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Faience openwork collar

-1352/-1336

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

Faience was a very versatile material and extremely well suited to making small items such as elements of jewellery. The material, sometimes termed 'glazed composition' from the technique used, was produced by heating crushed quartz and natron, with a pigment, until they fused. Pottery moulds were used to make small objects, such as necklace elements and amulets. Many of these moulds have been found littering the sites of faience workshops at the city of Tell el-Amarna.Faience was cheap to make and could be used to manufacture jewellery on an industrial scale. The addition of pigments to the ingredients allowed a range of colours to be produced, which in the New Kingdom (1550-1070 BC) included red, yellow, green, blue and white. The most popular time for polychrome faience was in the mid-eighteenth Dynasty, during the Amarna Period.This openwork collar is typical of the type of jewellery produced in the Amarna Period. The collar is made up entirely of floral designs. The lotus flowers on the rectangular terminals are inlaid with blue, turquoise and red glazes. The vertical spacers consist of yellow mandrake fruits, green palm leaves, and purple tipped white lotus petals. These are separated by tiny beads of blue, yellow and red.

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  • Title: Faience openwork collar
  • Date Created: -1352/-1336
  • Physical Dimensions: Length: 50.80cm (total)
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: glazed; mould-made
  • Registration number: 1929,1014.61
  • Place: Excavated/Findspot Amarna, el-
  • Period/culture: 18th Dynasty
  • Material: glazed composition
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Authority: Ruler Akhenaten
  • Acquisition: Donated by Egypt Exploration Society
British Museum

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