Snake Bracelet

Getty Museum

Snake Bracelet

Creator

UnknownAll works by this person →More on Getty ULAN
Date
100 B.C.–A.D. 100
Medium
Gold
Culture
Romano-Egyptian
Department
Jewelry
Institution
Getty Museum

Spiral bracelets in the form of snakes were very popular in the Hellenistic period. This type of bracelet was worn coiled around the wearer's arm, the continuation of a fashion known earlier in the Classical period. Such slip-on bracelets were worn in pairs, on the wrists or the upper arms (compare, for example those worn by the woman on this [grave relief](http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/7009/unknown-maker-grave-naiskos-of-an-enthroned-woman-with-an-attendant-east-greek-about-100-bc/?dz=0.6209,0.3479,1.32)). On this single spiral example, the goldsmith carefully recreated the sinuous motion of the snake's curving tail. Incised crosshatching represents the texture of the scales on the snake's head and tail. In the Hellenistic period, gold made available by new territorial conquests flooded the Greek world. Combined with social and economic changes that created a wealthy clientele with a taste for luxury, this availability led to an immense outpouring of gold jewelry to meet the demand.

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