Late Roman Glass Pendant with Lion

$221.15

A late Roman bright blue glass pendant, featuring a circular shape and thick suspension loop at its top. The front of the pendant depicts a lion moulded in relief, viewed in profile and facing left. The feline is portrayed in a striding position, with its tail raised upwards and legs apart – conveying a sense of movement. Earthly encrustations remain on the surface.

Date: Circa mid 4th - mid 5th century AD
Provenance: Ex S.M. collection, London, Mayfair. Acquired 1970s-1990s.
Condition: Fine condition.

SOLD

SKU: AF-45 Category: Tags: ,

The mass production of glass in Ancient Rome explains the common use of this material in jewellery-making. The ageing process of glass endows Roman glass jewellery with unique qualities. For instance, contaminants manufactured into the glass, combined with the surrounding environment over thousands of years, result in beautiful iridescence and speckling, where the glass might formerly have been transparent.

Such glass pendants would have been worn by Romans as good fortune charms to bring good luck and ward off the evil. Iconographies were extremely differentiated, including apotropaic symbols, images of deities and animals. In the Roman world, lions maintained a strong association with Hercules, as he famously encountered the Nemean Lion as one of his Twelve Labours. The lion was far from a mythological beast, however, and would have been a familiar sight across the Roman Empire. The ‘venationes’ (“hunts”) and other ‘spectacula’ (“shows”) of ancient Rome saw exotic species (including panthers, elephants, and bears) procured from all corners of the Roman Empire – a conscious demonstration in itself of the nation’s extensive reach and authority – and placed in the amphitheatre for gory entertainment. Notoriously, lions were integral to the form of capital punishment known as ‘damnatio ad bestias’, whereby condemned criminals were pitted against the beasts. Lions were also sought out by Roman army units as a pastime when not at war – the process of capturing the beasts is recorded in several Roman mosaics, as is ‘damnatio ad bestias’, which became a motif of Christian martyrdom in later antiquity.

For more information about the meanings of animals in Roman art, see our relevant blog post: Animal Symbolism in Roman Art.

Weight 1.81 g
Dimensions W 1.7 x H 2.0 cm
Culture

Glass

Region

Reference: For similar: The British Museum, London, item 1883,0621.12

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