Anello Persiano Oro sigillo

450,00 

Anello molto semplice in oro 18k di manifattura Persiana, riproduzione fedele di modello risalente all’epoca dell’impero Selgiuchide, che ha dominato dal XI al XIII secolo l’area che si estende dall’Hindu Kush (catena montuosa tra Afghanistan e Pakistan) sino all’Anatolia orientale, comprendendo anche l’antica Persia.
Incastonata vi è una Cornalina incisa a sigillo, con la rappresentazione abbastanza nitida di un uccello con sembianze da rapace, probabilmente Simurgh, che secondo la mitologia persiana viveva sull’albero dei semi, da cui erano generati le sementi di tutte le piante selvatiche, posizionato accanto all’albero dell’immortalità – secondo alcuni studiosi, l’albero era invece l’albero della scienza, paragonato a Yggdrasill delle leggende scandinave -.
Il Simurgh, posandosi sull’albero, faceva cadere a terra i semi. Le sue penne avevano proprietà magiche e taumaturgiche e le sue ali, quando spiegate, creavano un spessa foschia sulle montagne. Viveva solitamente sulla cima degli inaccessibili picchi caucasici e in modo analogo all’uccello Garuḍa, odiava i serpenti e combatteva i Nāga (divinità metà uomo e metà serpente).
Misura sigillo in pietra diametro 1,1 cm

Esaurito

Informazioni aggiuntive

Peso 3,4 g
Paese d'origine

Materiali

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Color

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Descrizione

Very simple Ring in 18k gold – Persian goldsmith – faithful reproduction of a model dating back to the era of the Seljuk empire, which dominated from the XI to the XIII century the area that extends from the Hindu Kush (mountain range between Afghanistan and Pakistan) until to Eastern Anatolia, also including ancient Persia.
A seal is a carnelian stone engraved with a fairly clear representation of a bird with a rapacious appearance, probably Simurgh, who according to Persian mythology lived on the tree of seeds, from which the seeds of all the wild plants were generated, placed next to the tree of immortality – according to some scholars, the tree was instead the tree of science, compared to Yggdrasill of Scandinavian legends -.
The Simurgh, falling on the tree, made the seeds fall to the ground. Its feathers had magical and thaumaturgical properties and its wings, when unfurled, created a thick haze on the mountains. It usually lived on top of inaccessible Caucasian peaks and similarly to the Garuḍa bird, he hated snakes and fought the Nāga (half-man and half-serpent).
Stone-seal diameter 1.1 cm

Very simple Ring in 18k gold – Persian goldsmith – faithful reproduction of a model dating back to the era of the Seljuk empire, which dominated from the XI to the XIII century the area that extends from the Hindu Kush (mountain range between Afghanistan and Pakistan) until to Eastern Anatolia, also including ancient Persia.
A seal is a carnelian stone engraved with a fairly clear representation of a bird with a rapacious appearance, probably Simurgh, who according to Persian mythology lived on the tree of seeds, from which the seeds of all the wild plants were generated, placed next to the tree of immortality – according to some scholars, the tree was instead the tree of science, compared to Yggdrasill of Scandinavian legends -.
The Simurgh, falling on the tree, made the seeds fall to the ground. Its feathers had magical and thaumaturgical properties and its wings, when unfurled, created a thick haze on the mountains. It usually lived on top of inaccessible Caucasian peaks and similarly to the Garuḍa bird, he hated snakes and fought the Nāga (half-man and half-serpent).
Stone-seal diameter 1.1 cm

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