AN EGYPTIAN GOLD SNAKE BRACELET
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF FRANCES BROCKHOLST CUTTING, BY DESCENT
AN EGYPTIAN GOLD SNAKE BRACELET

LATE PTOLEMAIC PERIOD TO ROMAN PERIOD, CIRCA 1ST CENTURY B.C.- 1ST CENTURY A.D.

Details
AN EGYPTIAN GOLD SNAKE BRACELET
LATE PTOLEMAIC PERIOD TO ROMAN PERIOD, CIRCA 1ST CENTURY B.C.- 1ST CENTURY A.D.
2 13/16 in. (7.1 cm.) wide
Provenance
with J.J. Klejman (1906-1995), New York.
Heyward Cutting (1921-2012), Cambridge, MA, acquired from the above, 1965; thence by descent to the current owner.

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Hannah Fox Solomon
Hannah Fox Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay


The use of the snake in jewelry made its first appearance in the Greek world during the Geometric period, the earliest example being an anguiform bracelet found in Eleusis. The motif can be seen worn by female figures depicted on Athenian vases during the 6th and 5th centuries B.C., but it became immensely popular in the late Hellenistic and Roman periods. As Walker explains (p. 318 in Walker and Higgs, eds., Cleopatra of Egypt), "It was thought both that the snake was a potent symbol of fertility and that it had healing powers. The snake played an important role in the cult of Asklepios, the Greek healing god, because, as the snake lived underground in the dark, then emerged as the sun rose, it designated the transition from the underworld to the upper world. This, then, was a symbol of life and death, sickness and health, fertility and infertility." For a similar pair in the British Museum, see no. 334 in op. cit.

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