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Wikipedia

Jewellery

Jewellery (Commonwealth English) or jewelry (American English) consists of decorative items worn for personal adornment, such as brooches, rings, necklaces, earrings, pendants, bracelets, and cufflinks. Jewellery may be attached to the body or the clothes. From a western perspective, the term is restricted to durable ornaments, excluding flowers for example. For many centuries metal such as gold often combined with gemstones, has been the normal material for jewellery, but other materials such as glass, shells and other plant materials may be used.

Various examples of jewellery throughout history

Jewellery is one of the oldest types of archaeological artefact – with 100,000-year-old beads made from Nassarius shells thought to be the oldest known jewellery.[1] The basic forms of jewellery vary between cultures but are often extremely long-lived; in European cultures the most common forms of jewellery listed above have persisted since ancient times, while other forms such as adornments for the nose or ankle, important in other cultures, are much less common.

Jewellery may be made from a wide range of materials. Gemstones and similar materials such as amber and coral, precious metals, beads, and shells have been widely used, and enamel has often been important. In most cultures jewellery can be understood as a status symbol, for its material properties, its patterns, or for meaningful symbols. Jewellery has been made to adorn nearly every body part, from hairpins to toe rings, and even genital jewellery. In modern European culture the amount worn by adult males is relatively low compared with other cultures and other periods in European culture.

The word jewellery itself is derived from the word jewel, which was anglicised from the Old French "jouel",[2] and beyond that, to the Latin word "jocale", meaning plaything. In British English, Indian English, New Zealand English, Hiberno-English, Australian English, and South African English it is spelled jewellery, while the spelling is jewelry in American English.[3] Both are used in Canadian English, though jewellery prevails by a two to one margin. In French and a few other European languages the equivalent term, joaillerie, may also cover decorated metalwork in precious metal such as objets d'art and church items, not just objects worn on the person.

Form and function

 
A gold, diamonds and sapphires red guilloché enamel "Boule de Genève", a type of pendant watch used as an accessory for women. An example of an object which is functional, artistic/decorative, marker of social status or a symbol of personal meaning.

Humans have used jewellery for a number of different reasons:

  • functional, generally to fix clothing or hair in place.
  • as a marker of social status and personal status, as with a wedding ring
  • as a signifier of some form of affiliation, whether ethnic, religious or social
  • to provide talismanic protection (in the form of amulets)[4]
  • as an artistic display
  • as a carrier or symbol of personal meaning – such as love, mourning, a personal milestone or even luck
  • considered it as a good investment
  • superstition[5]

Most[quantify] cultures at some point have had a practice of keeping large amounts of wealth stored in the form of jewellery. Numerous cultures store wedding dowries in the form of jewellery or make jewellery as a means to store or display coins. Alternatively, jewellery has been used as a currency or trade good.[6] an example being the use of slave beads.[7]

Many items of jewellery, such as brooches and buckles, originated as purely functional items, but evolved into decorative items as their functional requirement diminished.[8]

Jewellery can symbolise group membership (as in the case, of the Christian crucifix or the Jewish Star of David) or status (as in the case of chains of office, or the Western practice of married people wearing wedding rings).

Wearing of amulets and devotional medals to provide protection or to ward off evil is common in some cultures. These may take the form of symbols (such as the ankh), stones, plants, animals, body parts (such as the Khamsa), or glyphs (such as stylised versions of the Throne Verse in Islamic art).[9]

Materials and methods

 
Hair ornament, an Art Nouveau masterpiece; by René Lalique; circa 1902; gold, emeralds and diamonds; Musée d'Orsay (Paris)

In creating jewellery, gemstones, coins, or other precious items are often used, and they are typically set into precious metals. Platinum alloys range from 900 (90% pure) to 950 (95% pure). The silver used in jewellery is usually sterling silver, or 92.5% fine silver. In costume jewellery, stainless steel findings are sometimes used.

Other commonly used materials include glass, such as fused-glass or enamel; wood, often carved or turned; shells and other natural animal substances such as bone and ivory; natural clay; polymer clay; Hemp and other twines have been used as well to create jewellery that has more of a natural feel. However, any inclusion of lead or lead solder will give a British Assay office (the body which gives U.K. jewellery its stamp of approval, the Hallmark) the right to destroy the piece, however it is very rare for the assay office to do so.

Beads are frequently used in jewellery. These may be made of glass, gemstones, metal, wood, shells, clay and polymer clay. Beaded jewellery commonly encompasses necklaces, bracelets, earrings, belts and rings. Beads may be large or small; the smallest type of beads used are known as seed beads, these are the beads used for the "woven" style of beaded jewellery. Seed beads are also used in an embroidery technique where they are sewn onto fabric backings to create broad collar neck pieces and beaded bracelets. Bead embroidery, a popular type of handwork during the Victorian era, is enjoying a renaissance in modern jewellery making. Beading, or beadwork, is also very popular in many African and indigenous North American cultures.

Silversmiths, goldsmiths, and lapidaries use methods including forging, casting, soldering or welding, cutting, carving and "cold-joining" (using adhesives, staples and rivets to assemble parts).[10]

Diamonds

Diamonds were first mined in India.[11] Pliny may have mentioned them, although there is some debate as to the exact nature of the stone he referred to as Adamas.[12] In 2005, Australia, Botswana, Russia and Canada ranked among the primary sources of gemstone diamond production.[13] There are negative consequences of the diamond trade in certain areas. Diamonds mined during the recent civil wars in Angola, Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone, and other nations have been labelled as blood diamonds when they are mined in a war zone and sold to finance an insurgency.[citation needed]

The British crown jewels contain the Cullinan Diamond, part of the largest gem-quality rough diamond ever found (1905), at 3,106.75 carats (621.35 g).

 
A diamond solitaire engagement ring

Now popular in engagement rings, this usage dates back to the marriage of Maximilian I to Mary of Burgundy in 1477.[14]

A popular style is the diamond solitaire, which features a single large diamond mounted prominently.[15] Within solitaire, there are 3 categories in which a ring can be classified into: prong, bezel and tension setting.[16]

Other gemstones

Many precious and semiprecious stones are used for jewellery. Among them are:

Amber
Amber, an ancient organic gemstone, is composed of tree resin that has hardened over time. The stone must be at least one million years old to be classified as amber, and some amber can be up to 120 million years old.
Amethyst
Amethyst has historically been the most prized gemstone in the quartz family. It is treasured for its purple hue, which can range in tone from light to dark.
Emerald
Emeralds are one of the three main precious gemstones (along with rubies and sapphires) and are known for their fine green to bluish green colour. They have been treasured throughout history, and some historians report that the Egyptians mined emerald as early as 3500 BC.
Jade
Jade is most commonly associated with the colour green but can come in a number of other colours as well. Jade is closely linked to Asian culture, history, and tradition, and is sometimes referred to as the stone of heaven.
Jasper
Jasper is a gemstone of the chalcedony family that comes in a variety of colours. Often, jasper will feature unique and interesting patterns within the coloured stone. Picture jasper is a type of jasper known for the colours (often beiges and browns) and swirls in the stone's pattern.
Quartz
Quartz refers to a family of crystalline gemstones of various colours and sizes. Among the well-known types of quartz are rose quartz (which has a delicate pink colour), and smoky quartz (which comes in a variety of shades of translucent brown). A number of other gemstones, such as Amethyst and Citrine, are also part of the quartz family. Rutilated quartz is a popular type of quartz containing needle-like inclusions.
Ruby
Rubies are known for their intense red colour and are among the most highly valued precious gemstones. Rubies have been treasured for millennia. In Sanskrit, the word for ruby is ratnaraj, meaning king of precious stones.
Sapphire
The most popular form of sapphire is blue sapphire, which is known for its medium to deep blue colour and strong saturation. Fancy sapphires of various colours are also available. In the United States, blue sapphire tends to be the most popular and most affordable of the three major precious gemstones (emerald, ruby, and sapphire).
Turquoise
Turquoise is found in only a few places on earth, and the world's largest turquoise-producing region is the southwest United States. Turquoise is prized for its attractive colour, most often an intense medium blue or a greenish blue, and its ancient heritage. Turquoise is used in a great variety of jewellery styles. It is perhaps most closely associated with southwest and Native American jewellery, but it is also used in many sleek, modern styles. Some turquoise contains a matrix of dark brown markings, which provides an interesting contrast to the gemstone's bright blue colour.

Some gemstones (like pearls, coral, and amber) are classified as organic, meaning that they are produced by living organisms. Others are inorganic, meaning that they are generally composed of and arise from minerals.

Some gems, for example, amethyst, have become less valued as methods of extracting and importing them have progressed. Some man-made gems can serve in place of natural gems, such as cubic zirconia, which can be used in place of diamond.[17]

Metal finishes

 
An example of gold plated jewellery.

For platinum, gold, and silver jewellery, there are many techniques to create finishes. The most common are high-polish, satin/matte, brushed, and hammered. High-polished jewellery is the most common and gives the metal a highly reflective, shiny look. Satin, or matte finish reduces the shine and reflection of the jewellery, and this is commonly used to accentuate gemstones such as diamonds. Brushed finishes give the jewellery a textured look and are created by brushing a material (similar to sandpaper) against the metal, leaving "brush strokes". Hammered finishes are typically created by using a rounded steel hammer and hammering the jewellery to give it a wavy texture.

Some jewellery is plated to give it a shiny, reflective look or to achieve a desired colour. Sterling silver jewellery may be plated with a thin layer of 0.999 fine silver (a process known as flashing) or may be plated with rhodium or gold. Base metal costume jewellery may also be plated with silver, gold, or rhodium for a more attractive finish.

Impact on society

Jewellery has been used to denote status. In ancient Rome, only certain ranks could wear rings and[18] later, sumptuary laws dictated who could wear what type of jewellery. This was also based on rank of the citizens of that time.

Cultural dictates have also played a significant role. For example, the wearing of earrings by Western men was considered effeminate in the 19th century and early 20th century. More recently, the display of body jewellery, such as piercings, has become a mark of acceptance or seen as a badge of courage within some groups but is completely rejected in others. Likewise, hip hop culture has popularised the slang term bling-bling, which refers to ostentatious display of jewellery by men or women.

Conversely, the jewellery industry in the early 20th century launched a campaign to popularise wedding rings for men, which caught on, as well as engagement rings for men, which did not, going so far as to create a false history and claim that the practice had medieval roots. By the mid-1940s, 85% of weddings in the U.S. featured a double-ring ceremony, up from 15% in the 1920s.[19]

Some religions have specific rules or traditions surrounding jewellery (or even prohibiting it) and many religions have edicts against excessive display. Islam, for instance, considers the wearing of gold by men as Haraam.[20] The majority of Islamic jewellery was in the form of bridal dowries, and traditionally was not handed down from generation to generation; instead, on a woman's death it was sold at the souk and recycled or sold to passers-by. Islamic jewellery from before the 19th century is thus exceedingly rare.[21]

Some Christian denominations forbid the use of jewellery by both men and women, including Amish-Mennonites and Holiness churches. The New Testament of the Bible gives injunctions against the wearing of gold, in the writings of the apostles Paul and Peter, and Revelations, describes "the great whore", or false religious system, as being "decked with gold and precious stones and pearls, having a golden cup in her hand." (Rev. 17:4)

History

The history of jewellery is long and goes back many years, with many different uses among different cultures. It has endured for thousands of years and has provided various insights into how ancient cultures worked.

Prehistory

The earliest known Jewellery was actually created not by humans (Homo sapiens) but by Neanderthal living in Europe. Specifically, perforated beads made from small sea shells have been found dating to 115,000 years ago in the Cueva de los Aviones, a cave along the southeast coast of Spain. Later in Kenya, at Enkapune Ya Muto, beads made from perforated ostrich egg shells have been dated to more than 40,000 years ago. In Russia, a stone bracelet and marble ring are attributed to a similar age.[22]

Later, the European early modern humans had crude necklaces and bracelets of bone, teeth, berries, and stone hung on pieces of string or animal sinew, or pieces of carved bone used to secure clothing together. In some cases, jewellery had shell or mother-of-pearl pieces. A decorated engraved pendant (the Star Carr Pendant) dating to around 11,000 BC, and thought to be the oldest Mesolithic art in Britain, was found at the site of Star Carr in North Yorkshire in 2015.[23] In southern Russia, carved bracelets made of mammoth tusk have been found. The Venus of Hohle Fels features a perforation at the top, showing that it was intended to be worn as a pendant.

Around seven-thousand years ago, the first sign of copper jewellery was seen.[8] In October 2012 the Museum of Ancient History in Lower Austria revealed that they had found a grave of a female jewellery worker – forcing archaeologists to take a fresh look at prehistoric gender roles after it appeared to be that of a female fine metal worker – a profession that was previously thought to have been carried out exclusively by men.[24]

Africa

Egypt

The first signs of established jewellery making in Ancient Egypt was around 3,000–5,000 years ago.[25] The Egyptians preferred the luxury, rarity, and workability of gold over other metals. In Predynastic Egypt jewellery soon began to symbolise political and religious power in the community. Although it was worn by wealthy Egyptians in life, it was also worn by them in death, with jewellery commonly placed among grave goods.

In conjunction with gold jewellery, Egyptians used coloured glass, along with semi-precious gems. The colour of the jewellery had significance. Green, for example, symbolised fertility. Lapis lazuli and silver had to be imported from beyond the country's borders.

Egyptian designs were most common in Phoenician jewellery. Also, ancient Turkish designs found in Persian jewellery suggest that trade between the Middle East and Europe was not uncommon. Women wore elaborate gold and silver pieces that were used in ceremonies.[25]

 
Khmissa amulet in silver

Maghreb countries in North Africa

Jewellery of the Berber cultures is a style of traditional jewellery worn by women and girls in the rural areas of the Maghreb region in North Africa inhabited by indigenous Berber people (in Berber language: Amazigh, Imazighen, pl). Following long social and cultural traditions, the silversmiths of different ethnic Berber groups of Morocco, Algeria and neighbouring countries created intricate jewellery to adorn their women and that formed part of their ethnic identity. Traditional Berber jewellery was usually made of silver and includes elaborate brooches made of triangular plates and pins (fibula), originally used as clasps for garments, but also necklaces, bracelets, earrings and similar items.

Another major type is the so-called khmissa (local pronunciation of the Arabic word "khamsa" for the number "five"), which is called afus in the Berber language (Tamazight). This form represents the five fingers of the hand and is traditionally believed both by Muslims as well as Jewish people to protect against the Evil Eye.[26]

Europe and the Middle East

The first gold jewellery from Bulgaria

 
Oldest golden artifacts in the world from Varna necropolis – grave offerings on exposition in Varna Museum

The oldest gold jewelry in the world is dating from 4,600 BC to 4,200 BC and was discovered in Europe, at the site of Varna Necropolis, near the Black Sea coast in Bulgaria.[27] Several prehistoric Bulgarian finds are considered no less old – the golden treasures of Hotnitsa, Durankulak, artifacts from the Kurgan settlement of Yunatsite near Pazardzhik, the golden treasure Sakar, as well as beads and gold jewellery found in the Kurgan settlement of ProvadiaSolnitsata (“salt pit”). However, Varna gold is most often called the oldest since this treasure is the largest and most diverse.[28]

Mesopotamia

 
Headdress decorated with golden leaves; 2600–2400 BC; gold, lapis lazuli and carnelian; length: 38.5 cm; from the Royal Cemetery at Ur; Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City)

By approximately 5,000 years ago, jewellery-making had become a significant craft in the cities of Mesopotamia. The most significant archaeological evidence comes from the Royal Cemetery of Ur, where hundreds of burials dating 2900–2300 BC were unearthed; tombs such as that of Puabi contained a multitude of artefacts in gold, silver, and semi-precious stones, such as lapis lazuli crowns embellished with gold figurines, close-fitting collar necklaces, and jewel-headed pins. In Assyria, men and women both wore extensive amounts of jewellery, including amulets, ankle bracelets, heavy multi-strand necklaces, and cylinder seals.[29]

Jewellery in Mesopotamia tended to be manufactured from thin metal leaf and was set with large numbers of brightly coloured stones (chiefly agate, lapis, carnelian, and jasper). Favoured shapes included leaves, spirals, cones, and bunches of grapes. Jewellers created works both for human use and for adorning statues and idols. They employed a wide variety of sophisticated metalworking techniques, such as cloisonné, engraving, fine granulation, and filigree.[30]

Extensive and meticulously maintained records pertaining to the trade and manufacture of jewellery have also been unearthed throughout Mesopotamian archaeological sites. One record in the Mari royal archives, for example, gives the composition of various items of jewellery:

  • 1 necklace of flat speckled chalcedony beads including: 34 flat speckled chalcedony bead, [and] 35 gold fluted beads, in groups of five.
  • 1 necklace of flat speckled chalcedony beads including: 39 flat speckled chalcedony beads, [with] 41 fluted beads in a group that make up the hanging device.
  • 1 necklace with rounded lapis lazuli beads including: 28 rounded lapis lazuli beads, [and] 29 fluted beads for its clasp.[31]

Greece

 
Openwork hairnet; 300–200 BC; gold; diameter: 23 cm, diameter of the medallion: 11.4 cm; unknown provenance (said to be from Karpenissi (Greece)); National Archaeological Museum (Athens)[32]

The Greeks started using gold and gems in jewellery in 1600 BC, although beads shaped as shells and animals were produced widely in earlier times. Around 1500 BC, the main techniques of working gold in Greece included casting, twisting bars, and making wire.[33] Many of these sophisticated techniques were popular in the Mycenaean period, but unfortunately this skill was lost at the end of the Bronze Age. The forms and shapes of jewellery in ancient Greece such as the armring (13th century BC), brooch (10th century BC) and pins (7th century BC), have varied widely since the Bronze Age as well. Other forms of jewellery include wreaths, earrings, necklace and bracelets. A good example of the high quality that gold working techniques could achieve in Greece is the 'Gold Olive Wreath' (4th century BC), which is modeled on the type of wreath given as a prize for winners in athletic competitions like the Olympic Games. Jewellery dating from 600 to 475 BC is not well represented in the archaeological record, but after the Persian wars the quantity of jewellery again became more plentiful.[34] One particularly popular type of design at this time was a bracelet decorated with snake and animal-heads Because these bracelets used considerably more metal, many examples were made from bronze. By 300 BC, the Greeks had mastered making coloured jewellery and using amethysts, pearl, and emeralds. Also, the first signs of cameos appeared, with the Greeks creating them from Indian Sardonyx, a striped brown pink and cream agate stone. Greek jewellery was often simpler than in other cultures, with simple designs and workmanship. However, as time progressed, the designs grew in complexity and different materials were soon used.

Jewellery in Greece was hardly worn and was mostly used for public appearances or on special occasions. It was frequently given as a gift and was predominantly worn by women to show their wealth, social status, and beauty. The jewellery was often supposed to give the wearer protection from the "Evil Eye" or endowed the owner with supernatural powers, while others had a religious symbolism. Older pieces of jewellery that have been found were dedicated to the Gods.

They worked two styles of pieces: cast pieces and pieces hammered out of sheet metal. Fewer pieces of cast jewellery have been recovered. It was made by casting the metal onto two stone or clay moulds. The two halves were then joined together, and wax, followed by molten metal, was placed in the centre. This technique had been practised since the late Bronze Age. The more common form of jewellery was the hammered sheet type. Sheets of metal would be hammered to thickness and then soldered together. The inside of the two sheets would be filled with wax or another liquid to preserve the metal work. Different techniques, such as using a stamp or engraving, were then used to create motifs on the jewellery. Jewels may then be added to hollows or glass poured into special cavities on the surface.

The Greeks took much of their designs from outer origins, such as Asia, when Alexander the Great conquered part of it. In earlier designs, other European influences can also be detected. When Roman rule came to Greece, no change in jewellery designs was detected. However, by 27 BC, Greek designs were heavily influenced by the Roman culture. That is not to say that indigenous design did not thrive. Numerous polychrome butterfly pendants on silver foxtail chains, dating from the 1st century, have been found near Olbia, with only one example ever found anywhere else.[35]

Etruscan

Gorgons, pomegranates, acorns, lotus flowers and palms were a clear indicator of Greek influence in Etruscan jewellery. The modelling of heads, which was a typical practice from the Greek severe period, was a technique that spread throughout the Etruscan territory. An even clearer evidence of new influences is the shape introduced in the Orientalizing era: The Bullae. A pear shaped vessel used to hold perfume. Its surface was usually decorated with repoussé and engraved symbolic figures.

Much of the jewellery found was not worn by Etruscans, but were made to accompany them in the after world. Most, if not all, techniques of Etruscan goldsmiths were not invented by them as they are dated to the third millennium BC.

Rome

 
The Great Cameo of France; second quarter of the 1st century AD; five-layered sardonyx; 31 x 26.5 cm; Cabinet des médailles (Paris)

Although jewellery work was abundantly diverse in earlier times, especially among the barbarian tribes such as the Celts, when the Romans conquered most of Europe, jewellery was changed as smaller factions developed the Roman designs. The most common artefact of early Rome was the brooch, which was used to secure clothing together. The Romans used a diverse range of materials for their jewellery from their extensive resources across the continent. Although they used gold, they sometimes used bronze or bone, and in earlier times, glass beads & pearl. As early as 2,000 years ago, they imported Sri Lankan sapphires and Indian diamonds and used emeralds and amber in their jewellery. In Roman-ruled England, fossilised wood called jet from Northern England was often carved into pieces of jewellery. The early Italians worked in crude gold and created clasps, necklaces, earrings, and bracelets. They also produced larger pendants that could be filled with perfume.

Like the Greeks, often the purpose of Roman jewellery was to ward off the "Evil Eye" given by other people. Although women wore a vast array of jewellery, men often only wore a finger ring. Although they were expected to wear at least one ring, some Roman men wore a ring on every finger, while others wore none. Roman men and women wore rings with an engraved gem on it that was used with wax to seal documents, a practice that continued into medieval times when kings and noblemen used the same method. After the fall of the Roman Empire, the jewellery designs were absorbed by neighbouring countries and tribes.[25]

Middle Ages

 
Byzantine collier; late 6th–7th century; gold, emeralds, sapphires, amethysts and pearls; diameter: 23 cm; from a Constantinopolitan workshop; Antikensammlung Berlin (Berlin, Germany)

Post-Roman Europe continued to develop jewellery making skills. The Celts and Merovingians in particular are noted for their jewellery, which in terms of quality matched or exceeded that of the Byzantine Empire. Clothing fasteners, amulets, and, to a lesser extent, signet rings, are the most common artefacts known to us. A particularly striking Celtic example is the Tara Brooch.[38] The Torc was common throughout Europe as a symbol of status and power. By the 8th century, jewelled weaponry was common for men, while other jewellery (with the exception of signet rings) seemed to become the domain of women. Grave goods found in a 6th–7th century burial near Chalon-sur-Saône are illustrative. A young girl was buried with: 2 silver fibulae, a necklace (with coins), bracelet, gold earrings, a pair of hair-pins, comb, and buckle.[39] The Celts specialised in continuous patterns and designs, while Merovingian designs are best known for stylised animal figures.[40] They were not the only groups known for high quality work. Note the Visigoth work shown here, and the numerous decorative objects found at the Anglo-Saxon Ship burial at Sutton Hoo Suffolk, England are a particularly well-known example.[25] On the continent, cloisonné and garnet were perhaps the quintessential method and gemstone of the period.

The Eastern successor of the Roman Empire, the Byzantine Empire, continued many of the methods of the Romans, though religious themes came to predominate. Unlike the Romans, the Franks, and the Celts, however, Byzantium used light-weight gold leaf rather than solid gold, and more emphasis was placed on stones and gems. As in the West, Byzantine jewellery was worn by wealthier females, with male jewellery apparently restricted to signet rings. Woman's jewellery had some peculiarities like kolts that decorated headband. Like other contemporary cultures, jewellery was commonly buried with its owner.[41]

Renaissance

 
Cameo; 16th century; sardonyx; Cabinet des Médailles (Paris)

The Renaissance and exploration both had significant impacts on the development of jewellery in Europe. By the 17th century, increasing exploration and trade led to increased availability of a wide variety of gemstones as well as exposure to the art of other cultures. Whereas prior to this the working of gold and precious metal had been at the forefront of jewellery, this period saw increasing dominance of gemstones and their settings. An example of this is the Cheapside Hoard, the stock of a jeweller hidden in London during the Commonwealth period and not found again until 1912. It contained Colombian emerald, topaz, amazonite from Brazil, spinel, iolite, and chrysoberyl from Sri Lanka, ruby from India, Afghan lapis lazuli, Persian turquoise, Red Sea peridot, as well as Bohemian and Hungarian opal, garnet, and amethyst. Large stones were frequently set in box-bezels on enamelled rings.[42] Notable among merchants of the period was Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, who brought the precursor stone of the Hope Diamond to France in the 1660s.

When Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned as Emperor of the French in 1804, he revived the style and grandeur of jewellery and fashion in France. Under Napoleon's rule, jewellers introduced parures, suites of matching jewellery, such as a diamond tiara, diamond earrings, diamond rings, a diamond brooch, and a diamond necklace. Both of Napoleon's wives had beautiful sets such as these and wore them regularly. Another fashion trend resurrected by Napoleon was the cameo. Soon after his cameo decorated crown was seen, cameos were highly sought. The period also saw the early stages of costume jewellery, with fish scale covered glass beads in place of pearls or conch shell cameos instead of stone cameos. New terms were coined to differentiate the arts: jewellers who worked in cheaper materials were called bijoutiers, while jewellers who worked with expensive materials were called joailliers, a practice which continues to this day.

Romanticism

 
Russian earring; 19th century; silver, enamel and red glass beads; overall: 6.4 x 2.6 cm; Cleveland Museum of Art (Cleveland)

Starting in the late 18th century, Romanticism had a profound impact on the development of western jewellery. Perhaps the most significant influences were the public's fascination with the treasures being discovered through the birth of modern archaeology and a fascination with Medieval and Renaissance art. Changing social conditions and the onset of the Industrial Revolution also led to growth of a middle class that wanted and could afford jewellery. As a result, the use of industrial processes, cheaper alloys, and stone substitutes led to the development of paste or costume jewellery. Distinguished goldsmiths continued to flourish, however, as wealthier patrons sought to ensure that what they wore still stood apart from the jewellery of the masses, not only through use of precious metals and stones but also though superior artistic and technical work. One such artist was the French goldsmith François-Désiré Froment-Meurice. A category unique to this period and quite appropriate to the philosophy of romanticism was mourning jewellery. It originated in England, where Queen Victoria was often seen wearing jet jewellery after the death of Prince Albert, and it allowed the wearer to continue wearing jewellery while expressing a state of mourning at the death of a loved one.[43]

In the United States, this period saw the founding in 1837 of Tiffany & Co. by Charles Lewis Tiffany. Tiffany's put the United States on the world map in terms of jewellery and gained fame creating dazzling commissions for people such as the wife of Abraham Lincoln. Later, it would gain popular notoriety as the setting of the film Breakfast at Tiffany's. In France, Pierre Cartier founded Cartier SA in 1847, while 1884 saw the founding of Bulgari in Italy. The modern production studio had been born and was a step away from the former dominance of individual craftsmen and patronage.

This period also saw the first major collaboration between East and West. Collaboration in Pforzheim between German and Japanese artists led to Shakudō plaques set into Filigree frames being created by the Stoeffler firm in 1885).[44] Perhaps the grand finalé – and an appropriate transition to the following period – were the masterful creations of the Russian artist Peter Carl Fabergé, working for the Imperial Russian court, whose Fabergé eggs and jewellery pieces are still considered as the epitome of the goldsmith's art.

18th century/Romanticism/Renaissance

Many whimsical fashions were introduced in the extravagant eighteenth century. Cameos that were used in connection with jewellery were the attractive trinkets along with many of the small objects such as brooches, ear-rings and scarf-pins. Some of the necklets were made of several pieces joined with the gold chains were in and bracelets were also made sometimes to match the necklet and the brooch. At the end of the Century the jewellery with cut steel intermixed with large crystals was introduced by an Englishman, Matthew Boulton of Birmingham.[45]

Art Nouveau

 
Breastplate with a peacocks; René Lalique; circa 1898–1900; gold, enamels, opals and diamonds; Calouste Gulbenkian Museum (Lisboa, Portugal)

In the 1890s, jewellers began to explore the potential of the growing Art Nouveau style and the closely related German Jugendstil, British (and to some extent American) Arts and Crafts Movement, Catalan Modernisme, Austro-Hungarian Sezession, Italian "Liberty", etc.

Art Nouveau jewellery encompassed many distinct features including a focus on the female form and an emphasis on colour, most commonly rendered through the use of enamelling techniques including basse-taille, champleve, cloisonné, and plique-à-jour. Motifs included orchids, irises, pansies, vines, swans, peacocks, snakes, dragonflies, mythological creatures, and the female silhouette.

René Lalique, working for the Paris shop of Samuel Bing, was recognised by contemporaries as a leading figure in this trend. The Darmstadt Artists' Colony and Wiener Werkstätte provided perhaps the most significant input to the trend, while in Denmark Georg Jensen, though best known for his Silverware, also contributed significant pieces. In England, Liberty & Co., (notably through the Cymric designs of Archibald Knox) and the British arts & crafts movement of Charles Robert Ashbee contributed slightly more linear but still characteristic designs. The new style moved the focus of the jeweller's art from the setting of stones to the artistic design of the piece itself. Lalique's dragonfly design is one of the best examples of this. Enamels played a large role in technique, while sinuous organic lines are the most recognisable design feature.

The end of World War I once again changed public attitudes, and a more sober style developed.[46]

Art Deco

Growing political tensions, the after-effects of the war, and a reaction against the perceived decadence of the turn of the 20th century led to simpler forms, combined with more effective manufacturing for mass production of high-quality jewellery. Covering the period of the 1920s and 1930s, the style has become popularly known as Art Deco. Walter Gropius and the German Bauhaus movement, with their philosophy of "no barriers between artists and craftsmen" led to some interesting and stylistically simplified forms. Modern materials were also introduced: plastics and aluminium were first used in jewellery, and of note are the chromed pendants of Russian-born Bauhaus master Naum Slutzky. Technical mastery became as valued as the material itself. In the West, this period saw the reinvention of granulation by the German Elizabeth Treskow, although development of the re-invention has continued into the 1990s. It is based on the basic shapes.

Asia

In Asia, the Indian subcontinent has the longest continuous legacy of jewellery making anywhere, Asia was the first place where these jewellery were made in large numbers for the royals[citation needed] with a history of over 5,000 years.[47] One of the first to start jewellery making were the peoples of the Indus Valley civilization, in what is now predominately modern-day Pakistan and part of northern and western India. Early jewellery making in China started around the same period, but it became widespread with the spread of Buddhism around 2,000 years ago.

China

The Chinese used silver in their jewellery more than gold. Blue kingfisher feathers were tied onto early Chinese jewellery and later, blue gems and glass were incorporated into designs. However, jade was preferred over any other stone. The Chinese revered jade because of the human-like qualities they assigned to it, such as its hardness, durability, and beauty.[8] The first jade pieces were very simple, but as time progressed, more complex designs evolved. Jade rings from between the 4th and 7th centuries BC show evidence of having been worked with a compound milling machine, hundreds of years before the first mention of such equipment in the west.[48]

In China, the most uncommon piece of jewellery is the earring, which was worn neither by men nor women.[49] In modern times, earrings are still considered culturally taboo for men in China—in fact, in 2019, the Chinese video streaming service iQiyi began blurring the ears of male actors wearing earrings. Amulets were common, often with a Chinese symbol or dragon. Dragons, Chinese symbols, and phoenixes were frequently depicted on jewellery designs.

The Chinese often placed their jewellery in their graves. Most Chinese graves found by archaeologists contain decorative jewellery.[50]

Indian subcontinent

 
Necklace with Shiva's family; late 19th century; gold inlaid with rubies, a diamond Rudraksha beads (elaeo carpus seeds) and silver back plate on clasp; overall: 38.1 cm; Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Los Angeles, US)

The Indian subcontinent has a long jewellery history, which has gone through various changes via cultural influence and politics for more than 5,000–8,000 years. Because India had an abundant supply of precious metals and gems, it prospered financially through export and exchange with other countries. While European traditions were heavily influenced by waxing and waning empires, India enjoyed a continuous development of art forms for some 5,000 years.[47] One of the first to start jewellery making were the peoples of the Indus Valley civilization. By 1500 BC, the peoples of the Indus Valley were creating gold earrings and necklaces, bead necklaces, and metallic bangles. Before 2100 BC, prior to the period when metals were widely used, the largest jewellery trade in the Indus Valley region was the bead trade. Beads in the Indus Valley were made using simple techniques. First, a bead maker would need a rough stone, which would be bought from an eastern stone trader. The stone would then be placed into a hot oven where it would be heated until it turned deep red, a colour highly prized by people of the Indus Valley. The red stone would then be chipped to the right size and a hole bored through it with primitive drills. The beads were then polished. Some beads were also painted with designs. This art form was often passed down through the family. Children of bead makers often learned how to work beads from a young age. Each stone had its own characteristics related to Hinduism.

Jewellery in the Indus Valley was worn predominantly by females, who wore numerous clay or shell bracelets on their wrists. They were often shaped like doughnuts and painted black. Over time, clay bangles were discarded for more durable ones. In present-day India, bangles are made out of metal or glass.[51] Other pieces that women frequently wore were thin bands of gold that would be worn on the forehead, earrings, primitive brooches, chokers, and gold rings. Although women wore jewellery the most, some men in the Indus Valley wore beads. Small beads were often crafted to be placed in men and women's hair. The beads were about one millimetre long.

A female skeleton (presently on display at the National Museum, New Delhi, India) wears a carlinean bangle (bracelet) on her left hand. Kada is a special kind of bracelet and is widely popular in Indian culture. They symbolize animals such as peacock, elephant, etc.[52]

According to Hindu belief, gold and silver are considered as sacred metals. Gold is symbolic of the warm sun, while silver suggests the cool moon. Both are the quintessential metals of Indian jewellery. Pure gold does not oxidise or corrode with time, which is why Hindu tradition associates gold with immortality. Gold imagery occurs frequently in ancient Indian literature. In the Vedic Hindu belief of cosmological creation, the source of physical and spiritual human life originated in and evolved from a golden womb (hiranyagarbha) or egg (hiranyanda), a metaphor of the sun, whose light rises from the primordial waters.[53]

Jewellery had great status with India's royalty; it was so powerful that they established laws, limiting wearing of jewellery to royalty. Only royalty and a few others to whom they granted permission could wear gold ornaments on their feet. This would normally be considered breaking the appreciation of the sacred metals. Even though the majority of the Indian population wore jewellery, Maharajas and people related to royalty had a deeper connection with jewellery. The Maharaja's role was so important that the Hindu philosophers identified him as central to the smooth working of the world. He was considered as a divine being, a deity in human form, whose duty was to uphold and protect dharma, the moral order of the universe.[54]

Navaratna (nine gems) is a powerful jewel frequently worn by a Maharaja (Emperor). It is an amulet, which comprises diamond, pearl, ruby, sapphire, emerald, topaz, cat's eye, coral, and hyacinth (red zircon). Each of these stones is associated with a celestial deity, represented the totality of the Hindu universe when all nine gems are together. The diamond is the most powerful gem among the nine stones. There were various cuts for the gemstone. Indian Kings bought gemstones privately from the sellers. Maharaja and other royal family members value gem as Hindu God. They exchanged gems with people to whom they were very close, especially the royal family members and other intimate allies.

India was the first country to mine diamonds, with some mines dating back to 296 BC. India traded the diamonds, realising their valuable qualities. Historically, diamonds have been given to retain or regain a lover's or ruler's lost favour, as symbols of tribute, or as an expression of fidelity in exchange for concessions and protection. Mughal emperors and Kings used the diamonds as a means of assuring their immortality by having their names and worldly titles inscribed upon them. Moreover, it has played and continues to play a pivotal role in Indian social, political, economic, and religious event, as it often has done elsewhere. In Indian history, diamonds have been used to acquire military equipment, finance wars, foment revolutions, and tempt defections. They have contributed to the abdication or the decapitation of potentates. They have been used to murder a representative of the dominating power by lacing his food with crushed diamond. Indian diamonds have been used as security to finance large loans needed to buttress politically or economically tottering regimes. Victorious military heroes have been honoured by rewards of diamonds and also have been used as ransom payment for release from imprisonment or abduction.[55]

Today, many jewellery designs and traditions are used, and jewellery is commonplace in Indian ceremonies and weddings.[50] For many Indians, especially those who follow the Hindu or Jain faiths, bridal jewellery is known as streedhan and functions as personal wealth for the bride only, as a sort of financial security. For this reason, this jewellery, especially in the sacred metals of gold and silver, has large cultural significance for Indian brides. Jewellery is worn on the arms and hands, ears, neck, hair, head, feet, toes and waist to bless the bride with prosperity.[56]

North and South America

 
Moche ear ornaments depicting winged runners; 3rd–7th century; gold, turquoise, sodalite and shell; diameter: 8 cm; Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City)

Jewellery making started in the Americas with the arrival of Paleo-Indians more than 15,000 years ago. This jewellery would have been made from stone, shell, bone and other perishable materials. The American continent is home to 2 cradles of civilization: in the Andes and Mesoamerica. Cultures in these regions developed more complex methods of jewellery creation. The Andes is the origin of hot working metallurgy in the Americas and consequently the region has the longest history of work in materials such as silver, platinum and gold. Metallurgy began in Mesoamerica during the Termainal Classic era, likely arriving from direct maritime trade with the Andean cultures. As a result, western Mesoamerican cultures, such as the Tarascans and Mixtecs, had more complex use of the technology.

With the Moche culture, goldwork flourished. The pieces are no longer simple metalwork, but are now masterful examples of jewellery making. Pieces are sophisticated in their design, and feature inlays of turquoise, mother of pearl, spondylus shell, and amethyst. The nose and ear ornaments, chest plates, small containers and whistles are considered masterpieces of ancient Peruvian culture.[57] A notable example of Andean metallurgy is the Northern Andean cultures' work with platinum, which has a much higher melting point than other precious metals. There are only a few known examples of cold worked platinum in the Old World and no known intentionally hot worked examples (platinum wasn't identified as a separate element and small inclusions appeared in some goldwork). In the New World however, certain Andean cultures recognized platinum as a separate metal and were able to incorporate it into jewellery, such as through sintering it with gold.[58]

 
Jadeite funerary jewellery from Tomb 1 of Structure VII of Calakmul, thought to belong to Yuknoom Tookʼ Kʼawiil. Late Classic (660 to 750 AD).

Among the Late Post-Classic Aztecs, only nobility wore gold jewellery, as it showed their rank, power, and wealth. A large portion of "Aztec gold" jewellery was created by Mixtec artisans. The Mixtecs were particularly known for their goldwork and gold jewellery was part of the tribute payed by Mixtec polities to the Aztecs. In general, the more jewellery an Aztec noble wore, the higher his status or prestige. The Emperor and his High Priests, for example, would be nearly completely covered in jewellery when making public appearances. Although gold was the most common and a popular material used in Aztec jewellery, jade, turquoise, and certain feathers were considered more valuable.[59] In addition to adornment and status, the Aztecs also used jewellery in sacrifices to appease the gods.[25][43]

Another ancient American civilization with expertise in jewellery making were the Maya. During the Pre-Classic and Classic era of Maya civilization, the Maya were making jewellery from local materials such as jade, pearls, and sea shell while also incorporating imported materials such as obsidian and turquoise. In the Terminal Classic and Post-Classic, importation of gold, silver, bronze, and copper lead to the use of these materials in jewellery. Merchants and nobility were the only few that wore expensive jewellery in the Maya region, much the same as with the Aztecs.[50] Jade in particular had an important role across Mesoamerica.

In Northern America, Native Americans used shells, wood, turquoise, and soapstone The turquoise was used in necklaces and to be placed in earrings. The turquoise incorporated into Mesoamerican jewellery was primarily obtained through trade with Oasisamerica. Native Americans with access to oyster shells, often located in only one location in America, traded the shells with other tribes, showing the great importance of the body adornment trade in Northern America.[60]

Jewellery played a major role in the fate of the Americas when the Spanish colonizers were spurred to search for gold on the American mainland after coming into contact with Caribbean natives that had gold jewellery obtained through trade with the mainland. Continued contact with Native Americans wearing gold jewellery eventually lead to Spanish expeditions of the mythological El Dorado.

Native American

 
Bai-De-Schluch-A-Ichin or Be-Ich-Schluck-Ich-In-Et-Tzuzzigi (Slender Silversmith) "Metal Beater," Navajo silversmith, photo by George Ben Wittick, 1883

Native American jewellery is the personal adornment, often in the forms of necklaces, earrings, bracelets, rings, pins, brooches, labrets, and more, made by the Indigenous peoples of the United States. Native American jewellery reflects the cultural diversity and history of its makers. Native American tribes continue to develop distinct aesthetics rooted in their personal artistic visions and cultural traditions. Artists create jewellery for adornment, ceremonies, and trade. Lois Sherr Dubin writes, "[i]n the absence of written languages, adornment became an important element of Indian [Native American] communication, conveying many levels of information." Later, jewellery and personal adornment "...signaled resistance to assimilation. It remains a major statement of tribal and individual identity."[61]

Within the Haida Nation of the Pacific Northwest, copper was used as a form of jewellery for creating bracelets.[62]

Metalsmiths, beaders, carvers, and lapidaries combine a variety of metals, hardwoods, precious and semi-precious gemstones, beadwork, quillwork, teeth, bones, hide, vegetal fibres, and other materials to create jewellery. Contemporary Native American jewellery ranges from hand-quarried and processed stones and shells to computer-fabricated steel and titanium jewellery.

Pacific

Jewellery making in the Pacific started later than in other areas because of recent human settlement. Early Pacific jewellery was made of bone, wood, and other natural materials, and thus has not survived. Most Pacific jewellery is worn above the waist, with headdresses, necklaces, hair pins, and arm and waist belts being the most common pieces.

Jewellery in the Pacific, with the exception of Australia, is worn to be a symbol of either fertility or power. Elaborate headdresses are worn by many Pacific cultures and some, such as the inhabitants of Papua New Guinea, wear certain headdresses once they have killed an enemy. Tribesman may wear boar bones through their noses.

Island jewellery is still very much primal because of the lack of communication with outside cultures. Some areas of Borneo and Papua New Guinea are yet to be explored by Western nations. However, the island nations that were flooded with Western missionaries have had drastic changes made to their jewellery designs. Missionaries saw any type of tribal jewellery as a sign of the wearer's devotion to paganism. Thus many tribal designs were lost forever in the mass conversion to Christianity.[63]

Australia is now the number one supplier of opals in the world. Opals had already been mined in Europe and South America for many years prior, but in the late 19th century, the Australian opal market became predominant. Australian opals are only mined in a few select places around the country, making it one of the most profitable stones in the Pacific.[64]

The New Zealand Māori traditionally had a strong culture of personal adornment,[65] most famously the hei-tiki. Hei-tikis are traditionally carved by hand from bone, nephrite, or bowenite.

Nowadays a wide range of such traditionally inspired items such as bone carved pendants based on traditional fishhooks hei matau and other greenstone jewellery are popular with young New Zealanders of all backgrounds – for whom they relate to a generalized sense of New Zealand identity. These trends have contributed towards a worldwide interest in traditional Māori culture and arts.

Other than jewellery created through Māori influence, modern jewellery in New Zealand is multicultural and varied.[63]

Modern

 
Gold and gemstone contemporary jewellery design
 
Male hand with modern silver rings, one with a tribal motive.

Most modern commercial jewellery continues traditional forms and styles, but designers such as Georg Jensen have widened the concept of wearable art. The advent of new materials, such as plastics, Precious Metal Clay (PMC), and colouring techniques, has led to increased variety in styles. Other advances, such as the development of improved pearl harvesting by people such as Mikimoto Kōkichi and the development of improved quality artificial gemstones such as moissanite (a diamond simulant), has placed jewellery within the economic grasp of a much larger segment of the population.

The "jewellery as art" movement was spearheaded by artisans such as Robert Lee Morris and continued by designers such as Gill Forsbrook in the UK. Influence from other cultural forms is also evident. One example of this is bling-bling style jewellery, popularised by hip-hop and rap artists in the early 21st century, e.g. grills, a type of jewellery worn over the teeth.

 
Indian actress Shraddha Kapoor showcasing modern Indian-style jewellery

The late 20th century saw the blending of European design with oriental techniques such as Mokume-gane. The following are innovations in the decades straddling the year 2000: "Mokume-gane, hydraulic die forming, anti-clastic raising, fold-forming, reactive metal anodising, shell forms, PMC, photoetching, and [use of] CAD/CAM."[66]

Also, 3D printing as a production technique gains more and more importance. With a great variety of services offering this production method, jewellery design becomes accessible to a growing number of creatives. An important advantage of using 3d printing are the relatively low costs for prototypes, small batch series or unique and personalized designs. Shapes that are hard or impossible to create by hand can often be realized by 3D printing. Popular materials to print include polyamide, steel and wax (latter for further processing). Every printable material has its very own constraints that have to be considered while designing the piece of jewellery using 3D modelling software.

Artisan jewellery continues to grow as both a hobby and a profession. With more than 17 United States periodicals about beading alone, resources, accessibility, and a low initial cost of entry continues to expand production of hand-made adornments. Some fine examples of artisan jewellery can be seen at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.[67] The increase in numbers of students choosing to study jewellery design and production in Australia has grown in the past 20 years, and Australia now has a thriving contemporary jewellery community. Many of these jewellers have embraced modern materials and techniques, as well as incorporating traditional workmanship.

More expansive use of metal to adorn the wearer, where the piece is larger and more elaborate than what would normally be considered jewellery, has come to be referred to by designers and fashion writers as metal couture.[68][69]

Masonic

 
Types of masonic collar jewels

Freemasons attach jewels to their detachable collars when in Lodge to signify a Brothers Office held with the Lodge. For example, the square represents the Master of the Lodge and the dove represents the Deacon.

Body modification

 
A Padaung girl in Northern Thailand

Jewellery used in body modification can be simple and plain or dramatic and extreme. The use of simple silver studs, rings, and earrings predominates. Common jewellery pieces such as earrings are a form of body modification, as they are accommodated by creating a small hole in the ear.

Padaung women in Myanmar place large golden rings around their necks. From as early as five years old, girls are introduced to their first neck ring. Over the years, more rings are added. In addition to the twenty-plus pounds of rings on her neck, a woman will also wear just as many rings on her calves. At their extent, some necks modified like this can reach 10–15 in (25–38 cm) long. The practice has health impacts and has in recent years declined from cultural norm to tourist curiosity.[70] Tribes related to the Padaung, as well as other cultures throughout the world, use jewellery to stretch their earlobes or enlarge ear piercings. In the Americas, labrets have been worn since before first contact by Innu and First Nations peoples of the northwest coast.[71] Lip plates have been worn by the African Mursi and Sara people, as well as some South American peoples.

In the late twentieth century, the influence of modern primitivism led to many of these practices being incorporated into western subcultures. Many of these practices rely on a combination of body modification and decorative objects, thus keeping the distinction between these two types of decoration blurred.

In many cultures, jewellery is used as a temporary body modifier; in some cases, with hooks or other objects being placed into the recipient's skin. Although this procedure is often carried out by tribal or semi-tribal groups, often acting under a trance during religious ceremonies, this practice has seeped into western culture. Many extreme-jewellery shops now cater to people wanting large hooks or spikes set into their skin. Most often, these hooks are used in conjunction with pulleys to hoist the recipient into the air. This practice is said to give an erotic feeling to the person and some couples have even performed their marriage ceremony whilst being suspended by hooks.[70]

Jewellery market

 
The Oulun Koru jewellery shop at the Kirkkokatu street in Oulu, Finland

According to a 2007 KPMG study,[72] the largest jewellery market is the United States with a market share of 31%, Japan, India, China, and the Middle East each with 8–9%, and Italy with 5%. The authors of the study predicted a dramatic change in market shares by 2015, where the market share of the United States will have dropped to around 25%, and China and India will increase theirs to over 13%. The Trend of buying jewellery online is also increasing day by day, as a result the best quality jewellery can be provided at a cheaper price to any part of India via many online shops. The Middle East will remain more or less constant at 9%, whereas Europe's and Japan's market share will be halved and become less than 4% for Japan, and less than 3% for the biggest individual European countries, Italy and the UK.

See also

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Further reading

  • Borel, F. 1994. The Splendor of Ethnic Jewelry: from the Colette and Jean-Pierre Ghysels Collection. New York: H.N. Abrams (ISBN 0810929937).
  • Evans, J. 1989. A History of Jewellery 1100–1870 (ISBN 0486261220).
  • LaGamma, Alisa (1991). Metropolitan jewelry. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-0870996160.
  • Nemet-Nejat, Karen Rhea 1998. Daily Life in Ancient Mesopotamia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press (ISBN 0313294976).
  • Tait, H. 1986. Seven Thousand Years of Jewellery. London: British Museum Publications (ISBN 0714120340).

External links

  •   Media related to Jewellery at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Works related to Jewellery at Wikisource
  •   The dictionary definition of jewellery at Wiktionary

jewellery, other, uses, disambiguation, commonwealth, english, jewelry, american, english, consists, decorative, items, worn, personal, adornment, such, brooches, rings, necklaces, earrings, pendants, bracelets, cufflinks, attached, body, clothes, from, wester. For other uses see Jewellery disambiguation Jewellery Commonwealth English or jewelry American English consists of decorative items worn for personal adornment such as brooches rings necklaces earrings pendants bracelets and cufflinks Jewellery may be attached to the body or the clothes From a western perspective the term is restricted to durable ornaments excluding flowers for example For many centuries metal such as gold often combined with gemstones has been the normal material for jewellery but other materials such as glass shells and other plant materials may be used Various examples of jewellery throughout history Jewellery is one of the oldest types of archaeological artefact with 100 000 year old beads made from Nassarius shells thought to be the oldest known jewellery 1 The basic forms of jewellery vary between cultures but are often extremely long lived in European cultures the most common forms of jewellery listed above have persisted since ancient times while other forms such as adornments for the nose or ankle important in other cultures are much less common Jewellery may be made from a wide range of materials Gemstones and similar materials such as amber and coral precious metals beads and shells have been widely used and enamel has often been important In most cultures jewellery can be understood as a status symbol for its material properties its patterns or for meaningful symbols Jewellery has been made to adorn nearly every body part from hairpins to toe rings and even genital jewellery In modern European culture the amount worn by adult males is relatively low compared with other cultures and other periods in European culture The word jewellery itself is derived from the word jewel which was anglicised from the Old French jouel 2 and beyond that to the Latin word jocale meaning plaything In British English Indian English New Zealand English Hiberno English Australian English and South African English it is spelled jewellery while the spelling is jewelry in American English 3 Both are used in Canadian English though jewellery prevails by a two to one margin In French and a few other European languages the equivalent term joaillerie may also cover decorated metalwork in precious metal such as objets d art and church items not just objects worn on the person Contents 1 Form and function 2 Materials and methods 2 1 Diamonds 2 2 Other gemstones 2 3 Metal finishes 3 Impact on society 4 History 4 1 Prehistory 4 2 Africa 4 2 1 Egypt 4 2 2 Maghreb countries in North Africa 4 3 Europe and the Middle East 4 3 1 The first gold jewellery from Bulgaria 4 3 2 Mesopotamia 4 3 3 Greece 4 3 4 Etruscan 4 3 5 Rome 4 3 6 Middle Ages 4 3 7 Renaissance 4 3 8 Romanticism 4 3 9 18th century Romanticism Renaissance 4 3 10 Art Nouveau 4 3 11 Art Deco 4 4 Asia 4 4 1 China 4 4 2 Indian subcontinent 4 5 North and South America 4 6 Native American 4 7 Pacific 5 Modern 6 Masonic 7 Body modification 8 Jewellery market 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksForm and function Edit A gold diamonds and sapphires red guilloche enamel Boule de Geneve a type of pendant watch used as an accessory for women An example of an object which is functional artistic decorative marker of social status or a symbol of personal meaning Humans have used jewellery for a number of different reasons functional generally to fix clothing or hair in place as a marker of social status and personal status as with a wedding ring as a signifier of some form of affiliation whether ethnic religious or social to provide talismanic protection in the form of amulets 4 as an artistic display as a carrier or symbol of personal meaning such as love mourning a personal milestone or even luck considered it as a good investment superstition 5 Most quantify cultures at some point have had a practice of keeping large amounts of wealth stored in the form of jewellery Numerous cultures store wedding dowries in the form of jewellery or make jewellery as a means to store or display coins Alternatively jewellery has been used as a currency or trade good 6 an example being the use of slave beads 7 Many items of jewellery such as brooches and buckles originated as purely functional items but evolved into decorative items as their functional requirement diminished 8 Jewellery can symbolise group membership as in the case of the Christian crucifix or the Jewish Star of David or status as in the case of chains of office or the Western practice of married people wearing wedding rings Wearing of amulets and devotional medals to provide protection or to ward off evil is common in some cultures These may take the form of symbols such as the ankh stones plants animals body parts such as the Khamsa or glyphs such as stylised versions of the Throne Verse in Islamic art 9 Materials and methods Edit Hair ornament an Art Nouveau masterpiece by Rene Lalique circa 1902 gold emeralds and diamonds Musee d Orsay Paris In creating jewellery gemstones coins or other precious items are often used and they are typically set into precious metals Platinum alloys range from 900 90 pure to 950 95 pure The silver used in jewellery is usually sterling silver or 92 5 fine silver In costume jewellery stainless steel findings are sometimes used Other commonly used materials include glass such as fused glass or enamel wood often carved or turned shells and other natural animal substances such as bone and ivory natural clay polymer clay Hemp and other twines have been used as well to create jewellery that has more of a natural feel However any inclusion of lead or lead solder will give a British Assay office the body which gives U K jewellery its stamp of approval the Hallmark the right to destroy the piece however it is very rare for the assay office to do so Beads are frequently used in jewellery These may be made of glass gemstones metal wood shells clay and polymer clay Beaded jewellery commonly encompasses necklaces bracelets earrings belts and rings Beads may be large or small the smallest type of beads used are known as seed beads these are the beads used for the woven style of beaded jewellery Seed beads are also used in an embroidery technique where they are sewn onto fabric backings to create broad collar neck pieces and beaded bracelets Bead embroidery a popular type of handwork during the Victorian era is enjoying a renaissance in modern jewellery making Beading or beadwork is also very popular in many African and indigenous North American cultures Silversmiths goldsmiths and lapidaries use methods including forging casting soldering or welding cutting carving and cold joining using adhesives staples and rivets to assemble parts 10 Diamonds Edit Main article Diamond Diamonds Diamonds were first mined in India 11 Pliny may have mentioned them although there is some debate as to the exact nature of the stone he referred to as Adamas 12 In 2005 Australia Botswana Russia and Canada ranked among the primary sources of gemstone diamond production 13 There are negative consequences of the diamond trade in certain areas Diamonds mined during the recent civil wars in Angola Ivory Coast Sierra Leone and other nations have been labelled as blood diamonds when they are mined in a war zone and sold to finance an insurgency citation needed The British crown jewels contain the Cullinan Diamond part of the largest gem quality rough diamond ever found 1905 at 3 106 75 carats 621 35 g A diamond solitaire engagement ring Now popular in engagement rings this usage dates back to the marriage of Maximilian I to Mary of Burgundy in 1477 14 A popular style is the diamond solitaire which features a single large diamond mounted prominently 15 Within solitaire there are 3 categories in which a ring can be classified into prong bezel and tension setting 16 Other gemstones Edit Main article Gemstone Jade Jasper Ruby Sapphire TurquoiseMany precious and semiprecious stones are used for jewellery Among them are Amber Amber an ancient organic gemstone is composed of tree resin that has hardened over time The stone must be at least one million years old to be classified as amber and some amber can be up to 120 million years old Amethyst Amethyst has historically been the most prized gemstone in the quartz family It is treasured for its purple hue which can range in tone from light to dark Emerald Emeralds are one of the three main precious gemstones along with rubies and sapphires and are known for their fine green to bluish green colour They have been treasured throughout history and some historians report that the Egyptians mined emerald as early as 3500 BC Jade Jade is most commonly associated with the colour green but can come in a number of other colours as well Jade is closely linked to Asian culture history and tradition and is sometimes referred to as the stone of heaven Jasper Jasper is a gemstone of the chalcedony family that comes in a variety of colours Often jasper will feature unique and interesting patterns within the coloured stone Picture jasper is a type of jasper known for the colours often beiges and browns and swirls in the stone s pattern Quartz Quartz refers to a family of crystalline gemstones of various colours and sizes Among the well known types of quartz are rose quartz which has a delicate pink colour and smoky quartz which comes in a variety of shades of translucent brown A number of other gemstones such as Amethyst and Citrine are also part of the quartz family Rutilated quartz is a popular type of quartz containing needle like inclusions Ruby Rubies are known for their intense red colour and are among the most highly valued precious gemstones Rubies have been treasured for millennia In Sanskrit the word for ruby is ratnaraj meaning king of precious stones Sapphire The most popular form of sapphire is blue sapphire which is known for its medium to deep blue colour and strong saturation Fancy sapphires of various colours are also available In the United States blue sapphire tends to be the most popular and most affordable of the three major precious gemstones emerald ruby and sapphire Turquoise Turquoise is found in only a few places on earth and the world s largest turquoise producing region is the southwest United States Turquoise is prized for its attractive colour most often an intense medium blue or a greenish blue and its ancient heritage Turquoise is used in a great variety of jewellery styles It is perhaps most closely associated with southwest and Native American jewellery but it is also used in many sleek modern styles Some turquoise contains a matrix of dark brown markings which provides an interesting contrast to the gemstone s bright blue colour Some gemstones like pearls coral and amber are classified as organic meaning that they are produced by living organisms Others are inorganic meaning that they are generally composed of and arise from minerals Some gems for example amethyst have become less valued as methods of extracting and importing them have progressed Some man made gems can serve in place of natural gems such as cubic zirconia which can be used in place of diamond 17 Metal finishes Edit An example of gold plated jewellery For platinum gold and silver jewellery there are many techniques to create finishes The most common are high polish satin matte brushed and hammered High polished jewellery is the most common and gives the metal a highly reflective shiny look Satin or matte finish reduces the shine and reflection of the jewellery and this is commonly used to accentuate gemstones such as diamonds Brushed finishes give the jewellery a textured look and are created by brushing a material similar to sandpaper against the metal leaving brush strokes Hammered finishes are typically created by using a rounded steel hammer and hammering the jewellery to give it a wavy texture Some jewellery is plated to give it a shiny reflective look or to achieve a desired colour Sterling silver jewellery may be plated with a thin layer of 0 999 fine silver a process known as flashing or may be plated with rhodium or gold Base metal costume jewellery may also be plated with silver gold or rhodium for a more attractive finish Impact on society EditJewellery has been used to denote status In ancient Rome only certain ranks could wear rings and 18 later sumptuary laws dictated who could wear what type of jewellery This was also based on rank of the citizens of that time Cultural dictates have also played a significant role For example the wearing of earrings by Western men was considered effeminate in the 19th century and early 20th century More recently the display of body jewellery such as piercings has become a mark of acceptance or seen as a badge of courage within some groups but is completely rejected in others Likewise hip hop culture has popularised the slang term bling bling which refers to ostentatious display of jewellery by men or women Conversely the jewellery industry in the early 20th century launched a campaign to popularise wedding rings for men which caught on as well as engagement rings for men which did not going so far as to create a false history and claim that the practice had medieval roots By the mid 1940s 85 of weddings in the U S featured a double ring ceremony up from 15 in the 1920s 19 Some religions have specific rules or traditions surrounding jewellery or even prohibiting it and many religions have edicts against excessive display Islam for instance considers the wearing of gold by men as Haraam 20 The majority of Islamic jewellery was in the form of bridal dowries and traditionally was not handed down from generation to generation instead on a woman s death it was sold at the souk and recycled or sold to passers by Islamic jewellery from before the 19th century is thus exceedingly rare 21 Some Christian denominations forbid the use of jewellery by both men and women including Amish Mennonites and Holiness churches The New Testament of the Bible gives injunctions against the wearing of gold in the writings of the apostles Paul and Peter and Revelations describes the great whore or false religious system as being decked with gold and precious stones and pearls having a golden cup in her hand Rev 17 4 History EditThe history of jewellery is long and goes back many years with many different uses among different cultures It has endured for thousands of years and has provided various insights into how ancient cultures worked Prehistory Edit The earliest known Jewellery was actually created not by humans Homo sapiens but by Neanderthal living in Europe Specifically perforated beads made from small sea shells have been found dating to 115 000 years ago in the Cueva de los Aviones a cave along the southeast coast of Spain Later in Kenya at Enkapune Ya Muto beads made from perforated ostrich egg shells have been dated to more than 40 000 years ago In Russia a stone bracelet and marble ring are attributed to a similar age 22 Later the European early modern humans had crude necklaces and bracelets of bone teeth berries and stone hung on pieces of string or animal sinew or pieces of carved bone used to secure clothing together In some cases jewellery had shell or mother of pearl pieces A decorated engraved pendant the Star Carr Pendant dating to around 11 000 BC and thought to be the oldest Mesolithic art in Britain was found at the site of Star Carr in North Yorkshire in 2015 23 In southern Russia carved bracelets made of mammoth tusk have been found The Venus of Hohle Fels features a perforation at the top showing that it was intended to be worn as a pendant Around seven thousand years ago the first sign of copper jewellery was seen 8 In October 2012 the Museum of Ancient History in Lower Austria revealed that they had found a grave of a female jewellery worker forcing archaeologists to take a fresh look at prehistoric gender roles after it appeared to be that of a female fine metal worker a profession that was previously thought to have been carried out exclusively by men 24 String of beads 3650 3100 BC lapis lazuli the blue beads and travertine the white beads Egyptian alabaster length 4 5 cm by Naqada II or Naqada III cultures Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City String of beads 3300 3100 BC carnelian garnet quartz and glazed steatite length 20 5 cm by Naqada III culture Metropolitan Museum of Art Armlet with sun symbol 16th 13th century BC late Bronze Age bronze German National Museum Nurnberg Necklace probably 2600 1300 BC carnelian bone and stone from Saruq Al Hadid the United Arab Emirates Africa Edit Egypt Edit Main article Art of ancient Egypt Jewelry The first signs of established jewellery making in Ancient Egypt was around 3 000 5 000 years ago 25 The Egyptians preferred the luxury rarity and workability of gold over other metals In Predynastic Egypt jewellery soon began to symbolise political and religious power in the community Although it was worn by wealthy Egyptians in life it was also worn by them in death with jewellery commonly placed among grave goods In conjunction with gold jewellery Egyptians used coloured glass along with semi precious gems The colour of the jewellery had significance Green for example symbolised fertility Lapis lazuli and silver had to be imported from beyond the country s borders Egyptian designs were most common in Phoenician jewellery Also ancient Turkish designs found in Persian jewellery suggest that trade between the Middle East and Europe was not uncommon Women wore elaborate gold and silver pieces that were used in ceremonies 25 Pectoral chest jewellery of Tutankhamun 1336 1327 BC Reign of Tutankhamun gold silver and meteoric glass height 14 9 cm 5 9 in Egyptian Museum Cairo Pendant circa 1069 BC gold and turquoise overall 5 1 x 2 3 cm Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Signet ring 664 525 BC gold diameter 3 3 4 cm British Museum London Pectoral and necklace of Princess Sithathoriunet 1887 1813 BC gold carnelian lapis lazuli turquoise garnet amp feldspar height of the pectoral 4 5 cm 1 8 in Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Khmissa amulet in silver Maghreb countries in North Africa Edit Main article Jewellery of the Berber cultures Jewellery of the Berber cultures is a style of traditional jewellery worn by women and girls in the rural areas of the Maghreb region in North Africa inhabited by indigenous Berber people in Berber language Amazigh Imazighen pl Following long social and cultural traditions the silversmiths of different ethnic Berber groups of Morocco Algeria and neighbouring countries created intricate jewellery to adorn their women and that formed part of their ethnic identity Traditional Berber jewellery was usually made of silver and includes elaborate brooches made of triangular plates and pins fibula originally used as clasps for garments but also necklaces bracelets earrings and similar items Another major type is the so called khmissa local pronunciation of the Arabic word khamsa for the number five which is called afus in the Berber language Tamazight This form represents the five fingers of the hand and is traditionally believed both by Muslims as well as Jewish people to protect against the Evil Eye 26 Europe and the Middle East Edit The first gold jewellery from Bulgaria Edit Main article Varna Necropolis Oldest golden artifacts in the world from Varna necropolis grave offerings on exposition in Varna Museum The oldest gold jewelry in the world is dating from 4 600 BC to 4 200 BC and was discovered in Europe at the site of Varna Necropolis near the Black Sea coast in Bulgaria 27 Several prehistoric Bulgarian finds are considered no less old the golden treasures of Hotnitsa Durankulak artifacts from the Kurgan settlement of Yunatsite near Pazardzhik the golden treasure Sakar as well as beads and gold jewellery found in the Kurgan settlement of Provadia Solnitsata salt pit However Varna gold is most often called the oldest since this treasure is the largest and most diverse 28 Mesopotamia Edit Headdress decorated with golden leaves 2600 2400 BC gold lapis lazuli and carnelian length 38 5 cm from the Royal Cemetery at Ur Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City By approximately 5 000 years ago jewellery making had become a significant craft in the cities of Mesopotamia The most significant archaeological evidence comes from the Royal Cemetery of Ur where hundreds of burials dating 2900 2300 BC were unearthed tombs such as that of Puabi contained a multitude of artefacts in gold silver and semi precious stones such as lapis lazuli crowns embellished with gold figurines close fitting collar necklaces and jewel headed pins In Assyria men and women both wore extensive amounts of jewellery including amulets ankle bracelets heavy multi strand necklaces and cylinder seals 29 Jewellery in Mesopotamia tended to be manufactured from thin metal leaf and was set with large numbers of brightly coloured stones chiefly agate lapis carnelian and jasper Favoured shapes included leaves spirals cones and bunches of grapes Jewellers created works both for human use and for adorning statues and idols They employed a wide variety of sophisticated metalworking techniques such as cloisonne engraving fine granulation and filigree 30 Extensive and meticulously maintained records pertaining to the trade and manufacture of jewellery have also been unearthed throughout Mesopotamian archaeological sites One record in the Mari royal archives for example gives the composition of various items of jewellery 1 necklace of flat speckled chalcedony beads including 34 flat speckled chalcedony bead and 35 gold fluted beads in groups of five 1 necklace of flat speckled chalcedony beads including 39 flat speckled chalcedony beads with 41 fluted beads in a group that make up the hanging device 1 necklace with rounded lapis lazuli beads including 28 rounded lapis lazuli beads and 29 fluted beads for its clasp 31 Sumerian necklace beads 2600 2500 BC gold and lapis lazuli length 54 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art Necklace 2600 2500 BC gold and lapis lazuli length 22 5 cm Royal Cemetery at Ur Iraq Metropolitan Museum of Art Pair of earrings with cuneiform inscriptions 2093 2046 BC gold Sulaymaniyah Museum Sulaymaniyah Iraq Sumerian necklaces and headgear discovered in the royal and individual graves of the Royal Cemetery at Ur showing the way they may have been worn in British Museum London Greece Edit Openwork hairnet 300 200 BC gold diameter 23 cm diameter of the medallion 11 4 cm unknown provenance said to be from Karpenissi Greece National Archaeological Museum Athens 32 The Greeks started using gold and gems in jewellery in 1600 BC although beads shaped as shells and animals were produced widely in earlier times Around 1500 BC the main techniques of working gold in Greece included casting twisting bars and making wire 33 Many of these sophisticated techniques were popular in the Mycenaean period but unfortunately this skill was lost at the end of the Bronze Age The forms and shapes of jewellery in ancient Greece such as the armring 13th century BC brooch 10th century BC and pins 7th century BC have varied widely since the Bronze Age as well Other forms of jewellery include wreaths earrings necklace and bracelets A good example of the high quality that gold working techniques could achieve in Greece is the Gold Olive Wreath 4th century BC which is modeled on the type of wreath given as a prize for winners in athletic competitions like the Olympic Games Jewellery dating from 600 to 475 BC is not well represented in the archaeological record but after the Persian wars the quantity of jewellery again became more plentiful 34 One particularly popular type of design at this time was a bracelet decorated with snake and animal heads Because these bracelets used considerably more metal many examples were made from bronze By 300 BC the Greeks had mastered making coloured jewellery and using amethysts pearl and emeralds Also the first signs of cameos appeared with the Greeks creating them from Indian Sardonyx a striped brown pink and cream agate stone Greek jewellery was often simpler than in other cultures with simple designs and workmanship However as time progressed the designs grew in complexity and different materials were soon used Jewellery in Greece was hardly worn and was mostly used for public appearances or on special occasions It was frequently given as a gift and was predominantly worn by women to show their wealth social status and beauty The jewellery was often supposed to give the wearer protection from the Evil Eye or endowed the owner with supernatural powers while others had a religious symbolism Older pieces of jewellery that have been found were dedicated to the Gods They worked two styles of pieces cast pieces and pieces hammered out of sheet metal Fewer pieces of cast jewellery have been recovered It was made by casting the metal onto two stone or clay moulds The two halves were then joined together and wax followed by molten metal was placed in the centre This technique had been practised since the late Bronze Age The more common form of jewellery was the hammered sheet type Sheets of metal would be hammered to thickness and then soldered together The inside of the two sheets would be filled with wax or another liquid to preserve the metal work Different techniques such as using a stamp or engraving were then used to create motifs on the jewellery Jewels may then be added to hollows or glass poured into special cavities on the surface The Greeks took much of their designs from outer origins such as Asia when Alexander the Great conquered part of it In earlier designs other European influences can also be detected When Roman rule came to Greece no change in jewellery designs was detected However by 27 BC Greek designs were heavily influenced by the Roman culture That is not to say that indigenous design did not thrive Numerous polychrome butterfly pendants on silver foxtail chains dating from the 1st century have been found near Olbia with only one example ever found anywhere else 35 The Bee Pendant an iconic Minoan jewel 1700 1600 BC gold width 4 6 cm from Chrysolakkos gold pit complex at Malia Archaeological Museum of Heraklion Heraklion Greece 36 37 Mycenaean necklace 1400 1050 BC gilded terracotta diameter of the rosettes 2 7 cm with variations of circa 0 1 cm length of the pendant 3 7 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City The Ganymede Jewellery circa 300 BC gold various dimensions provenance unknown said to have been found near Thessaloniki Greece Metropolitan Museum of Art Necklace circa 200 BC gold moonstone garnet emerald cornelian baroque pearl and banded agate overall 39 4 cm Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Etruscan Edit Main article Etruscan jewelry Gorgons pomegranates acorns lotus flowers and palms were a clear indicator of Greek influence in Etruscan jewellery The modelling of heads which was a typical practice from the Greek severe period was a technique that spread throughout the Etruscan territory An even clearer evidence of new influences is the shape introduced in the Orientalizing era The Bullae A pear shaped vessel used to hold perfume Its surface was usually decorated with repousse and engraved symbolic figures Much of the jewellery found was not worn by Etruscans but were made to accompany them in the after world Most if not all techniques of Etruscan goldsmiths were not invented by them as they are dated to the third millennium BC The Vulci set of jewelry early 5th century gold glass rock crystal agate and carnelian various dimensions Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Earring in the form of a dolphin 5th century BC gold 2 1 1 4 4 9 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulla with Daedalus and Icarus 5th century BC gold 1 6 1 1 cm Walters Art Museum Baltimore Earring gold and silver 1 5 0 4 1 4 cm Metropolitan Museum of ArtRome Edit The Great Cameo of France second quarter of the 1st century AD five layered sardonyx 31 x 26 5 cm Cabinet des medailles Paris Although jewellery work was abundantly diverse in earlier times especially among the barbarian tribes such as the Celts when the Romans conquered most of Europe jewellery was changed as smaller factions developed the Roman designs The most common artefact of early Rome was the brooch which was used to secure clothing together The Romans used a diverse range of materials for their jewellery from their extensive resources across the continent Although they used gold they sometimes used bronze or bone and in earlier times glass beads amp pearl As early as 2 000 years ago they imported Sri Lankan sapphires and Indian diamonds and used emeralds and amber in their jewellery In Roman ruled England fossilised wood called jet from Northern England was often carved into pieces of jewellery The early Italians worked in crude gold and created clasps necklaces earrings and bracelets They also produced larger pendants that could be filled with perfume Like the Greeks often the purpose of Roman jewellery was to ward off the Evil Eye given by other people Although women wore a vast array of jewellery men often only wore a finger ring Although they were expected to wear at least one ring some Roman men wore a ring on every finger while others wore none Roman men and women wore rings with an engraved gem on it that was used with wax to seal documents a practice that continued into medieval times when kings and noblemen used the same method After the fall of the Roman Empire the jewellery designs were absorbed by neighbouring countries and tribes 25 Cameo portrait of the Emperor Augustus 41 54 AD sardonyx 3 7 2 9 0 8 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Bracelet 1st 2nd century AD gold mounted crystal and sardonyx length 19 69 cm Los Angeles County Museum of Art Los Angeles Necklace with a medallion depicting a goddess 30 300 green glass the green beads and gold length 43 82 cm Los Angeles County Museum of Art Openwork hairnet with the head of Medusa 200 300 gold Archaeological Museum of Agrigento Agrigento Italy Middle Ages Edit Byzantine collier late 6th 7th century gold emeralds sapphires amethysts and pearls diameter 23 cm from a Constantinopolitan workshop Antikensammlung Berlin Berlin Germany Post Roman Europe continued to develop jewellery making skills The Celts and Merovingians in particular are noted for their jewellery which in terms of quality matched or exceeded that of the Byzantine Empire Clothing fasteners amulets and to a lesser extent signet rings are the most common artefacts known to us A particularly striking Celtic example is the Tara Brooch 38 The Torc was common throughout Europe as a symbol of status and power By the 8th century jewelled weaponry was common for men while other jewellery with the exception of signet rings seemed to become the domain of women Grave goods found in a 6th 7th century burial near Chalon sur Saone are illustrative A young girl was buried with 2 silver fibulae a necklace with coins bracelet gold earrings a pair of hair pins comb and buckle 39 The Celts specialised in continuous patterns and designs while Merovingian designs are best known for stylised animal figures 40 They were not the only groups known for high quality work Note the Visigoth work shown here and the numerous decorative objects found at the Anglo Saxon Ship burial at Sutton Hoo Suffolk England are a particularly well known example 25 On the continent cloisonne and garnet were perhaps the quintessential method and gemstone of the period The Eastern successor of the Roman Empire the Byzantine Empire continued many of the methods of the Romans though religious themes came to predominate Unlike the Romans the Franks and the Celts however Byzantium used light weight gold leaf rather than solid gold and more emphasis was placed on stones and gems As in the West Byzantine jewellery was worn by wealthier females with male jewellery apparently restricted to signet rings Woman s jewellery had some peculiarities like kolts that decorated headband Like other contemporary cultures jewellery was commonly buried with its owner 41 The Eagle shaped fibulae of Alovera 5th century gold bronze and glass imitation of garnet height 11 8 cm width 5 9 cm from Guadalajara Spain National Archaeological Museum Madrid Spain Shoulder clasps from Sutton Hoo early 7th century gold glass amp garnet length 12 7 cm British Museum London Pair of Byzantine earrings 7th century gold pearls glass and emeralds 10 2 x 4 5 cm Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Front of a temple pendant with two birds flanking a tree of life 11th 12th century cloisonne enamel amp gold overall 5 4 x 4 8 x 1 5 cm made in Kyiv Ukraine Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Renaissance Edit Cameo 16th century sardonyx Cabinet des Medailles Paris The Renaissance and exploration both had significant impacts on the development of jewellery in Europe By the 17th century increasing exploration and trade led to increased availability of a wide variety of gemstones as well as exposure to the art of other cultures Whereas prior to this the working of gold and precious metal had been at the forefront of jewellery this period saw increasing dominance of gemstones and their settings An example of this is the Cheapside Hoard the stock of a jeweller hidden in London during the Commonwealth period and not found again until 1912 It contained Colombian emerald topaz amazonite from Brazil spinel iolite and chrysoberyl from Sri Lanka ruby from India Afghan lapis lazuli Persian turquoise Red Sea peridot as well as Bohemian and Hungarian opal garnet and amethyst Large stones were frequently set in box bezels on enamelled rings 42 Notable among merchants of the period was Jean Baptiste Tavernier who brought the precursor stone of the Hope Diamond to France in the 1660s When Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned as Emperor of the French in 1804 he revived the style and grandeur of jewellery and fashion in France Under Napoleon s rule jewellers introduced parures suites of matching jewellery such as a diamond tiara diamond earrings diamond rings a diamond brooch and a diamond necklace Both of Napoleon s wives had beautiful sets such as these and wore them regularly Another fashion trend resurrected by Napoleon was the cameo Soon after his cameo decorated crown was seen cameos were highly sought The period also saw the early stages of costume jewellery with fish scale covered glass beads in place of pearls or conch shell cameos instead of stone cameos New terms were coined to differentiate the arts jewellers who worked in cheaper materials were called bijoutiers while jewellers who worked with expensive materials were called joailliers a practice which continues to this day Romanticism Edit Russian earring 19th century silver enamel and red glass beads overall 6 4 x 2 6 cm Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Starting in the late 18th century Romanticism had a profound impact on the development of western jewellery Perhaps the most significant influences were the public s fascination with the treasures being discovered through the birth of modern archaeology and a fascination with Medieval and Renaissance art Changing social conditions and the onset of the Industrial Revolution also led to growth of a middle class that wanted and could afford jewellery As a result the use of industrial processes cheaper alloys and stone substitutes led to the development of paste or costume jewellery Distinguished goldsmiths continued to flourish however as wealthier patrons sought to ensure that what they wore still stood apart from the jewellery of the masses not only through use of precious metals and stones but also though superior artistic and technical work One such artist was the French goldsmith Francois Desire Froment Meurice A category unique to this period and quite appropriate to the philosophy of romanticism was mourning jewellery It originated in England where Queen Victoria was often seen wearing jet jewellery after the death of Prince Albert and it allowed the wearer to continue wearing jewellery while expressing a state of mourning at the death of a loved one 43 In the United States this period saw the founding in 1837 of Tiffany amp Co by Charles Lewis Tiffany Tiffany s put the United States on the world map in terms of jewellery and gained fame creating dazzling commissions for people such as the wife of Abraham Lincoln Later it would gain popular notoriety as the setting of the film Breakfast at Tiffany s In France Pierre Cartier founded Cartier SA in 1847 while 1884 saw the founding of Bulgari in Italy The modern production studio had been born and was a step away from the former dominance of individual craftsmen and patronage This period also saw the first major collaboration between East and West Collaboration in Pforzheim between German and Japanese artists led to Shakudō plaques set into Filigree frames being created by the Stoeffler firm in 1885 44 Perhaps the grand finale and an appropriate transition to the following period were the masterful creations of the Russian artist Peter Carl Faberge working for the Imperial Russian court whose Faberge eggs and jewellery pieces are still considered as the epitome of the goldsmith s art 18th century Romanticism Renaissance Edit Many whimsical fashions were introduced in the extravagant eighteenth century Cameos that were used in connection with jewellery were the attractive trinkets along with many of the small objects such as brooches ear rings and scarf pins Some of the necklets were made of several pieces joined with the gold chains were in and bracelets were also made sometimes to match the necklet and the brooch At the end of the Century the jewellery with cut steel intermixed with large crystals was introduced by an Englishman Matthew Boulton of Birmingham 45 Art Nouveau Edit Breastplate with a peacocks Rene Lalique circa 1898 1900 gold enamels opals and diamonds Calouste Gulbenkian Museum Lisboa Portugal In the 1890s jewellers began to explore the potential of the growing Art Nouveau style and the closely related German Jugendstil British and to some extent American Arts and Crafts Movement Catalan Modernisme Austro Hungarian Sezession Italian Liberty etc Art Nouveau jewellery encompassed many distinct features including a focus on the female form and an emphasis on colour most commonly rendered through the use of enamelling techniques including basse taille champleve cloisonne and plique a jour Motifs included orchids irises pansies vines swans peacocks snakes dragonflies mythological creatures and the female silhouette Rene Lalique working for the Paris shop of Samuel Bing was recognised by contemporaries as a leading figure in this trend The Darmstadt Artists Colony and Wiener Werkstatte provided perhaps the most significant input to the trend while in Denmark Georg Jensen though best known for his Silverware also contributed significant pieces In England Liberty amp Co notably through the Cymric designs of Archibald Knox and the British arts amp crafts movement of Charles Robert Ashbee contributed slightly more linear but still characteristic designs The new style moved the focus of the jeweller s art from the setting of stones to the artistic design of the piece itself Lalique s dragonfly design is one of the best examples of this Enamels played a large role in technique while sinuous organic lines are the most recognisable design feature The end of World War I once again changed public attitudes and a more sober style developed 46 The Dragonfly brooch by Rene Lalique circa 1897 1898 gold vitreous enamel chrysoprase chalcedony moonstone and diamond height 23 cm width 26 5 cm Calouste Gulbenkian Museum Lisboa Portugal Necklace by Rene Lalique 1897 1899 gold enamel opals and amethysts overall diameter 24 1 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City The Snakes brooch by Rene Lalique gold and enamel Calouste Gulbenkian Museum Hair ornament an Art Nouveau masterpiece by Rene Lalique circa 1902 gold emeralds and diamonds Musee d Orsay Paris Art Deco Edit Growing political tensions the after effects of the war and a reaction against the perceived decadence of the turn of the 20th century led to simpler forms combined with more effective manufacturing for mass production of high quality jewellery Covering the period of the 1920s and 1930s the style has become popularly known as Art Deco Walter Gropius and the German Bauhaus movement with their philosophy of no barriers between artists and craftsmen led to some interesting and stylistically simplified forms Modern materials were also introduced plastics and aluminium were first used in jewellery and of note are the chromed pendants of Russian born Bauhaus master Naum Slutzky Technical mastery became as valued as the material itself In the West this period saw the reinvention of granulation by the German Elizabeth Treskow although development of the re invention has continued into the 1990s It is based on the basic shapes Asia Edit In Asia the Indian subcontinent has the longest continuous legacy of jewellery making anywhere Asia was the first place where these jewellery were made in large numbers for the royals citation needed with a history of over 5 000 years 47 One of the first to start jewellery making were the peoples of the Indus Valley civilization in what is now predominately modern day Pakistan and part of northern and western India Early jewellery making in China started around the same period but it became widespread with the spread of Buddhism around 2 000 years ago China Edit The Chinese used silver in their jewellery more than gold Blue kingfisher feathers were tied onto early Chinese jewellery and later blue gems and glass were incorporated into designs However jade was preferred over any other stone The Chinese revered jade because of the human like qualities they assigned to it such as its hardness durability and beauty 8 The first jade pieces were very simple but as time progressed more complex designs evolved Jade rings from between the 4th and 7th centuries BC show evidence of having been worked with a compound milling machine hundreds of years before the first mention of such equipment in the west 48 In China the most uncommon piece of jewellery is the earring which was worn neither by men nor women 49 In modern times earrings are still considered culturally taboo for men in China in fact in 2019 the Chinese video streaming service iQiyi began blurring the ears of male actors wearing earrings Amulets were common often with a Chinese symbol or dragon Dragons Chinese symbols and phoenixes were frequently depicted on jewellery designs The Chinese often placed their jewellery in their graves Most Chinese graves found by archaeologists contain decorative jewellery 50 Fluted ring with a dragon head huan circa 475 BC jade nephrite overall 9 1 cm Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Ornament with flowers and grapes design 1115 1234 jade Shanghai Museum China Xin 心 shaped jewelry 1368 1644 gold ruby pearl and other gemstones about the size of an adult human s palm Dingling Beijing China Hat ornament 18th 19th century gold gilded metal kingfisher feathers glass and semiprecious stones various dimensions Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Indian subcontinent Edit Necklace with Shiva s family late 19th century gold inlaid with rubies a diamond Rudraksha beads elaeo carpus seeds and silver back plate on clasp overall 38 1 cm Los Angeles County Museum of Art Los Angeles US The Indian subcontinent has a long jewellery history which has gone through various changes via cultural influence and politics for more than 5 000 8 000 years Because India had an abundant supply of precious metals and gems it prospered financially through export and exchange with other countries While European traditions were heavily influenced by waxing and waning empires India enjoyed a continuous development of art forms for some 5 000 years 47 One of the first to start jewellery making were the peoples of the Indus Valley civilization By 1500 BC the peoples of the Indus Valley were creating gold earrings and necklaces bead necklaces and metallic bangles Before 2100 BC prior to the period when metals were widely used the largest jewellery trade in the Indus Valley region was the bead trade Beads in the Indus Valley were made using simple techniques First a bead maker would need a rough stone which would be bought from an eastern stone trader The stone would then be placed into a hot oven where it would be heated until it turned deep red a colour highly prized by people of the Indus Valley The red stone would then be chipped to the right size and a hole bored through it with primitive drills The beads were then polished Some beads were also painted with designs This art form was often passed down through the family Children of bead makers often learned how to work beads from a young age Each stone had its own characteristics related to Hinduism Jewellery in the Indus Valley was worn predominantly by females who wore numerous clay or shell bracelets on their wrists They were often shaped like doughnuts and painted black Over time clay bangles were discarded for more durable ones In present day India bangles are made out of metal or glass 51 Other pieces that women frequently wore were thin bands of gold that would be worn on the forehead earrings primitive brooches chokers and gold rings Although women wore jewellery the most some men in the Indus Valley wore beads Small beads were often crafted to be placed in men and women s hair The beads were about one millimetre long A female skeleton presently on display at the National Museum New Delhi India wears a carlinean bangle bracelet on her left hand Kada is a special kind of bracelet and is widely popular in Indian culture They symbolize animals such as peacock elephant etc 52 According to Hindu belief gold and silver are considered as sacred metals Gold is symbolic of the warm sun while silver suggests the cool moon Both are the quintessential metals of Indian jewellery Pure gold does not oxidise or corrode with time which is why Hindu tradition associates gold with immortality Gold imagery occurs frequently in ancient Indian literature In the Vedic Hindu belief of cosmological creation the source of physical and spiritual human life originated in and evolved from a golden womb hiranyagarbha or egg hiranyanda a metaphor of the sun whose light rises from the primordial waters 53 Jewellery had great status with India s royalty it was so powerful that they established laws limiting wearing of jewellery to royalty Only royalty and a few others to whom they granted permission could wear gold ornaments on their feet This would normally be considered breaking the appreciation of the sacred metals Even though the majority of the Indian population wore jewellery Maharajas and people related to royalty had a deeper connection with jewellery The Maharaja s role was so important that the Hindu philosophers identified him as central to the smooth working of the world He was considered as a divine being a deity in human form whose duty was to uphold and protect dharma the moral order of the universe 54 Navaratna nine gems is a powerful jewel frequently worn by a Maharaja Emperor It is an amulet which comprises diamond pearl ruby sapphire emerald topaz cat s eye coral and hyacinth red zircon Each of these stones is associated with a celestial deity represented the totality of the Hindu universe when all nine gems are together The diamond is the most powerful gem among the nine stones There were various cuts for the gemstone Indian Kings bought gemstones privately from the sellers Maharaja and other royal family members value gem as Hindu God They exchanged gems with people to whom they were very close especially the royal family members and other intimate allies India was the first country to mine diamonds with some mines dating back to 296 BC India traded the diamonds realising their valuable qualities Historically diamonds have been given to retain or regain a lover s or ruler s lost favour as symbols of tribute or as an expression of fidelity in exchange for concessions and protection Mughal emperors and Kings used the diamonds as a means of assuring their immortality by having their names and worldly titles inscribed upon them Moreover it has played and continues to play a pivotal role in Indian social political economic and religious event as it often has done elsewhere In Indian history diamonds have been used to acquire military equipment finance wars foment revolutions and tempt defections They have contributed to the abdication or the decapitation of potentates They have been used to murder a representative of the dominating power by lacing his food with crushed diamond Indian diamonds have been used as security to finance large loans needed to buttress politically or economically tottering regimes Victorious military heroes have been honoured by rewards of diamonds and also have been used as ransom payment for release from imprisonment or abduction 55 Today many jewellery designs and traditions are used and jewellery is commonplace in Indian ceremonies and weddings 50 For many Indians especially those who follow the Hindu or Jain faiths bridal jewellery is known as streedhan and functions as personal wealth for the bride only as a sort of financial security For this reason this jewellery especially in the sacred metals of gold and silver has large cultural significance for Indian brides Jewellery is worn on the arms and hands ears neck hair head feet toes and waist to bless the bride with prosperity 56 Pendant probably with Siddha 8th 9th century copper alloy 8 89 x 7 93 x 31 cm Los Angeles County Museum of Art Los Angeles Earring with Vishnu riding Garuda circa 1600 gold set with jewels and semi precious stones overall 2 6 cm from Nepal Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Earring with four armed Vishnu riding Garuda with Nagas serpent divinities circa 1600 repousse gold with pearls overall 3 6 cm from Nepal Cleveland Museum of Art Comb with Vishnu adored by serpents 1750 1800 ivory with traces of paint 6 99 x 7 94 from Nepal Los Angeles County Museum of ArtNorth and South America Edit Moche ear ornaments depicting winged runners 3rd 7th century gold turquoise sodalite and shell diameter 8 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Jewellery making started in the Americas with the arrival of Paleo Indians more than 15 000 years ago This jewellery would have been made from stone shell bone and other perishable materials The American continent is home to 2 cradles of civilization in the Andes and Mesoamerica Cultures in these regions developed more complex methods of jewellery creation The Andes is the origin of hot working metallurgy in the Americas and consequently the region has the longest history of work in materials such as silver platinum and gold Metallurgy began in Mesoamerica during the Termainal Classic era likely arriving from direct maritime trade with the Andean cultures As a result western Mesoamerican cultures such as the Tarascans and Mixtecs had more complex use of the technology With the Moche culture goldwork flourished The pieces are no longer simple metalwork but are now masterful examples of jewellery making Pieces are sophisticated in their design and feature inlays of turquoise mother of pearl spondylus shell and amethyst The nose and ear ornaments chest plates small containers and whistles are considered masterpieces of ancient Peruvian culture 57 A notable example of Andean metallurgy is the Northern Andean cultures work with platinum which has a much higher melting point than other precious metals There are only a few known examples of cold worked platinum in the Old World and no known intentionally hot worked examples platinum wasn t identified as a separate element and small inclusions appeared in some goldwork In the New World however certain Andean cultures recognized platinum as a separate metal and were able to incorporate it into jewellery such as through sintering it with gold 58 Jadeite funerary jewellery from Tomb 1 of Structure VII of Calakmul thought to belong to Yuknoom Tookʼ Kʼawiil Late Classic 660 to 750 AD Among the Late Post Classic Aztecs only nobility wore gold jewellery as it showed their rank power and wealth A large portion of Aztec gold jewellery was created by Mixtec artisans The Mixtecs were particularly known for their goldwork and gold jewellery was part of the tribute payed by Mixtec polities to the Aztecs In general the more jewellery an Aztec noble wore the higher his status or prestige The Emperor and his High Priests for example would be nearly completely covered in jewellery when making public appearances Although gold was the most common and a popular material used in Aztec jewellery jade turquoise and certain feathers were considered more valuable 59 In addition to adornment and status the Aztecs also used jewellery in sacrifices to appease the gods 25 43 Another ancient American civilization with expertise in jewellery making were the Maya During the Pre Classic and Classic era of Maya civilization the Maya were making jewellery from local materials such as jade pearls and sea shell while also incorporating imported materials such as obsidian and turquoise In the Terminal Classic and Post Classic importation of gold silver bronze and copper lead to the use of these materials in jewellery Merchants and nobility were the only few that wore expensive jewellery in the Maya region much the same as with the Aztecs 50 Jade in particular had an important role across Mesoamerica In Northern America Native Americans used shells wood turquoise and soapstone The turquoise was used in necklaces and to be placed in earrings The turquoise incorporated into Mesoamerican jewellery was primarily obtained through trade with Oasisamerica Native Americans with access to oyster shells often located in only one location in America traded the shells with other tribes showing the great importance of the body adornment trade in Northern America 60 Jewellery played a major role in the fate of the Americas when the Spanish colonizers were spurred to search for gold on the American mainland after coming into contact with Caribbean natives that had gold jewellery obtained through trade with the mainland Continued contact with Native Americans wearing gold jewellery eventually lead to Spanish expeditions of the mythological El Dorado Pendant made from a spondylus shell Western Mexico shaft tomb tradition 200 BC to 200 AD now at the Art Institute of Chicago United States Muisca gold jewellery including a headband nose ornament and pectoral on display at the Gold Museum in Bogota Colombia Moche nose ornament made from silver and gold silver alloy inlaid with malachite now at the Cleveland Museum of Art United States Mixtec Puebla style labret made from obsidian in the shape of an eagle now at the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore United States Native American Edit Main article Native American jewelry Bai De Schluch A Ichin or Be Ich Schluck Ich In Et Tzuzzigi Slender Silversmith Metal Beater Navajo silversmith photo by George Ben Wittick 1883 Native American jewellery is the personal adornment often in the forms of necklaces earrings bracelets rings pins brooches labrets and more made by the Indigenous peoples of the United States Native American jewellery reflects the cultural diversity and history of its makers Native American tribes continue to develop distinct aesthetics rooted in their personal artistic visions and cultural traditions Artists create jewellery for adornment ceremonies and trade Lois Sherr Dubin writes i n the absence of written languages adornment became an important element of Indian Native American communication conveying many levels of information Later jewellery and personal adornment signaled resistance to assimilation It remains a major statement of tribal and individual identity 61 Within the Haida Nation of the Pacific Northwest copper was used as a form of jewellery for creating bracelets 62 Metalsmiths beaders carvers and lapidaries combine a variety of metals hardwoods precious and semi precious gemstones beadwork quillwork teeth bones hide vegetal fibres and other materials to create jewellery Contemporary Native American jewellery ranges from hand quarried and processed stones and shells to computer fabricated steel and titanium jewellery Pacific Edit Main article Jewellery in the Pacific Jewellery making in the Pacific started later than in other areas because of recent human settlement Early Pacific jewellery was made of bone wood and other natural materials and thus has not survived Most Pacific jewellery is worn above the waist with headdresses necklaces hair pins and arm and waist belts being the most common pieces Jewellery in the Pacific with the exception of Australia is worn to be a symbol of either fertility or power Elaborate headdresses are worn by many Pacific cultures and some such as the inhabitants of Papua New Guinea wear certain headdresses once they have killed an enemy Tribesman may wear boar bones through their noses Island jewellery is still very much primal because of the lack of communication with outside cultures Some areas of Borneo and Papua New Guinea are yet to be explored by Western nations However the island nations that were flooded with Western missionaries have had drastic changes made to their jewellery designs Missionaries saw any type of tribal jewellery as a sign of the wearer s devotion to paganism Thus many tribal designs were lost forever in the mass conversion to Christianity 63 Australia is now the number one supplier of opals in the world Opals had already been mined in Europe and South America for many years prior but in the late 19th century the Australian opal market became predominant Australian opals are only mined in a few select places around the country making it one of the most profitable stones in the Pacific 64 The New Zealand Maori traditionally had a strong culture of personal adornment 65 most famously the hei tiki Hei tikis are traditionally carved by hand from bone nephrite or bowenite Nowadays a wide range of such traditionally inspired items such as bone carved pendants based on traditional fishhooks hei matau and other greenstone jewellery are popular with young New Zealanders of all backgrounds for whom they relate to a generalized sense of New Zealand identity These trends have contributed towards a worldwide interest in traditional Maori culture and arts Other than jewellery created through Maori influence modern jewellery in New Zealand is multicultural and varied 63 Maori hei tiki 1500 1800 jade nephrite abalone shell and pigments from the New Zealand Musee du quai Branly Jacques Chirac Paris Hei tiki 18th century nephrite and haliotis shell 10 9 cm from the New Zealand Los Angeles County Museum of Art Los Angeles Hawaiian pendant 18th 19th century whalebone height 6 cm width 3 8 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Breast Ornament civa vonovono circa 1850 whale ivory pearl shell and fiber height 12 7 cm diameter 17 78 cm from Fiji Los Angeles County Museum of ArtModern Edit Gold and gemstone contemporary jewellery design Male hand with modern silver rings one with a tribal motive Most modern commercial jewellery continues traditional forms and styles but designers such as Georg Jensen have widened the concept of wearable art The advent of new materials such as plastics Precious Metal Clay PMC and colouring techniques has led to increased variety in styles Other advances such as the development of improved pearl harvesting by people such as Mikimoto Kōkichi and the development of improved quality artificial gemstones such as moissanite a diamond simulant has placed jewellery within the economic grasp of a much larger segment of the population The jewellery as art movement was spearheaded by artisans such as Robert Lee Morris and continued by designers such as Gill Forsbrook in the UK Influence from other cultural forms is also evident One example of this is bling bling style jewellery popularised by hip hop and rap artists in the early 21st century e g grills a type of jewellery worn over the teeth Indian actress Shraddha Kapoor showcasing modern Indian style jewellery The late 20th century saw the blending of European design with oriental techniques such as Mokume gane The following are innovations in the decades straddling the year 2000 Mokume gane hydraulic die forming anti clastic raising fold forming reactive metal anodising shell forms PMC photoetching and use of CAD CAM 66 Also 3D printing as a production technique gains more and more importance With a great variety of services offering this production method jewellery design becomes accessible to a growing number of creatives An important advantage of using 3d printing are the relatively low costs for prototypes small batch series or unique and personalized designs Shapes that are hard or impossible to create by hand can often be realized by 3D printing Popular materials to print include polyamide steel and wax latter for further processing Every printable material has its very own constraints that have to be considered while designing the piece of jewellery using 3D modelling software Artisan jewellery continues to grow as both a hobby and a profession With more than 17 United States periodicals about beading alone resources accessibility and a low initial cost of entry continues to expand production of hand made adornments Some fine examples of artisan jewellery can be seen at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City 67 The increase in numbers of students choosing to study jewellery design and production in Australia has grown in the past 20 years and Australia now has a thriving contemporary jewellery community Many of these jewellers have embraced modern materials and techniques as well as incorporating traditional workmanship More expansive use of metal to adorn the wearer where the piece is larger and more elaborate than what would normally be considered jewellery has come to be referred to by designers and fashion writers as metal couture 68 69 Masonic Edit Types of masonic collar jewels Freemasons attach jewels to their detachable collars when in Lodge to signify a Brothers Office held with the Lodge For example the square represents the Master of the Lodge and the dove represents the Deacon Body modification Edit A Padaung girl in Northern Thailand Jewellery used in body modification can be simple and plain or dramatic and extreme The use of simple silver studs rings and earrings predominates Common jewellery pieces such as earrings are a form of body modification as they are accommodated by creating a small hole in the ear Padaung women in Myanmar place large golden rings around their necks From as early as five years old girls are introduced to their first neck ring Over the years more rings are added In addition to the twenty plus pounds of rings on her neck a woman will also wear just as many rings on her calves At their extent some necks modified like this can reach 10 15 in 25 38 cm long The practice has health impacts and has in recent years declined from cultural norm to tourist curiosity 70 Tribes related to the Padaung as well as other cultures throughout the world use jewellery to stretch their earlobes or enlarge ear piercings In the Americas labrets have been worn since before first contact by Innu and First Nations peoples of the northwest coast 71 Lip plates have been worn by the African Mursi and Sara people as well as some South American peoples In the late twentieth century the influence of modern primitivism led to many of these practices being incorporated into western subcultures Many of these practices rely on a combination of body modification and decorative objects thus keeping the distinction between these two types of decoration blurred In many cultures jewellery is used as a temporary body modifier in some cases with hooks or other objects being placed into the recipient s skin Although this procedure is often carried out by tribal or semi tribal groups often acting under a trance during religious ceremonies this practice has seeped into western culture Many extreme jewellery shops now cater to people wanting large hooks or spikes set into their skin Most often these hooks are used in conjunction with pulleys to hoist the recipient into the air This practice is said to give an erotic feeling to the person and some couples have even performed their marriage ceremony whilst being suspended by hooks 70 Jewellery market Edit The Oulun Koru jewellery shop at the Kirkkokatu street in Oulu Finland According to a 2007 KPMG study 72 the largest jewellery market is the United States with a market share of 31 Japan India China and the Middle East each with 8 9 and Italy with 5 The authors of the study predicted a dramatic change in market shares by 2015 where the market share of the United States will have dropped to around 25 and China and India will increase theirs to over 13 The Trend of buying jewellery online is also increasing day by day as a result the best quality jewellery can be provided at a cheaper price to any part of India via many online shops The Middle East will remain more or less constant at 9 whereas Europe s and Japan s market share will be halved and become less than 4 for Japan and less than 3 for the biggest individual European countries Italy and the UK See also EditBronze and brass ornamental work Estate jewelry Heirloom Gemology Jewellery cleaning Jewellery of the Berber cultures Jewellery Quarter Jewelry Television List of jewellery types List of topics characterized as pseudoscience healing jewelry Live insect jewelry Suffrage jewellery Wire sculptureReferences Edit Study reveals oldest jewellery Archived 2018 06 12 at the Wayback Machine BBC News June 22 2006 jewel n d Archived 2016 03 07 at the Wayback Machine Dictionary com Unabridged v 1 1 Retrieved on August 7 2007 from the Dictionary com website see American and British spelling differences Kunz PhD DSc George Frederick 1917 Magic of Jewels and Charms John Lippincott Co a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link URL Magic Of jewels Chapter VII Amulets Archived 2013 12 13 at the Wayback Machine George Frederick Kunz a gemmologist for Tiffany s built the collections of banker J P Morgan and of the American Natural History Museum in New York City This chapter deals entirely with using jewels and gemstones in jewellery for talismanic purposes in Western cultures Manutchehr Danai Mohsen ed 2009 magical jewelry Dictionary of Gems and Gemology Berlin Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 540 72816 0 ISBN 978 3 540 72795 8 magical jewelry articles of jewelry worn for their magical belief medicinal powers or superstitions reasons BBC History Ancient History in depth Viking Money Retrieved 2017 11 10 Web Team Victoria and Albert Museum Online Museum 2011 01 13 Trade Beads www vam ac uk Retrieved 2017 11 10 a b c Holland J 1999 The Kingfisher History Encyclopedia Kingfisher books Morris Desmond Body Guards Protective Amulets and Charms Element 1999 ISBN 1862045720 McCreight Tim Jewelry Fundamentals of Metalsmithing Design Books International 1997 ISBN 1880140292 Home GIA edu PDF gia edu Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 26 Pliny Natural History XXXVI 15 Natural Diamond World Production By Country And Type indexmundi com Diamonds Are a Girl s Worst Friend The trouble with engagement rings Archived 2011 09 24 at the Wayback Machine by Meghan O Rourke at Slate com on June 11 2007 What is a Solitaire Setting GIA edu Gemological Institute of America 6 June 2012 Retrieved 21 December 2019 What does solitaire ring look like TIDAN tidanapp com Retrieved 6 May 2020 Nassau K 1980 Gems made by man ISBN 0801967732 Pliny the Elder The Natural History ed John Bostock Henry Thomas Riley Book XXXIII The Natural History of Metals Online at the Perseus Project Archived 2008 04 11 at the Wayback Machine Chapter 4 Accessed July 2006 Howard Vicky A real Man s Ring Gender and the Invention of Tradition Journal of Social History Summer 2003 pp 837 856 Yusuf al Qaradawi The Lawful and Prohibited in Islam online Archived 2011 10 13 at the Wayback Machine Greenbaum Toni Silver Speaks Traditional Jewelry From the Middle East Metalsmith Winter 2004 Vol 24 Issue 1 p 56 Greenbaum provides the explanation for the lack of historical examples Stone Bracelet May Have Been Made by Denisovans 2015 A stone bracelet unearthed in Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains of Siberia in 2008 is being called the oldest known jewelry of its kind Anatoly Derevyanko director of the Russian Academy of Sciences Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography and the research team believe that the cave s Denisovan layers were uncontaminated by human activity from a later period The soil around the two fragments of the jewelry piece was dated with oxygen isotopic analysis to 40 000 years ago In the same layer where we found a Denisovan bone were found interesting things until then it was believed these were the hallmark of the emergence of Homo sapiens First of all there were symbolic items such as jewelry including the stone bracelet as well as a ring carved out of marble Derevyanko told The Siberian Times Milner Nicky 2016 A Unique Engraved Shale Pendant from the Site of Star Carr the oldest Mesolithic art in Britain PDF Internet Archaeology 40 doi 10 11141 ia 40 8 The Austrian Independent News and Pictures Cavewoman jeweller rewrites gender history austrianindependent com Archived from the original on 2012 10 07 Retrieved 2012 10 05 a b c d e Reader s Digest Association 1986 The last 2 million years Reader s Digest ISBN 0864380070 Camps Fabrer Henriette 1991 12 01 Bijoux Encyclopedie berbere in French 10 1496 1516 doi 10 4000 encyclopedieberbere 1758 ISSN 1015 7344 1 Archived 2022 11 01 at the Wayback Machine Gems and Gemstones Timeless Natural Beauty of the Mineral World By Lance Grande Archaeologists have discovered the oldest treasure in the world Afrinik 15 May 2021 Nemet Nejat Daily Life 155 157 Nemet Nejat Daily Life 295 297 Nemet Nejat Daily Life 297 Smith David Michael 2017 Ancient Greece Pocket Museum Thames and Hudson p 251 ISBN 978 0500519585 Jewellery Through 7000 Years British Museum Publications 1976 pp 65 86 ISBN 978 0714100548 Deppert Lippitz Barbara Bromberg Anne R Dennis John 1996 Ch 4 Europe and Western Ancient Gold Jewelry at the Dallas Museum of Art Dallas Museum of Art pp 88 89 ISBN 978 0936227191 Treister Mikhail 2004 Polychrome Necklaces from the Late Hellenistic Period Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 10 3 199 257 doi 10 1163 1570057042596388 Smith David Michael 2017 Ancient Greece Pocket Museum Thames and Hudson p 79 ISBN 978 0500519585 Nelson E C Mavrofridis G amp Anagnostopoulos I T 2020 Natural History of a Bronze Age Jewel Found in Crete The Malia Pendant The Antiquaries Journal 1 12 doi 10 1017 S0003581520000475 Somerville Orna Kite Shaped Brooches Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland volume 123 1993 pp 59 101 JSTOR 25509045 Duby Georges and Philippe Aries eds A History of Private Life Vol 1 From Pagan Rome to Byzantium Harvard 1987 p 506 Duby throughout Sherrard P 1972 Great Ages of Man Byzantium Time Life International Scarisbrick Diana Rings Symbols of Wealth Power and Affection New York Abrams 1993 ISBN 0810937751 p 77 a b Farndon J 2001 1 000 Facts on Modern History Miles Kelly Publishing Ilse Neuman Ursula Book review Schmuck Jewellery 1840 1940 Highlights from the Schmuckmuseum Pforzheim Metalsmith Fall2006 Vol 26 Issue 3 pp 12 13 Anonymous 2013 A history of feminine fashion Nabu Press p 71 ISBN 978 1289626945 Constantino Maria Art Nouveau Knickerbocker Press 1999 ISBN 1577150740 as well as Ilse Neuman 2006 a b Untracht Oppi Traditional Jewellery of India New York Abrams 1997 ISBN 0810938863 p 15 Lu Peter J Early Precision Compound Machine from Ancient China Science 6 11 2004 Vol 304 Issue 5677 Yuan Li 27 March 2019 No Earrings Tattoos or Cleavage Inside China s War on Fun the new york times Retrieved 2022 05 21 a b c Reader s Digest Association 1983 Vanished Civilisations Reader s Digest Bangles Tamilnadu com 4 March 2013 Archived from the original on 18 October 2013 Retrieved 14 March 2013 When showstopper Juhi walked down the ramp The Times of India Archived from the original on 14 June 2013 Retrieved 16 June 2013 Untracht Oppi 1997 Traditional Jewelry of India p 278 ISBN 978 0810938861 Prior Katherine Adamson John 2000 Maharajas Jewels New York Vendome Press p 12 ISBN 978 0865652187 Prior Katherine 2000 Traditional Jewelry of India New York Vendome p 312 Kaur Prabhjot Women and Jewelry The Traditional and Religious Dimensions of Ornamentation Larco Hoyle Rafael 2008 Museo Larco Experience Ancient Peru Lima Museo Larco ISBN 978 9972934124 Ancient Platinum Technology in South America technology matthey com Retrieved 22 April 2023 Miller Mary Ellen Taube Karl A 1993 The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya An Illustrated Dictionary of Mesoamerican Religion Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0500050682 Josephy Jr A M 1994 500 Nations The Illustrated History of North American Indians Alfred A Knopf Inc Dubin 17 Haida Jewelry Retrieved 22 January 2020 a b Neich R Pereira F 2004 Pacific Jewellery and Adornment David Bateman amp Auckland Museum ISBN 1869535359 Dorling Kindersley Ltd 1989 Facts and Fallacies Stories of the Strange and Unusual Reader s Digest 11 13 Maori customary adornment Te Papa 2010 06 02 Archived from the original on 2010 06 02 Maori made and wore items of jewellery McCrieght Tim What s New Metalsmith Spring 2006 Vol 26 Issue 1 pp 42 45 Nineteenth Century American Jewelry metmuseum org Mohemad Dena Manuel Albarran Metal Couture Archived 2016 04 11 at the Wayback Machine Pushit Journal News Ilbarra Sabina May 5 2014 Q amp A with Manuel Albarran Archived 2016 04 13 at the Wayback Machine Living Out Loud a b Packard M 2002 Ripley s Believe It or Not Special Edition Scholastic Inc p 22 Treister Mikhail 2004 George Catlin among the Nayas Understanding the Practice of Labret Wearing on the Northwest Coast Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 10 3 199 257 doi 10 1163 1570057042596388 JSTOR 483428 KPMG India 2007 Global Jewelry Consumption Gems and Gemology XLIII Summer 2007 180 Further reading EditBorel F 1994 The Splendor of Ethnic Jewelry from the Colette and Jean Pierre Ghysels Collection New York H N Abrams ISBN 0810929937 Evans J 1989 A History of Jewellery 1100 1870 ISBN 0486261220 LaGamma Alisa 1991 Metropolitan jewelry New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0870996160 Nemet Nejat Karen Rhea 1998 Daily Life in Ancient Mesopotamia Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 0313294976 Tait H 1986 Seven Thousand Years of Jewellery London British Museum Publications ISBN 0714120340 External links Edit Media related to Jewellery at Wikimedia Commons Works related to Jewellery at Wikisource The dictionary definition of jewellery at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jewellery amp oldid 1152709823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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