A PAIR OF HELLENISTIC GOLD AND GLASS RAM-HEADED EARRINGS, the horned animal's head terminating in a collar of granulated triangles, separated from a similar tongued collar by a spherical glass bead imitating banded onyx, the hoop passing into a loop below the ram's muzzle, spirally bound with gold wire, 1st Century B.C.

Details
A PAIR OF HELLENISTIC GOLD AND GLASS RAM-HEADED EARRINGS, the horned animal's head terminating in a collar of granulated triangles, separated from a similar tongued collar by a spherical glass bead imitating banded onyx, the hoop passing into a loop below the ram's muzzle, spirally bound with gold wire, 1st Century B.C.
1½in. (3.8cm.) long max. (2)

Lot Essay

This earring type is the final development of the Hellenistic animal head earring and survived, usually with more than one bead on the hoop, into the Roman period. The ram-headed types are best known from Egypt (where they are sometimes shown on Romano-Egyptian mummy cases) but also recorded from elsewhere

More from Antiquities

View All
View All