Pendant Cross

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 300

This small cross would haven been strung on a necklace or string and worn around the neck. Crosses were everywhere in the early Byzantine world. They marked religious, secular, and domestic buildings, public works, clothes and jewelry, and objects in the home. The cross was a sign of Christ's triumph over death and the hope of eternal life and was frequently ascribed apotropaic, or protective, powers by the faithful.

Pendant Cross, Bone

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