
Getty Museum
Ring with Greek Inscription to Hera
Creator
UnknownAll works by this person →More on Getty ULAN- Date
- about 575 B.C.
- Medium
- Gold
- Culture
- Greek (Argive)
- Department
- Jewelry
- Institution
- Getty Museum
The front of this unusual gold ring is inscribed in Greek with the words, "Havriknidas [or perhaps Aphrikanidas] dedicated [this ring] to the white-armed goddess, Hera.” Its outer circumference is decorated with two rows of dentilated knobs separated by incised grooves. Signs of considerable wear on this outer edge indicate that it had been worn for a long time before the inscription was added and the dedication made. In the 500s B.C., the way that Greek letters were written differed significantly from city to city. The inscription on this ring uses the script of Argos, a city in southern Greece, and represents the earliest form of the Argive alphabet, suggesting a date in the early-mid 6th century B.C. The inscription consequently represents one of the earliest of all Argive texts. Hera was Argos’s patron deity, and it is probable that the ring came from the Heraion, her main sanctuary in the city. Although Homer routinely calls Hera “white-armed”, the epithet is not otherwise attested at the Heraion, and perhaps indicated the dedicator’s personal learning. Rings were a favorite dedication at this sanctuary, however, where over six hundred have been found, almost all of which are made of bronze.
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