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Spider Necklace Beads

300–390 CE
Not on view
Spiders with bodies shaped like human heads sit at the center of delicate webs fashioned from gold wire. The convex backs of the beads have a spiral design ending in three bird heads in profile. Small pellets inside the hollow beads would have rattled when the wearer moved. The Moche people associated spiders with warriors and sacrifice, as the capture of prisoners was considered analogous to a spider catching its prey. These beads—from a necklace of ten—are from the tomb of the Old Lord of Sipán, probably an ancestor of the Lord of Sipán, whose remains were found in a tomb nearby.



Se pueden observar arañas con rostros humanos en el centro de las delicadas telas de araña tejidas con alambre de oro. La parte trasera de las cuentas es convexa y está adornada por un espiral grabado que termina por tres cabezas de perfil que representan a un pájaro. Es probable que se hayan puesto pequeñas bolitas dentro de las cuentas de manera a que sonaran cuando el guerrero se movía. Los Moche solían asociar a las arañas con los guerreros y con el sacrificio, ya que la captura de prisioneros era considerada similar a la de una araña captivando a su presa. Estas piezas, dos de las diez que conformaban el collar, provienen de la tumba del Viejo Señor de Sipán, probablemente un ancestro del Señor de Sipán, cuyos restos fueron encontrados en la Tumba 1.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Spider Necklace Beads
  • Date: 300–390 CE
  • Geography: Peru
  • Culture: Moche
  • Medium: Gold
  • Dimensions: W. 1 3/16 × D. 2 1/16 × L. 1 3/4 × Diam. 3 1/4 in. (3 × 5.2 × 4.5 × 8.3 cm)
  • Classification: Metalwork-Jewelry
  • Credit Line: Museo Tumbas Reales de Sipán, Lambayeque, Peru, Ministerio de Cultura del Perú (MNTRS-244-INC-02; S/T3-O:1A, MNTRS-245-INC-02; S/T3-O:1B)

  • Curatorial Department: The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing

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