Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Medieval_jewelry> ?p ?o }
- Medieval_jewelry abstract "The Middle Ages was a period that spanned approximately 1000 years and is normally restricted to Europe and the Byzantine Empire. The material remains we have from that time, including jewelry, can vary greatly depending on the place and time of their creation, especially as Christianity discouraged the burial of jewellery as grave goods, except for royalty and important clerics, who were often buried in their best clothes and wearing jewels. The main material used for jewellery design in antiquity and leading into the Middle Ages was gold. Many different techniques were used to create working surfaces and add decoration to those surfaces to produce the jewellery, including soldering, plating and gilding, repoussé, chasing, inlay, enamelling, filigree and granulation, stamping, striking and casting. Major stylistic phases include barbarian, Byzantine, Carolingian and Ottonian, Viking, and the Late Middle Ages, when Western European styles became relatively similar.Most styles and techniques used in jewellery for personal adornment, the main subject of this article, were also used in pieces of decorated metalwork, which was the most prestigious form of art through most of this period; these were often much larger. Most surviving examples are religious objects such as reliquaries, church plate such as chalices and other pieces, crosses like the Cross of Lothair and treasure bindings for books. However this is largely an accident of survival, as the church has proved much better at preserving its treasures than secular or civic elites, and at the time there may well have been as many secular objects made in the same styles. For example the Royal Gold Cup, a secular cup though decorated with religious imagery, is one of a handful of survivals of the huge collections of metalwork joyaux (\"jewels\") owned by the Valois dynasty who ruled France in the late Middle Ages.In addition to basic forms of personal jewellery such as rings, necklaces, bracelets, and brooches that remain in use today, medieval jewellery often includes a range of other forms less often found in modern jewellery, such as fittings and fasteners for clothes including, buckles, \"points\" for the end of laces, and buttons by the end of the period, as well as hat badges, decorations for belts, weapons, purses and other accessories, and decorated pins, mostly for holding hairstyles and head-dresses in place. Neck chains carried a variety of pendants, from crosses (the most common) to lockets and elaborate pieces with gems. Thin \"fillets\" or strips of flexible gold sheet, often decorated, were probably mostly sewn into hair or headresses. Arm-rings (\"armillae\") and sometimes ankle-rings were also sometimes worn, and sometimes (for the very rich) many small of pieces of jewellery were sewn into the cloth of garments forming patterns. Jewellery was a very important marker of social status, and most prosperous women probably wore some conspicuous pieces all the time, or at least whenever outside the home. Men were often at least equally highly adorned, and high-status children of both sexes often wore jewellery as formal wear.".
- Medieval_jewelry thumbnail Paar_Prunkfibeln.jpg?width=300.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageExternalLink 3.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageExternalLink 188784.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageExternalLink jewel1.htm.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageExternalLink 3047569.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageID "35075551".
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageLength "22572".
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageOutDegree "90".
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageRevisionID "696204899".
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Amber.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Saxons.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Armill.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Bohemia.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink British_Isles.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Brooch.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Button.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Byzantine_Empire.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Cabochon.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Carolingian_dynasty.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jewellery.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_European_metalwork_objects.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_costume.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Category:Types_of_jewellery.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Celtic_brooch.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Chalice.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Champlevé.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Cloisonné.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink College_Art_Association.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Coral.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Cross_of_Lothair.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Cultured_freshwater_pearls.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Diamond.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Disk_brooch.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Emerald.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Engraved_gem.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Europe.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Facet.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Fibula.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Filigree.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Franks.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Freshwater_pearl_mussel.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Garnet.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Gemcutter.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Gemstone.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Gold.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Goldsmith.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Granulation_(jewellery).
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Grave_goods.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Holarctic.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink House_of_Valois.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Hunterston_Brooch.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Insular_art.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Jet_(lignite).
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Kutná_Hora.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Lapidary_(text).
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Anglo-Saxon_monarchs_and_kingdoms.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Lombards.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Migration_Period.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Ostrogoths.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Ottonian_dynasty.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Pendant.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Quartz.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Reliquary.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Repoussé_and_chasing.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Gold_Cup.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Ruby.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Scotland.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Soldering.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Sutton_Hoo.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Tara_Brooch.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Treasure_binding.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Vestment.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Vikings.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Visigoths.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Vitreous_enamel.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink Western_Roman_Empire.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink File:Ardennenkreuz_(croce_processionale),_francia_del_nord_o_germania_occ.le,_825-850_ca_02.JPG.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink File:British_Museum_-Dunstable_Swan_Jewel_-side_cropped_close.jpg.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink File:Britishmuseumpenrithhoardbrooches.jpg.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink File:Buckle_and_Tab,_600s_AD,_Avaric,_gold_-_Cleveland_Museum_of_Art_-_DSC08478.JPG.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink File:Byzantine_-_Pair_of_Earrings_-_Walters_57560,_57561.jpg.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink File:Byzantine_Jewellery_(1).JPG.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink File:Gold_earring_MCAM_Split.jpg.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink File:Paar_Prunkfibeln.jpg.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLink File:Sutton.Hoo.ShoulderClasp2.RobRoy.jpg.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLinkText "Medieval jewelry".
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLinkText "jewellery".
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLinkText "medieval jewellery".
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLinkText "medieval jewelry".
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageWikiLinkText "stylish shoulder ornaments".
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Main.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Medieval_jewelry wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Medieval_jewelry subject Category:Jewellery.