A PAIR OF SELJUK GOLD BRACELETS
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 2… Read more
A PAIR OF SELJUK GOLD BRACELETS

IRAN, 11TH-13TH CENTURY

Details
A PAIR OF SELJUK GOLD BRACELETS
IRAN, 11TH-13TH CENTURY
Each bracelet with a band of graduated elaborately plaited wire giving a triangular section band which tapers towards a domed terminal with central fastening pin plain save for a band of meandering arabesque vine on black filled ground, excellent condition
2 5/8in. (6.8cm.) across
Provenance
Anon sale in these Rooms, 20 April 1999, lot 470
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 20% on the buyer's premium.

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Sara Plumbly
Sara Plumbly

Lot Essay

A very similar bracelet reportedly found at Gurgan and attributed to the 11-13th Century is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (inv. 52.32.2; Marilyn Jenkins and Manuel Keene, Islamic Jewelry in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1982, no.22). The example in the Metropolitan Museum also has a rounded terminal with niello decoration. The meandering arabesque niello decoration on the rounded terminals on our bracelets are very similar to the niello decoration on a set of belt trappings in the British Museum. The belt trappings were found at Nihavand in Western Iran and attributed to the 11th-12th century. A series of five bracelets of comparable age and construction were part of a private collection which was offered at Spink, (Michael Spink, Islamic Jewellery, exhibition catalogue, London, 1996, nos. 51-54, p.21).

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