A GREEK CARNELIAN AMYGDALOID RINGSTONE WITH NIKE
A GREEK CARNELIAN AMYGDALOID RINGSTONE WITH NIKE

ARCHAIC PERIOD, CIRCA EARLY 5TH CENTURY B.C.

Details
A GREEK CARNELIAN AMYGDALOID RINGSTONE WITH NIKE
ARCHAIC PERIOD, CIRCA EARLY 5TH CENTURY B.C.
5/8 in. (1.5 cm.) long
Provenance
Giorgio Sangiorgi (1886-1965), Rome, acquired and brought to Switzerland, late 1930s; thence by continuous descent to the current owners.
Literature
J. Boardman and C. Wagner, Masterpieces in Miniature: Engraved Gems from Prehistory to the Present, London, 2018, p. 24, no. 17.

Lot Essay

Engraved on this unusual pointed oval ringstone is Nike flying to the right with her wing upraised, wearing a voluminous chiton, proffering a fillet and a branch, symbols of victory. Most Greek gems of the Archaic and Classical periods were perforated to be mounted in swivel rings. Only rarely during this period did the Greeks bezel-mount their seal stones to be set immobile in a finger ring, the normal practice of the following Hellenistic and Roman periods. The pointed oval of this gem recalls that of a group of contemporary all-metal rings, usually of gold, some of which bear the same motif (see the gold ring from Nymphaeum, now in St. Petersburg, pl. 658 in Boardman, Greek Gems and Finger Rings). The subject was also common on coins, where the goddess usually flies above a quadriga (see for example the coins of Syracuse, including no. 801 in C. Kraay, Archaic and Classical Greek Coins).

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