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Permanent Collection  >  Egyptian Art  
Met Bestseller - Snake Bracelet
Snake Bracelet
ENLARGE

With Alexander the Great’s conquest of the Persian Empire in 331 B.C., the lands under his control stretched from Greece and Asia Minor through Egypt and the Near East to India. As a result of this contact with cultures far and wide, Greek arts were exposed to a host of new exotic influences. Increased commercial and cultural exchanges and the greater mobility of goldsmiths and silversmiths led to the establishment of a common artistic language in which strikingly similar images and styles coexisted in distant corners of the Hellenistic world. Vast quantities of gold passed into circulation in the Hellenistic world, and gold jewelry became more popular. Our bracelet is reproduced from a master mold taken directly from an original bracelet from around 300–250 B.C. and now in the Museum’s collection. Realistically rendered and detailed with scales on both its head and tail, the original bracelet was created in the Ptolemaic Kingdom, the area of Egypt ceded to general Ptolemy after Alexander’s early death.

24K gold plate, lightly antiqued. Inner circumference 7 5/8 in.

Snake Bracelet
09-011156
Member Price: $76.50 each
Non-Member Price: $85.00 each


Quantity:


Two-Tone Egyptian Knot Bangle Bracelet
Greek Filigree Wire Bangle
Two-Tone Egyptian Knot Bangle Bracelet
09-079450
Member Price: $166.50
Non-Member Price: $185.00
Greek Filigree Wire Bangle
09-085051
Member Price: $90.00
Non-Member Price: $100.00

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