peak with the Etruscans in the 7th-6th centuries BC.

To find out more about different metal decorative techniques please see our relevant blog post: Decorative Metalwork Techniques

Weight 1.16 g
Dimensions L 1.7 x W 1.1 cm
Culture

Metal

Region

Reference: For a similar item,The Metropolitan Museum, item 74.51.3719

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