Necklace (ashän ketab) with amulet pendants (tälsäm)

Cleveland Museum of Art

Necklace (ashän ketab) with amulet pendants (tälsäm)

Date
late 1800s or early 1900s
Medium
silver alloy
Culture
Africa, East Africa, Ethiopia, unknown silversmith
Department
African Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ornate filigree jewelry was historically made in Ethiopia for royals and nobility by specialized silversmiths trained through long apprenticeships. This silver necklace is composed of numerous box-shaped amulet pendants ( tälsäm) meant to ward off the evil eye or other dangers. Linked to Islamic amuletic practices, the boxes are effective whether empty or whether they contain magical or prayerful texts. Their fine filigree and granulation work is characteristic of Harar as well as the Ethiopian Orthodox Christian city of Aksum. Ethiopian silver jewelry is made by melting high-purity Maria Theresa thaler coins made from the 1700s to the 1900s.

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