* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Ancient jewelry and antique jewelry available to buy online on our
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Jewellery History Since the beginning of time, humans have made use of creating ornamental jewelry for their personal adornment. Traditionally, ancient jewelry displays distinctive character, presents intense artistic images, and carries rich cultural assets through plasticity and expression. However, historically many jewelry items were first created as a means of fastening ones clothing, the display of wealth and status in society as well as for creating storage units for coins and other trinkets in jewelry boxes. It can be seen that various cultures have their own cherished wealthy possessions of precious metals and gemstones. Long ago, wedding dowries included such treasures as the family jewels for a daughter about to be married. Stylistic evolution from the Early Oriental to Hellenistic-Romanian trends served as a basis for the stylistic changes in the art of jewelry making. Aside from its external beauty properties, every jewellery object has a second, internal life triggered by its semantic significance and perceived through one's mind, intuition or aesthetic sense. Every artifact serves as a symbol of information. Apotropeic emblems, borrowed from everyday life, epos, or myths, and used in the art of jewelry making, carried a certain magical connotation. Some of the most well-known jewelry makers were the ancient Egyptians, who began incorporating gold into their jewelry, which was one of their most favorite metals to work with, approximately 3,000 to 5,000 years ago. Meanwhile, the ancient Romans added their own special flair of creative artistry into jewelry making styles, such as the ever popular brooch. However, their pinning creation was born of the need for securely fastening their clothing. The ancient Romans were very fond of imported goods and made beautiful use of such gemstones as diamonds, emeralds, sapphires and amber. Although the majority of Roman men wore one ring upon a finger, however, there were some who wore more, their women usually wore many more pieces of jewelry than they. Rings of that time were often carved of beautiful gemstones, and utilized for sealing documents with an engraved wax seal, as was customary during the middle ages by kings and noblemen alike. Popularity of a particular mythological plot line was connected to the very zeitgeist of the given time period, since the jewelry maker lived through it and tended to be deeply involved with the contemporary events. The art reflected the master's interests in what was currently happening with the society. Through the evolution of jewellery items it is possible to trace not only the historical and cultural situation, but also economical, political and social sides of ancient civilizations, as well as symbolism and semantics of the art produced. The ancient masters employed various techniques, including casting, granulation, filigree, and inlay, among others. Certain items of jewelry serve as a testament to the advanced artistic skills of the jewelers. Among precious and semi-precious stones used by jewelers in the ancient world the most popular were garnets, rubies, cornelian stones, pearls and emeralds. Ancient Bronze Jewellery Authentic Bronze Roman Rings – History Just as today, jewelry was an important part of Roman life and culture. Jewelry reflected then as now the wealth and status of the wearer. In the Roman Republic, (before 44 BC), by law only citizens could wear rings. And a male citizen could only wear one ring, and that ring was made of iron. In the early empire only Patricians, (the upper class of citizens), could wear gold rings. Other citizens and freemen could wear silver or bronze. Slaves were not allowed to wear rings at all except in some circumstances, iron. As the empire expanded the laws and customs regarding jewelry were relaxed. Clothing was dictated by social class, and changed little for over 1000 years. Consequently jewelry and hairstyles were the dominant means of expressing a Roman's social and economic status. In the later empire some people wore rings on every finger, and even on their toes! The normal everyday Roman was not this ostentatious. They wore only one or two rings, usually of bronze. Since Roman clothing had no pockets, one popular ring was the key ring. Unlike the modern key ring which holds a group of keys together, a Roman key ring was a finger ring containing an actual key, possibly to a strongbox where the family valuables were stored, or maybe even to the door of the wearer's house. Bronze was popular because it was much less expensive than other metals, and when polished it could look almost like gold. There are some Roman bronze rings that even have a thin plating of gold. Just like their more expensive counterparts, bronze rings sometimes had a semiprecious stone or polished glass inset into the bezel. Most though were just inscribed with one of a large variety of symbols. The Romans were a superstitious people. Many of the symbols were good luck charms, asking for favors from a particular god, or protection by another. The Roman military sometimes wore rings with the insignia of their legion, or in commemoration of a great victory. Roman jewellery was made throughout the empire from 27BC, when Roman styles absorbed Greek culture, until the founding of Constantinople in AD330, when Byzantine styles gradually took over. Many towns throughout the empire have produced evidence for metal working in the forms of hearths, slag and scraps of metal or crucibles. Styles and Materials Romano-British jewellery was made and used in Britain after the Roman conquest in AD43, using Roman or native styles or a combination of both. Polychrome jewellery was made using a technique learnt from the Greeks. This was multicoloured by reason of being inlaid with gems and glass in rub-over settings (bringing a collar of gold up over the edges of the stone rather than using the modern clasp setting). Opus interrasile is a style of open-work decoration of metal used by the Etruscans, the Romans from the third century onwards, and then the Byzantines. It was made by piercing metal to form a fine fretwork, often creating a filigree-type background with a solid image left in relief. Dipped enamelling had been used in Greek jewellery since the third century BC, and was still practiced in Roman times. This involved dipping a heated metal core into molten glass then shaping it, and was mostly used for pendant earrings. Enamelling in general was very popular in the western provinces. Precious stones including sapphires, aquamarines, topaz, garnet, cornelian, occasional uncut diamonds, and pearls were used in bezel (rub-over) settings for rings, necklaces and bracelets. Emeralds from Egypt or the Red Sea were also known. Glass, bone and pottery beads were used too. British pearls were known to Tacitus (end of the first century) and were still being sold in the fourth century. Silver, from the Mendip hills, was mined as a by-product of the lead industry. However, the silver yield was very low in Britain compared to other lead-mining areas in Europe. Sometimes these designs refer to a specific place and on some occasions they refer to a specific celestial event or a day of the year when such an event will occur which is quite exciting from an astronomical or astrological point of view. There are also a few broken lines that may have formed a "Serpent" figure right behind the Moon which is exciting because this may reference a certain time of the year when the Serpent Constellation is seen in the night sky. The image on this ring is a "Moon" symbol. The image is done on a curved, 10mm rounded bezel and is a nicely cut image of the full moon which is the symbol of the Goddess Diana. This symbol is related to the magic circles that you see on other Roman rings, but when you see it like this, it depicts the moon. It would be my guess that the owner of this ring had a name that started with the first few letters or the whole word LUNA in it. Depicted on the bezel, is a single Legion Battle Standard. This type is related to the "Vexillum" but instead of a pendant flag, this type always had disks or circlets upon it. This example seems to mix both methods of depicting this design. ORION'S BELT DESIGN The belt of the Giant Orion is made up of three stars. Mintaka , the westernmost star in the belt, comes from the Arabic word for belt. Alnilam, the center star in the belt, means "a belt of pearls". And Alnitak, the eastern-most star, means the girdle. All three are at the same distance from us and, with Rigel, Saiph, and Meissa, probably formed at about the same time some ten million years ago from the molecular clouds astronomers have found in Orion. Animal Designs. The ancient Romans were very fond of statues and reliefs showing hunting scenes, including scenes where the hunter was an animal; they were also interested in statues of exotic animals. The Roman Eagle The Roman ensigns had on their top an eagle representing Rome. These symbols were held high by a special group of soldiers and during the battles they indicated the location of the commanding officers and they gave reassurance to the Roman legionaries. The choice of the eagle as the symbol of command was widespread among ancient civilizations. Lions The lion, the king of the animals, was mainly associated by the Romans with the myth of Hercules, who was always portrayed wearing a lion skin. Lions protected the dead in the Roman sarcophagi . The Romans liked in particular scenes showing the lion in the act of hunting a deer and some of these reliefs can be seen on Roman jewellery. Medieval Jewelry Authentic Medieval Bronze Rings – History An important technique in medieval jewelry was the use of garnet slices set, like enamel, into metal cells. Examples are garnet-inlaid buckles and clasps from the 7th-century Sutton Hoo ship burial in Suffolk (British Museum) and a crown inlaid with garnets and cabochon (rounded) gems (Real Amería, Madrid), which belonged to the Visigothic king Recceswinth. The famous Alfred jewel (9th century, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford) is an example of cloisonné. Quite different are Celtic gold torques, rigid bands that encircled the neck or arm of the wearer. Beginning in the 11th century, brooches continued to be one of the chief forms of medieval jewelry. They were usually penannular, such as the 12th-century Eagle brooch (Mainz Museum). Chased or enameled pendants of a crucifix or other religious emblem and pendants containing a holy relic were another characteristic adornment, as were rings. By the 14th and 15th centuries, jewelry increasingly became an integral part of dress and was worn in the form of necklaces and girdles, on hairnets, and sewn onto clothes. Renaissance Jewelry During the Renaissance (15th century to 17th century), jewelry became an even more important part of fashionable costume. Rich velvet and silk robes of both men and women were embroidered with pearls and sparkling gems. Separate pieces of jewelry demonstrated the close alliance between the decorative arts and those of painting, architecture, and sculpture. Renaissance jewelry is characterized by rich color and by sculptural or architectural design. Religious subjects were gradually replaced by classical and naturalistic themes. Typical of the period is the sculptural pendant in which irregular pearls, enameling, and colored gems were combined. Also popular were brooches or pendants containing a miniature portrait. Necklaces, chains, and girdles continued in fashion. Designs for jewels, some by such famous painters as Hans Holbein the Younger and Albrecht Dürer, were printed and circulated throughout Europe, creating an international style. Among artisans, the best known today is Benvenuto Cellini, but none of his jewels is believed to have survived. Notable examples of Renaissance jeweled pendants of the 16th century include the Phoenix jewel (British Museum) and the Canning jewel (Victoria and Albert Museum, London). Jewelry in the 17th and 18th Centuries Jewelry of later periods falls into two main groups: diamond jewelry, which was usually conservative in design, and jewelry that reflected changing fashions in clothes and the arts. With the introduction in the 17th century of new methods of faceting gems to give them greater brilliance, the diamond became the preferred stone for precious jewelry, a reference that remains. At the same time, in the 18th and 19th centuries, industrial development brought mass production of more popular jewelry in cheaper materials. In addition to diamond tiaras, rings, and brooches of naturalistic design, there was less costly jewelry in the neoclassical style inspired by originals excavated at Pompeii, and in revivals of Gothic, Renaissance, and Egyptian styles (see Neoclassical Art and Architecture). The materials utilized, in addition to gold and semiprecious stones, included base-metal alloys, paste (for imitation gemstones), steel, and cast iron. Techniques included mechanical processes for stamping and cutting out patterns and settings. In the case of both luxury jewelry and popular jewelry, a characteristic arrangement was a matched set, or parure. A woman's parure often included a tiara or ring in addition to the basic combination of necklace, earrings, and brooch. A man's parure, in the 18th century, consisted of buttons, shoe buckles, sword hilt, and the insignia of knightly orders. Many magnificent parures and other jewels were created for the royal houses of Europe, which for several hundred years have accumulated permanent collections of coronation regalia, state and personal jewelry, and important single stones like the Koh-i-noor and Hope diamonds. Many of the brilliant crowns have been reset, broken up, or lost, but a variety of impressive collections remain in the Tower of London, the Vienna Treasury, and the Kremlin. Jeweled accessories were also fashionable. These included watchcases, snuffboxes, seals, and thimble cases. Animals on Jewellery In medieval times the representation of animals was rather limited and linked to religious symbols (flocks of sheep and the symbols of three of the four Evangelists: an eagle, a bull and a lion). In the XIVth century Italy gradually became an important actor in Mediterranean trade and this led to bringing to the richest trading centers (Florence and Venice) exotic animals which were then exhibited. During the Renaissance each Italian court had a serraglio (menagerie) and an aviary. The discovery of Roman buildings having rooms entirely decorated with paintings and mosaics showing birds or wild animals had an influence on the Renaissance palaces Between 1572 and 1655, a period of great urban development of Rome, five popes had animals in their coats of arms and this coincidence enormously increased the number of animal statues decorating churches and fountains. Antonio Canova, realizing that most of the statues of lions in Rome were "humanized", spent some time in Caserta, the Versailles of the King of Naples, studying the actual features of a couple of lions, kept in the royal menagerie. History Bronze Byzantine Jewellery Authentic Ancient Byzantine Rings – Byzantine jewelry is characterized by the same love of luxury and precious materials as that of ancient times. Centres of jewellery production were not only the capitál Constantinople but also provinces such as Syria, which had a long tradition in this art. The jewellery-making techniques, such us engraving and embossing, filigree, granulation, enamelling were virtually the same as those used in antiquity. One of the distinctive traits of Byzantine jewellery is the lavish use of precious stones. Pearls from the Persian Gulf, emeralds from Egypt and India, sapphires from Ceylon were brought to the Empire to embellish valuable objects. Another method of decoration which is of oriental origin and was frequently used by Byzantine jewellers is niello. Though niello was known in the Mycenaean period it was subsequently forgotten, to reappear on Roman objects. the decorative effect is based on the contrast created between the colour of the ground metal and the dark motifs. It can be applied to gold, silver and bronze Pierced and cut-out decoration (opus interrasile), that appears in many pieces of Byzantine jewellery, also has eastern roots. It is usually applied on cast plaques: the decoration was first drawn on the metal and then selected parts were removed with different drills and saws, creating perforated designs reminiscent of lacework. Although Byzantine jewellery represents a continuation of the Roman tradition, its own principles and parameters are evident by the 4th century, and it swiftly adapted to the new tastes of its period and space. Rejecting the weight of solid gold, and preferring instead fine, light gold leaf, it created new forms, evolved, and was transmuted into a delicate, refined art embellished with precious and semiprecious stones, surpassing the use of this decoration already familiar from Roman jewellery. From the beginning to the end of the Byzantine empire, jewellery was highly valued by high-ranking officials at the Byzantine court, whose signet-rings were decorated with ingenious, complicated monograms, and even more so by wealthy Byzantine ladies, who never ceased to adore it. A sign of economic prosperity, it invariably adorns the necks, hair, wrists and expressive fingers of the female figures depicted in monumental mosaics and other works of art. The Byzantines' special appreciation and love of expensive, refined jewellery, attested both by the literary sources and by art, seems to have been intensified not only by women's interest in their appearance, but also by men's desire to show off their wealth. The Cross Scarcely any object was as ubiquitous in Byzantine culture as the cross. As the symbol of Christ's Passion and ultimate victory over death, the cross is the essential sign of the Christian faith. Yet, the cult of the cross did not flourish until the fourth century. Many years later it was decreed that the image of the cross should not be limited to churches and liturgical objects, but that it should be found also in jewelry.. Celtic Saxon and Viking Jewellery History The history here is about Celtic jewellery , Saxon jewelry , Viking, Egyptian, other pre-Roman, and other post-medieval jewellery. See our current selection of Viking jewellery here and our Celtic etc Silver rings here Celtic rings - 1300 BC - 100 AD. In addition to silver and gold, Celtic jewellery is very often found as a bronze alloy or copper alloy. Copper having a more deep plum colour than the bronze rings. Celtic jewellery with knots or Celtic interlace are ornamental patterns primarily were used to decorate Bible manuscripts, monuments (notably Celtic crosses and cross slabs) and jewelry. Celtic jewelry knots are complete loops with no end or beginning. A good Celtic artist will never leave a loose end on a strand unless it is stylized into a zoomorphic element or spiral. Pure knots should always be unending. The Celtic peoples were a series of tribes linked by culture and language. They were supra national, traded and co-operated with each other. The tribes included amongst others the Iceni, Gauls, Galations and Celtiberians. During the Roman period many of the Celtic peoples were pushed into tough and less hospitable areas and became known for their hardiness, resourcefullness and ability to survive in adverse circumstances. Whilst the Central European Celtic strongholds were subdued by the Romans, the culture survived laregly unchanged in Ireland, Scotland, Wales and parts of France. The Celts were widely respected for their metal working and artistic skills. Some types of rings were often given by a tribes chief to a deserving warrior who could use it as a badge of office and show that he spoke for his chief in important matters. Jewellery patterns vary including "Geometric" Celtic Swirl patterns that developed from Greek "key work" patterns. The design looks like a 6-armed Swastika. There is also many designs similar to what looks like "SUN DISK" or "SOLAR WHEEL" in honour of the sun God Bel or Belus on Celtic rings and other Celtic jewelry. These designs were quite popular among the Ancient Celts and figured heavily in a lot of their decorative work. Saxon and Viking Jewellery The tastes of the Anglo-Saxons were never very different from tastes on the mainland in Europe. Amongst all the descendents of the northern tribes that the Romans had called barbarian, there was great admiration for artistic workmanship in gold jewellery. There was a view that this interest in gold was a basic element of barbarian taste. The barbarians, it was thought, were concerned with amazing by the costliness rather than to attract by comeliness: to astonish rather than to charm. Certainly, in the Anglo-Saxon culture, as in others, the costliness of gold jewelry was part of its attraction. Bronze, gold, and silver jewellery. Bronze was most common, while gold and silver were usually for those of higher status Necklaces were often adorned with beads, precious stones, pendants, and crosses. Rock crystal pendants were believed to have special properties in the eyes of pagan Saxons. Brooches were used to fasten clothing together, such as cloaks. After iron, bronze was probably the commonest metal used by the Anglo-Saxons and Vikings. Bronze is a mixture of copper and tin (and sometimes a small amount of lead). It was used for making a wide variety of objects but was especially common for jewellery such as brooches, buckles, belt ends, dress pins and rings. Making bronze items was a difficult and complex craft carried out by specialists. Once the copper ore was dug out of the ground the copper had to be separated from the waste material. This was done by smelting the ore in a furnace with sand and charcoal. When the temperature inside the furnace reached about 1100°C (by pumping with hand bellows) the copper melted and flowed to the bottom where it was drawn out and cast into ingots. When the craftsman had his copper ingots there were several ways he could make the finished casting. Sometimes, if he wanted to produce a lot of similar items he would make a model of the item in wood or lead alloy and make a clay mould from this, or make an antler mould by carving directly into the antler. From these moulds he could then cast waxes to use as the masters for the bronze casting. If he wanted to make a one off casting he made a model of the object he wanted to cast out of wood or beeswax. If he used wood he would press the wood into clay to make the shape he wanted. Once the clay had been fired and the wood had burned away he could use it as a mould. If he was using wax he would wrap the wax model in clay (leaving a spout through which he could later pour the molten metal) and dry the clay by firing or leaving it somewhere warm and dry. This heating would melt the wax and allow it to be poured off, leaving a hollow mould. Having made the mould, the smith took enough copper to make the object and melted it in a clay crucible. To turn it to bronze he added about 10% tin (and sometimes some lead, to make the molten metal flow better) to the molten copper. He then poured this into the mould to achieve the object he wanted (if there was still any wax in the mould the hot bronze would melt it out). When the bronze had cooled the mould was broken open and the cast object was taken out. If the object had not cast properly it could be remelted and used for a later casting. If it was good it was cleaned up, polished, and used. Moulds could also be made by carving out of stone, usually soapstone or slate. Some of these stone moulds were quite detailed, often in two halves, others were much cruder one part moulds. These one piece stone moulds were often used for ingot moulds. Sometimes items were cast as blanks, usually in a clay or stone mould, although an iron mould has been found in York. These blanks would then be cleaned up and be decorated by engraving or punching. Objects were also made out of bronze wire or by cutting sheets of bronze to the right shape and stamping designs into the surface with iron tools. Bronze was even used to cover iron objects. This was done by coating the object with tallow and then applying bronze foil over this. If the item was hollow it was then filled with charcoal. The object was then covered in clay and placed in a fire. Bellows were used to raise the temperature of the fire so that the bronze melted and coated the surface of the object. This made items more decorative and prevented rusting. Bronze (and sometimes gold and silver) foils were sometimes embossed with a bronze die. These foils could then be attached to other items for decoration. The Vikings were particularly fond of silver arm and neck rings. These were produced either by plaiting and twisting silver wire or by hammering out a band from an ingot and punching it with decorative iron punches. Coins were made by moniers who were granted a special licence from the king. To make a coin the monier would take a disc of silver of the correct weight and place it between two pieces of steel which had been engraved with the design required on the coin. He would then hit the top piece of steel with a heavy hammer and the design would be stamped onto the silver. Gold was used mainly for jewellery which was made in the same way as bronze jewellery, although granulation and filigree work was often used to enhance gold jewellery. Gold jewellery was often inset with precious or semi-precious stones such as garnet. Gold was also used to gild other metals to create the impression that the object was actually made of gold, or to add a contrasting colour. Several gilding techniques were in use, and mercury, used in firegilding, has been excavated at York and Hedeby. Much gold and silver was used in the production of ecclesiastical items such as altar-crosses, reliquaries, portative altars, etc.. Gold and silver were also used to make thread for embroidery and braid weaving, often also ecclesiastical in nature. Pewter was used to make cheap jewellery and was usually cast in moulds made from antler, although stamped pewter jewellery was also made. Jewellery making was a specialist craft, and was frequently carried out at royal manors under royal patronage. . Middle Eastern Jewelry This funnel ring originated in the former Persia area where rings were worn by both men and women. The Achaemenid Persian empire dominated the Near East. Because of its great size, a wide variety of styles and art forms existed throughout the empire. Nonetheless, elements were drawn together from various eastern and western cultures to create an artistic style that is distinctly Achaemenid. An innovation of the period is the introduction of western-style metal finger rings, which begin to replace both stamp and cylinder seals such as this. Sumerian, Babylonian, and Assyrian tombs of the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC have yielded a great quantity of headdresses, necklaces, earrings, and animal amulet figures in gold, silver, and gems. A well-known example is a royal diadem from Ur made in the shape of thin gold beech leaves (British Museum, London). Fine gold and silver jewelry was also made in ancient Anatolia, Persia, and Phoenicia. Techniques included granulation (in which surfaces are decorated with clusters of tiny grains of gold), filigree, inlaid gems, and cloisonné and champlevé enamel. Evidence of Egyptian influence on Phoenician work and of Mesopotamian styles on Persian work suggests widespread trade or other contact. Egyptian Jewelry The ancient Egyptians were familiar with most of the processes of ornamenting metal that are still employed today. They produced skillfully chased, engraved, soldered, repoussé, and inlaid jewelry. They commonly worked in gold and silver and inlaid these metals with semiprecious stones such as carnelian, jasper, amethyst, turquoise, and lapis lazuli and with enamel and glass. Their jewelry included diadems; wide bead necklaces or collars; square pectorals; hoop, hinged, or bead bracelets; and rings. Many Egyptians wore two bracelets on each arm, one on the wrist and one above the elbow. An especially popular ornament was the signet ring. Jewelry motifs-the scarab (beetle), lotus, falcon, serpent, and eye, for example-were derived from religious symbols. Vast quantities of jewelry have been found in tombs. Especially notable are ornaments from the tomb of Tutankhamun (reigned 1333-1323 BCbc), of the 18th Dynasty, now in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo. Greek Jewelry Trojan and Cretan artisans of the Minoan period, although working at opposite ends of the Aegean region, executed earrings, bracelets, and necklaces of a common type that persisted from about 2500 BC to the beginning of the Classical period of Greek art (479-323 BC). Typical work consisted of thin coils and chains of linked and plaited wire, and thin foil formed into petals and rosettes. Stamping and enameling were common. Free use was also made of gold granulation and filigree. Stone inlay was rare. Prevailing motifs were spirals and naturalistic patterns drawn from cuttlefish, starfish, and butterflies. Archaic Greek jewelry and Etruscan and other Italian jewelry made in the period between 700 and 500 BC was almost entirely inspired by Egyptian and Assyrian examples imported by Phoenician merchants (see Etruscan Civilization). The techniques remained fundamentally the same as in the preceding period; embossed or stamped plates were the basic element in the work; granulation continued to be employed and was refined by Etruscan artists to an extraordinary degree. Representative of the period is a handsome Greek necklace from Rhodes that consists of seven rectangular gold plaques bearing winged figures in relief and edged with gold balls (7th century BC, British Museum). Authentic Ancient Silver Rings – History Goldsmiths worked mainly with the two most precious metals, gold and silver, and used enamel, pearls, and stones for the decoration of their products. Gold was seen as the most prestigious metal, for which silver-gilt or silver were seen as poorer substitutes, most suitable for lower classes. A large proportion of gold used in late medieval production was recycled gold: goldsmiths used ancient coins, jewelry, or other gold objects as their raw material. In the High Middle Ages, the previously produced gold stock of Europe was primarily accumulated in the court of the Byzantine emperors; consequently, little gold was circulated in the Western world. For coinage, for example, silver was generally used until the 13th century, when gold coinage was introduced in Italy, France, and England. This gold, however, was not newly produced but acquired through trade with the Arab countries, rich in gold since the early Middle Ages. From the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, gold production in Europe increased alongside the continuing importation of gold from the Arab world. A significant quantity of gold was mined, especially in Bohemia and Hungary, which two countries provided up to eleven twelfth of the total gold production of late medieval Europe. Most gold was produced by mining, but some gold was also gained by panning (swirling the deposits of rivers around in a pan to separate quartz from gold), especially in the Rhine area. Silver, in contrast to gold, was produced continuously through the Middle Ages in Europe, and even exported from there. In addition to silver mines that played an important part in silver production in the early and the High Middle Ages-Poitou (Merovingian period), Sardinia (11th-12th c.), the environs of Goslar, Germany (10th-12th c.), Freiberg, Saxony (12th-14th c.),rich silver mines were discovered in the second half of the thirteenth century in Kuttenberg (Kutná Hora), Bohemia, which supplied silver in great quantities until its decline, due to the Hussite wars, in the fifteenth century. Precious stones were acquired almost exclusively from long-distance trade. Among the most frequently used stones, rubies, sapphires, emeralds, turquoises, and diamonds came mainly from the East: rubies were brought from India and Ceylon, sapphires from Ceylon, Arabia, and Persia, emeralds from Egypt, turquoises from Persia and Tibet, and diamonds from India and Central Africa. Europe also produced a variety of gems and semi-precious stones in the later Middle Ages. The source for amethysts was Germany and Russia. Rock crystal came from Germany, Switzerland and France, opals and garnets, from Eastern Europe. Besides precious stones, also a great variety of less valuable stones were frequently used, as it turns out from a list of precious stones written by a Jewish merchant in 1453. For precious stone decoration, goldsmiths very frequently used also antique cameos and intaglios - precious or semiprecious stones decorated with engravings or reliefs-that survived (often encased in older, medieval metalwork) in large numbers and were highly sought after in the later Middle Ages. Cameos were set into many types of jewelry as decoration, and often reused again. Their usage is a evidence of the conscious attempt to keep awake or revive the spirit of Antiquity. The popularity of antique cameos and intaglios was, in fact, so high, that medieval gem-cutting itself developed in emulation of the classical models. However, Western European Middle Ages knew only clumsy imitations of antique cameos, while in Byzantium stone-carving remained a living tradition throughout the Middle Ages. Byzantine carved stones were eagerly imported to the West. Other raw materials for the decoration of jewelry included freshwater pearls from Scotland, mother-of-pearl, amber-the fossilised resin of pine trees-found in great quantities along the Baltic coast, jet-the black fossilised remains of trees-mainly from England and Spain, and coral from the Mediterranean coast in North Africa. Emeralds and diamonds were held in almost the same high esteem as rubies. The garnets, amethysts and Scotch pearls did duty for rubies and pearls in cheaper pieces. It was commonly held in the Middle Ages that by their very nature stones and minerals had magic potential. For that reason, various gems were worn for prophylactic purposes: to detect poison, to assist childbirth, to prevent epilepsy. However, the magic of jewels bearing an inscription, sign, or figure was much more effective. The medieval world inherited a large stock of antique cameos and intaglios. These were held in high esteem both for their beauty and for the supposed magic power of their images. A special kind of lapidarium treated engraved gems and attributed magical virtues to them: If you find a seal sculpted in black agate that depicts a man, naked and swollen, and another one, well-dressed and crowned, and he holds a chalice in one hand and a plant-branch in another, fit it into any ring, and anyone with fever who wears this ring will be healed in three days. Engraved gems were, consequently, in demand for personal ornaments to be constantly worn. The classical subjects of antique engraved gemstones were often interpreted in the light of Christian iconography. Another way to reinforce the magic of a stone was to inscribe it with a "name of power" or a wonder-working formula: If you inscribe a ring with the letters T. B. L. N. C. H. V. S. H. A. , it will keep your body intact and safe from any sickness, and mainly from fever and dropsy. In purchases it brings luck, it makes its bearer able and lovable in war and in litigations and in peace and grants him superiority and victory. It helps women in conception and birth. It gives its owner and wearer peace and harmony and wealth, provided that it is worn chastely and honestly. Many goldsmiths worked in silver and other metals as well (bronze), while some artists worked in silver only (silversmiths). The term "jeweller" also occurs in medieval sources, but its meaning is not clear. It probably does not refer to makers of jewels but rather to traders, appraisers, or cutters of gemstones, or retailers of jewels. There were both monastic and secular goldsmiths working in the Middle Ages. In the earlier Middle Ages, production took place predominantly in a monastic setting; later, however, jewelry production was closely associated also with the courts of rulers and nobility. In the late Middle Ages, urban goldsmiths acquired the leading role in the production of goldsmiths' works. They worked in independent workshops but were organised in guilds, medieval associations of craftsmen in the same trade that controlled and regulated the activities of its members. Membership in guilds was compulsory, but it also offered great advantages: guilds provided security and protected the interests of its members. The guilds controlled the prices and the quality of the products and also determined the duration and system of training. The growing number of goldsmiths-parallel with the urban expansion and growth in trade in the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuriesmade guild regulations more necessary in the later Middle Ages. Authentic Ancient Gold Rings – History Gold Roman rings are becoming increasingly rare and we have great difficulty in locating any at reasonable prices. A must for any collector or person who wants a sound investment or for a treasured gift for a loved one. Check out our current Ancient Gold Rings The aurifex or goldsmith would have been an honoured craftsman. In actual fact, in early Rome the wearing of finger rings and other items of gold, as well as the burial of gold rings and articles, was legally restricted, but during the period of the empire customs relaxed and jewellery was lavishly worn. As the empire expanded (AD200-400) Roman techniques and styles developed. The inhabitants of Ireland have been prospecting for gold in rivers since the Bronze Age. The Minoan Culture grew rich as a trading stop along Mediterranean trade routes and as a result, its jewelry making flourished. The Minoans began producing exceptional stamped gold sheeting and filigree and granulated Gold jewelry, burial masks and beads by 2000 BC, which spread to Mycenaean Islands and other Greek Islands and eventually on to the mainland. These techniques of filigree and granulation show up in Etruscan art, which saw elevated heights of beauty and technical skill as a contrast to the time of the emergence of Greek culture, when Gold use was rare. When Roman civilization began to flourish, the city began to attract talented Gold artisans who created gold-framed cameos, necklaces, pendants, bracelets, headdresses and earrings. Roman gold jewelry included rings that only those citizens of the higher classes could wear but the wearing of gold rings later included lower classes of warriors until finally, by the 3rd century AD, anyone other than the very lowest could wear a gold ring. Historians credit Roman Culture with the advent of the ring used as a symbol of engagement. The use of Gold in Rome grew beyond its use as jewelry and expanded into household items and furniture in the homes of the higher classes. By the third century AD, the citizens of Rome wore necklaces that contained Coins with the image of the emperor. As Christianity spread through the continent, Europeans ceased burying their dead with their jewelry and thus, few examples survive from the Middle Ages, except those of royalty and from church hordes. Modern historians gather information about the jewelry of the middle ages from artwork and literature that began to develop during this time. Among cultures of the Middle Ages, the Celts produced intricate Brooches while nearly every other region produced gold religious items. By the Renaissance, Classicism began to dictate the production of all art forms, and resulted in a rebirth in jewelry as an art form, in fact historians say artists such as Boticelli were apprentices in Goldsmith shops. In the height of the Renaissance period, the houses of royalty competed to accumulate larger collections of jewelry, which eventually slowed only to increase again by the reign of Louis XIV in the 17th Century. Gold Sassanian Rings. The Sassanids established an empire roughly within the frontiers achieved by the Achaemenids, with the capital at Ctesiphon. The Sassanids consciously sought to resuscitate Iranian traditions and to obliterate Greek cultural influence. Their rule was characterized by considerable centralization, ambitious urban planning, agricultural development, and technological improvements. Sassanid rulers adopted the title of shahanshah (king of kings), as sovereigns over numerous petty rulers, known as shahrdars. Historians believe that society was divided into four classes: the priests, warriors, secretaries, and commoners. The royal princes, petty rulers, great landlords, and priests together constituted a privileged stratum, and the social system appears to have been fairly rigid. Medieval Brooches Medieval brooches - Brooches were an important part of the wardrobe. Along with jewelled belts of every kind, medieval brooches were practical as well as decorative. They held up cloaks and tunics and various bits of fabric. The most common type of medieval brooches in the later middle ages is the circle pin, often jewelled, and usually with inscriptions extolling the virtues of a loved one. The brooch was a neccesity in Medieval wardrobes. In early Medieval times, the most common style of brooches was of Celtic design, in the later Medieval times the most common style was a Circle Brooch which were made of precious metals and even jeweled. Medieval Collectibles offers high quality Medieval Brooches made of sterling silver and pewter that can be worn with your Medieval Garb or your Modern Day wardrobe. Courtly love also appeared in more elaborate brooches, where figures of lovers were formed in gold and enamelled in bright colours. Romano-British Brooches Romano-British jewellery was made and used in Britain after the Roman conquest in AD43, using Roman or native styles or a combination of both. History Roman Ancient Bracelets Sometimes set with gemstones and coins. Roman glass bracelets were made, clear or variously coloured. A jewellery case found in a woman's grave at Lyons includes gold bracelets decorated with cameo medallions (one of which portrays Emperor Commodus which put it at least at the end of the second century) and a pair of bracelets made from twisted strands of gold wire. Bracelets of many different designs and materials evolved within the extensive geographical and chronological range of the Roman Empire. Bracelets and necklaces were part of the costume in the Roman world and were intended purely for feminine adornment, having no utilitarian function. Large objects such as a bracelet rarely find their way into the ground by accident, and we must rely on graves and roman settlement sites for their recovery. In the later Roman period quite narrow bronze hoops with geometric designs sharply engraved or cut in the so-called "chip- carved" style were common. Scores of patterns have been noted and recorded, from simple regular transverse grooves or milling over the whole surface or series of punched circles to more complex combinations of transverse and diagonal lines, circles and dots. Patterns in relief such as zig-zag lines and angular meanders were created by cutting or filing a regular sequence of notches. Earrings Hoops and pendants were ubiquitous in Roman earrings. In simpler types the ends often hooked together, or were fitted with a pendant club or a bezel-set conical stoneMost earrings at the time had long, S-shaped hooks for insertion into the earlobe. Some of the more ornate versions displayed clusters of emeralds or pearls. Necklaces Both necklaces and neck chains were worn. Neck chains would be wound several times round the neck or worn down over the breast, occasionally with a pendant. Pendants of small bears or other animals or carvings in relief with busts of one or two people are not uncommon, and it is possible that these latter were given as gifts to mark an anniversary or at a wedding. Rings Rings for fingers or thumbs were worn by men and women, sometimes several at a time. They were made from gold, silver, bronze, iron, lead or glass. Some have a small key attached. Betrothal rings (anulus pronubus) were given, made of iron when gold was restricted, and still popularly of iron even at a later date. Signet rings were important and were often large and ornate, perhaps with the seal engraved on a gemstone. In fact engraved gems were popular. Ancient Greek Golden Jewellery The first jewellery that man ever wore are lost in the depth of prehistorical times and it is impossible to trace them. So, research hasn't yet showed if jewellery use preceded the use of clothes or the opposite. The psychological reasons which led to the use of jewellery is also unknown whether it was to attract the opposite sex, the desire to be more beautiful or the need to be protected with the help of talismans. Indeed, it has been proved that jewellery was used to attract good powers or to turn away the bad. At first, jewellery was created by unprocessed objects such as animal teeth, shells, nuts, peculiar rocks and fruit stones. It is logical to think that jewellery was firstly created in countries where there was an abundance of gold. The dominant role of Asia and Egypt in this domain, jewellery production, is due to the above-mentioned reason although the oldest golden jewellery have been discovered in the Balkan area. With the creation of metal jewellery the magical character of natural jewellery didn't cease to exist. This was the fact with golden jewellery since gold was not wearing out let alone the fact that it was always shiny, leading people to believe that it had supernatural powers. With the years passing by, when religion was separated from magic the magical characterizations of the jewellery were diminished to some extent. In Greece for example, research has shown that some iron rings which have been discovered in Mycenaean tombs were thought of as magical since iron was not yet a part of the everyday life of people, along with some stones used for stamping that were worn as talismans. After the destruction of the magnificent Mycenaean centers there were economic difficulties and that is why the jewellery samples that we have from this era are only a few, mainly from copper, a few iron and only the minimum volume is golden. Since gold is not in abundance in Greece, goldsmiths and their art cease to exist. After the 9th century things changed again since the Greeks acquired new contacts with the gold markets of the East. So, during this era the history of gold starts again. The 8th century BC can be characterized as the century of its peak, mainly in Attica. During the time of the Homeric poems the jewellery are either well-shaped objects of everyday use such as brooches and pins or ornaments which underline beauty. During the seventh century the talisman character of the jewels re-surfaces, and their powers seem to be valid for the person wearing the jewel or for the dead in their other lifetime to which the simple man didn't stop believing. This notion will remain alive until the end of the antiquity when it will be transferred to crosses and other forms of jewels with Christian symbols. The jewels found in tombs are divided in two big categories. The ones worn in real life and their substitutes. The second category was used exclusively for burials and they were copies of the real ones which were replaced inside the tombs when the real jewels could not be used for economic or other reasons. The custom of burying the dead with their jewels was very strong since jewellery were not used in the everyday lives of people but during a special appearance or in feasts and especially on wedding days. Real jewellery were either dedicated to some alter or buried in some tomb anyhow. That is why we often meet jewels decorated with themes referring to the after life or immortality. Ancient Greek Earrings Gold in general is a rare metal. Few are the places on earth which can show significant quantities of gold and Greece is poor in the specific metal too. The main locations where gold is extracted are Africa and Asia. In this section which is dedicated in the ancient Greek golden jewellery you will have the opportunity to see many different kinds of jewels such as earrings, bracelets, rings, necklaces, wreaths, diadems, pins and broaches which are real works of art. Wreaths The oldest wreaths mentioned in scripts correspond to the second half of the 5th century and refer to honorary accolades of important people, such as winners in athletic or other events. Diadems and Tiaras The word diadem characterizes the crowns of royal families which were basically weaved head bands. Alexander the Great received one after he won Darius the 4th and became a king. The diadems received the form given to them today a bit later and they are mainly golden and often found in tombs. Earrings Along with the necklaces the earrings are those jewels which present the biggest variety. Many earrings have been found in peculiar shapes that still make us wonder how they could have been worn. Today, we can say that most of the ancient earrings must have been worn while hanging on a ring which pierced the ear, mostly made of silver or copper. Most of those earrings could not be preserved due to metal oxidation. Necklaces and Talismans In most cases the necklace is a total of small similar or dissimilar items hanging from a string at first from the neck and later from the clothes with pins and broaches right in front of the chest. Pins Pins are already known from the Age of Copper. During the prehistoric times we can find pins in different sizes but their use hasn't been clarified yet. Those having been found in pairs are associated with the holding of clothes while those found in a unique piece were probably used as decorative articles or worn on the hair combined with diadems. Broaches From all the kinds of jewellery the broaches are the ones which made their appearance last. They were first found during the Mycenaean years at the same time with the pins used to hold women's clothing in place, on the shoulders. They served the same purposes and they may have been used to hold the peplum's side closed when the dress was held on the shoulders by pins. Bracelets The bracelets in antiquity were mainly used in both hands over the elbow or around the wrist as today. Even the copper bracelet findings are not many. Their appearance is simple at first, made from wire or more solid materials which formed a spiral, multispiraled or open with decorated or non-decorated edges. Rings Rings are among the oldest jewels ever worn by people. In simple form made from bands are known even from the Neolithic era. During the 10th but mostly during the 9th century rings were made rich in curving decorations used probably only to be buried in tombs or offered in alters.