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Twenty-Five Beads or Appliqués with Triple Spiral Motifs

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Twenty-Five Beads or Appliqués with Triple Spiral Motifs

Place of OriginGreece, probably from the Peloponnesos or Crete
Dateabout 1400-1200 BCE
DimensionsL: 1 3/16 in. (3.0 cm); W: 7/16 in. (1.1 cm); Depth: 3/16 in. (.5 cm)
MediumCast in open, one-piece molds; stress marks on the undersides of several beads.
ClassificationGlass
Credit LineGift of Edward Drummond Libbey
Object number
1975.66A-Y
Not on View
DescriptionTwenty-five rectangular beads. Dark blue. Upperside uneven, with three raised clockwise spirals one above the other, each making two complete turns, rising to a sharp point at its center; narrow, segmented horizontal ridges separate the spirals, with a large segmented ridge at the top of each bead; underside flat. Each bead has transverse threadholes at either end.
Published ReferencesGrose, David F., Early Ancient Glass: Core-formed, Rod-Formed, and Cast Vessels and Objects from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Roman Empire, 1600 B.C. to A.D. 50, New York, Hudson Hills Press in association with the Toledo Museum of Art, 1989, cat. no. 24, p. 64, repr. (col.) p. 44.

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