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Saturday, April 8, 2017

600 - 400 B.C. Gold Neck Ring Weighs More Than One Pound

A Bit of History

If you like jewelry, then you probably appreciate the history and beauty of the jewelry of the centuries prior to today. 

Being a fashion designer and artist, I love to delve into the past brilliant minds for inspiration and culture details. Can you imagine someone wearing this four or six hundred years before Christ? And it weighing more than one pound? Just Imagine!


The Gold Neck Ring that is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, is a beautiful and coveted piece of jewelry weighs more than one pound.

Metropolitan Museum of Art:
"This elegant and technically accomplished solid gold torque, which weighs more than a pound, is a superb example of the mastery of goldsmiths in Iron Age Europe. 

Such an imposing object would have been an emblem of status and power. Its excellent condition suggests that it might have served as a ritual offering or been placed in a tomb to accompany the dead into the afterlife. It may also simply have been deluxe jewelry. In about 50 B.C. the Roman historian Diodorus Siculus wrote that Celts in Gaul “gather gold that is used for ornaments not only for women but men as well, for they wear bracelets on their arms and wrists and also massive solid-gold collars around their necks.” 

The torque may have been made from a cast gold blank that was deeply incised or channeled along its length on four sides, evenly notched along some of the edges, and then twisted. Or it may have been constructed of four graduated square lengths of gold that were evenly notched and then twisted. Such techniques employing single or multiple strands of gold were used in several cultures in the first millennium B.C., but they were most widespread among the Celts, who populated much of western Europe."

Generally dated between 600 - 400 B.C., it is theorized it was made in either Southern Russia or Black Sea Region, considered of Celtic culture.
Dimensions: Overall: 7 1/2 x 7 1/2 x 1/2 in., 1.102lb. (19 x 19.1 x 1.2 cm, 500g)
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 301

Our appreciation to the Metropolitan Museum of Art

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