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Serpent Bracelet

Roman1-100 AD

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Houston, United States

Throughout the ancient world, women wore jewelry to enhance their appearance, indicate rank, and display wealth. Men lavished gifts of earrings, bracelets, and necklaces on their wives and mistresses as tokens of affection. Brides had dowries that often contained sizeable parures, or jewelry wardrobes.

This armband is shaped in the form of coiled snakes with carefully incised scales, open mouths with protruding fangs, and eyes inlaid in glass. In Egypt, such armbands were worn by followers of the goddess Isis as symbols of good luck and resurrection, and to protect against evil.

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  • Title: Serpent Bracelet
  • Creator: Roman
  • Creator Nationality: Roman
  • Date Created: 1-100 AD
  • Physical Dimensions: w9.2 x h1.5 x d10 cm (overall)
  • Type: Jewelry
  • External Link: MFAH
  • Medium: Gold, green glass eyes
  • Period: Hellenistic
  • Credit Line: The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, gift of Miss Annette Finnigan
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

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