Roma Antiga Colar com contas de vidro multicoloridas
N.º 84098941
Roma Antiga Pulseira e brincos com contas de vidro raras
N.º 84098941
Roma Antiga Pulseira e brincos com contas de vidro raras
Due to custom regulations we can not ship outside the E.U. Please make sure you have an EU shipping address before bidding.
Bracelet and earrings with rare Roman glass beads. The authentic Roman beads are restrung with modern materials to create wearable jewellery.
Bracelet with rare double, triple and quadruple glass beads in a linked design.
Size: ± 19
Diameter beads: ± 4,7 mm maximum
Earrings with wire-wrapped glass beads.
Total length: ± 41,9 mm (including hooks)
Diameter beads: ± 4 mm maximum
Linking chains to create bracelets or necklaces is one of the oldest jewellery techniques and appeared in various ancient cultures. The oldest example of a chain necklace was found in Babylonia in a royal tomb from around 2500 BC.
The wire wrapping technique dates back from ca. 2000 BC and was a favourite technique of jewellery makers of ancient civilizations.
Good condition and wearable. The ancient beads are restrung and combined with modern gold-plated spacer beads and fittings. Signs of wear consistent with age and use. See images.
Certificate of Authenticity available upon request (pdf-document).
Ancient/Roman beads:
All authentic ancient beads are slightly different in shape or colour shade and show different signs of wear or iridescence. This adds to the charm of each piece and makes every composition unique.
ANCIENT GLASS
Glass has always been found in nature, but the humans first created glass about 4.000 years ago. when ancient craftsmen in Mesopotamia discovered the art of mixing sand, soda and lime to make glass.
For centuries, glass was a luxury item and reserved for the upper classes.
Glassmaking centers around the Mediterranean world experimented with new techniques (casting, core-forming, mosaic glass) and with colours by adding metallic oxides (cobalt, copper, etc) to the mixture.
The Romans learned the glass-making craft after the conquest of Egypt in the 1st century BC. During the 1st century AD the glassblowing technique revolutionized the production and made it possible to produce larger quantities. By adding manganese dioxide Roman glassmakers successfully produced colourless or ‘aqua’ glass for the first time.
Roman glass became a very popular material, used for beads, glass windows, mosaic tiles, tableware pieces etc. Roman glass was traded all over the Roman Empire and far beyond to Central Africa, Scandinavia and via the Silk Route to China.
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