HOME :
Coin Jewelry :
Beaded Coin Necklaces : Faience Beaded Necklace Featuring Three Roman Silver Denarii
|
 |
|
|
Faience Beaded Necklace Featuring Three Roman Silver Denarii - FJ.2440
Origin: Mediterranean
Circa: 98
AD
to 244
AD
Collection: Jewelry
Medium: Silver and Faience
$4,800.00
Location: United States
|
|
|
Photo Gallery |
|
Description |
These genuine Ancient Roman silver coins have been
mounted in modern 18 karat gold pendants and
strung on a necklace composed of genuine Ancient
Egyptian faience beads with a 14 karat gold clasp.
The denarii are of the following emperors: Hadrian,
Gordian III, and Trajan.
Most ancient Egyptian beads were made of faience,
a glass-composite glaze which was introduced as
early as the Pre-Dynastic period. According to
Egyptologists, most beads were made on an axis,
probably of thread, which would burn up during
firing, leaving a hole. Disc, ring and tubular beads
were made by coating the axis with the unfired body-
paste, rolling the cylinder to an even diameter on a
flat surface, and then scoring it with a knife into
sections of the desired length. Other shapes, such
as ball beads, were rolled between the hands and
perforated while still wet with a stiff point such as a
wire needle. The beads were then dried, coating
with glaze (if the glaze had not already been mixed
with the paste), and fired. The firing process often
gave the beads a beautiful translucent quality. The
majority of faience beads are blue or green in color,
but black, red yellow and white ones were also
produced, especially in the New Egyptian Kingdom.
- (FJ.2440)
|
|
|