古代ローマ人 ガラス ビーズネックレス - 680 mm (No reserve price)





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Ancient Roman glass bead necklace, restrung for modern display, total length 72 cm, dating to the 1st–3rd century A.D., authentic original, in good condition.
Description from the seller
Ancient Roman Glass Bead Necklace
Culture / Period: Ancient Roman
Date / Period: 1st - 3rd Century A.D.
Material: Glass
Dimensions: Total length 72 cm
Condition: Good condition, with expected surface wear, weathering, and minor encrustation consistent with age. The beads remain well preserved and restrung for modern display.
No shipping outside the European Union. Due to complex export regulations concerning cultural goods, this item cannot be shipped outside the EU. Please ensure you have a delivery address within the European Union before placing a bid.
Provenance information:
Object Registration ID: 17
The current owner purchased the Ancient Roman glass bead necklace from a private collector, Hans L. in Eindhoven.
The previous owner, a private collector, Hans L. from Eindhoven (the Netherlands), stated that the object had been in his collection since the 1990s.
According to the previous owner, the object had previously been in a private collection in the Netherlands since the 1970s.
No further information concerning the earlier ownership history of the object was available from the previous owner.
Background Information:
This necklace is composed of a large group of ancient Roman glass beads, restrung in modern times for display and wearability. Beads of this type were widely used throughout the Roman world as items of personal adornment and formed part of necklaces, bracelets, garments, and other decorative assemblages. Their variety in colour, size, and shape reflects the broad range of Roman bead production and the enduring popularity of glass as an attractive and versatile material.
In Roman daily life, bead jewellery was worn by women, children, and sometimes men, depending on regional custom and context. Such ornaments could serve both decorative and social purposes, expressing personal taste while also reflecting access to traded materials and manufactured goods. Glass beads were especially valued because they could imitate more costly stones while remaining affordable and widely available.
The Roman glass industry was highly developed, and bead-making formed part of a larger tradition of specialised craft production. Beads were produced in significant quantities using techniques such as winding, drawing, cutting, and shaping, often in workshops connected to major centres of glass manufacture. Their distribution across the Empire demonstrates the efficiency of Roman trade and exchange networks. Such objects were traded across large distances, reaching regions such as present-day Germany and the Netherlands.
Dated broadly to the 1st to 3rd century A.D., this necklace belongs to the Early Imperial period, when Roman material culture was widely standardised yet regionally diverse. Jewellery of this kind formed part of everyday life across both urban and provincial settings, showing how even small personal objects participated in the broader economic and cultural unity of the Roman Empire.
As with many ancient bead groups on the market, the present arrangement should be understood as a modern restringing of ancient components rather than a guaranteed ancient original sequence. What remains fully authentic is the individual Roman glass beads themselves, which together provide a representative and attractive assemblage of ancient personal adornment.
This piece provides a direct and physical link to the people of antiquity, where such objects were part of everyday life. It forms a tangible connection to the ancient world, in which jewellery of this kind played a practical and decorative role in daily Roman use
Ancient Roman Glass Bead Necklace
Culture / Period: Ancient Roman
Date / Period: 1st - 3rd Century A.D.
Material: Glass
Dimensions: Total length 72 cm
Condition: Good condition, with expected surface wear, weathering, and minor encrustation consistent with age. The beads remain well preserved and restrung for modern display.
No shipping outside the European Union. Due to complex export regulations concerning cultural goods, this item cannot be shipped outside the EU. Please ensure you have a delivery address within the European Union before placing a bid.
Provenance information:
Object Registration ID: 17
The current owner purchased the Ancient Roman glass bead necklace from a private collector, Hans L. in Eindhoven.
The previous owner, a private collector, Hans L. from Eindhoven (the Netherlands), stated that the object had been in his collection since the 1990s.
According to the previous owner, the object had previously been in a private collection in the Netherlands since the 1970s.
No further information concerning the earlier ownership history of the object was available from the previous owner.
Background Information:
This necklace is composed of a large group of ancient Roman glass beads, restrung in modern times for display and wearability. Beads of this type were widely used throughout the Roman world as items of personal adornment and formed part of necklaces, bracelets, garments, and other decorative assemblages. Their variety in colour, size, and shape reflects the broad range of Roman bead production and the enduring popularity of glass as an attractive and versatile material.
In Roman daily life, bead jewellery was worn by women, children, and sometimes men, depending on regional custom and context. Such ornaments could serve both decorative and social purposes, expressing personal taste while also reflecting access to traded materials and manufactured goods. Glass beads were especially valued because they could imitate more costly stones while remaining affordable and widely available.
The Roman glass industry was highly developed, and bead-making formed part of a larger tradition of specialised craft production. Beads were produced in significant quantities using techniques such as winding, drawing, cutting, and shaping, often in workshops connected to major centres of glass manufacture. Their distribution across the Empire demonstrates the efficiency of Roman trade and exchange networks. Such objects were traded across large distances, reaching regions such as present-day Germany and the Netherlands.
Dated broadly to the 1st to 3rd century A.D., this necklace belongs to the Early Imperial period, when Roman material culture was widely standardised yet regionally diverse. Jewellery of this kind formed part of everyday life across both urban and provincial settings, showing how even small personal objects participated in the broader economic and cultural unity of the Roman Empire.
As with many ancient bead groups on the market, the present arrangement should be understood as a modern restringing of ancient components rather than a guaranteed ancient original sequence. What remains fully authentic is the individual Roman glass beads themselves, which together provide a representative and attractive assemblage of ancient personal adornment.
This piece provides a direct and physical link to the people of antiquity, where such objects were part of everyday life. It forms a tangible connection to the ancient world, in which jewellery of this kind played a practical and decorative role in daily Roman use

