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Bulgarian or Ottoman, Necklace or Chest Ornament

Note the jeweled birds. A necklace or chest ornament (see second photo in the comments.) The coins are real coins and the big one is from 1828-1832 and the smaller ones are 1839-1843. The materials are gilt high silver (central element), gilt low silver (chains and coins) and gilt copper (at least part of the birds.)
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Comments

  • Yes, a nice find!  I saw this one :-)

  • Thank you Hillary!

    Here is a photo of how the chains drape, could also be an ornament worn across the front of the breast. 

    2506014317?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024

  • Dear Lynn; Lovely indeed! I too, believe that this is rather a chest ornament - a gorgeous one to say the least! Congratulations.
    Peter
  • Thank you Peter, I suspected you would like it.  :) 

  • Very attractive as a necklace! Great find.

  • This is gorgeous Lynn. Those filigree flowers on the central plate always remind me of the work of the Jewish silversmiths in Yemen and elsewhere. I wonder if this piece was imported. It looks as if it has a slightly different origin from the birds.

  • Thank you for your comment Thelma.  I agree the central plate had to be made by a different person than the bird ends.  The bird ends are gilt copper and the work is not fine, but the central plate is gilt silver and the back is even more beautiful than the front, it has gorgeous filigree under the rosettes.  It does appear to be of Balkan origin to me, but definitely different makers, one quite skilled.  I was recently reading about the guild system under Ottoman rule and apparently there well-defined rules for coppersmith vs. goldsmith (silversmith) and this system existed in Bulgaria until the revolution.  So the birds may have been made by a coppersmith, and the plate by a goldsmith.

  • Yes, it is almost as if the rest of the necklace is a setting for the precious central plate.

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