Earrings with ibex head terminal

Ptolemaic Period

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 134

Hoops with animal head terminals are the commonest type of Hellenistic earring.

The heads on these earrings have been referred to as those of gazelles, but is now thought more likely to be an ibex. Ibex-head earrings are well-known in Egypt, but also Asia Minor and Cyprus. The gold bead that forms part of the collar behind the animal's head is scarcely rounded, pointing to a 3rd or probably 2nd century date.

The hoops on these earrings are formed of sheet gold.

Earrings with ibex head terminal, Gold

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