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pendant
pendant

pendant

Object NamePendant in the Shape of a Man’s Head
Made FromGlass
Date500-400 BCE
TechniqueRod-formed, trailed, tooled
SizeOverall H: 3 cm, W: 1.6 cm, D: 1.6 cm, Diam (max): 2.8 cm
Accession Number68.1.15
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
Glass Jewelry: 25 Centuries of Style
Life on a String: 35 Centuries of the Glass Bead
A Touch of Glass
Interpretive Notes
The Phoenicians were an economic and cultural force in the Mediterranean from 1200 B.C. Their realm extended from the Syro-Palestinian coast to North Africa, and they controlled much of the trade in this region and across the Mediterranean. They became skilled glassworkers who fashioned technically masterful beads and developed unique forms of pendants made by core forming. These objects were often traded. The powerful port city of Carthage (located in modern Tunisia), which was established by 800 B.C., was the center of production for many of these beads and pendants. Pendants with men’s heads, featuring curly hair and beards, are by far the bestknown work of the Phoenicians, who also crafted pendants with demons’ masks (e.g.,66.1.249) and rams’ heads (e.g., 66.1.212), as well as cylindrical barrel beads with protruding eyes that are thought to have been used as protection against the “evil eye” (e.g., 64.1.13). While the Romans would continue to display the human face on their glass beads, the type of head pendants fashioned by the Phoenicians ended with the demise of their kingdom.
Place Made
possibly Eastern Mediterranean; possibly Tunisia, Carthage
Physical DescriptionPendant in the Shape of a Man’s Head. Translucent aquamarine, opaque brick-red, opaque white, and translucent deep blue glass; rod-formed, trailed, tooled. Large pendant bead in the shape of a bearded head, buff core with applied loop on top, face modeled, eyes lined with deep blue, eyebrows and curls across top of head and vertically ribbed beard of same glass, lips applied over beard, jewelry highlights of opaque white in center of forehead and above and below ear.
Provenance
Provenance information not currently available online. Please check back in the coming weeks.
pendant
650-400 BCE
vessel
1600-1700
Bacchante Texana
Susan Stinsmuehlen-Amend
1985
pendant
400-300 BCE
Vittorio Costantini
about 1985-1989
Vittorio Costantini
about 1985-1989