Gold oak wreath with a bee and two cicadas. 350-300 BC. Said to be from the Dardanelles. Each branch, made of sheet gold tubes, has six sprays with eight leaves and seven or eight acorns, as well as a cicada. Perhaps the most famous oak wreath is that from a tomb in Virginia, identified as the tomb of Philip II. Another comes from the nearby Prince's tomb. A particularly fine example was discovered in a tumulus at Pergamon.
Gold oak wreath with a bee and two cicadas. 350-300 BC. Said to be from the Dardanelles. Each branch, made of sheet gold tubes, has six sprays with eight leaves and seven or eight acorns, as well as a cicada. Perhaps the most famous oak wreath is that from a tomb in Virginia, identified as the tomb of Philip II. Another comes from the nearby Prince's tomb. A particularly fine example was discovered in a tumulus at Pergamon.
Size: 5500px × 3284px
Location:
Photo credit: © World History Archive / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: 350-300, acorns, ancient, archival, archive, bc, bee, branch, cicada, cicadas, dardanelles, discovered, famous, fine, gold, greece, historical, history, identified, ii, jewellery, leaves, nearby, oak, pergamon., philip, princes, sheet, sprays, tomb, tubes, tumulus, virginia, wreath