-40%

Vintage 925 Silver Brooch Pin Scene of Ancient Greek Minoan Bull-Leaping Fresco

$ 8.97

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Certification: Uncertified
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Unknown
  • Bull fighting Rodeo Jewelry: Ancient Bull Riding Performance Archaic Ritual
  • Metal: Sterling Silver
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    Hello and Thank you for looking!
    PLEASE READ EVERYTHING IN
    RED
    BEFORE BIDDING OR BUYING.
    !!  SERIOUS BUYERS ONLY PLEASE  !!
    Please do not bid or buy if you have no intention of paying. If you have a new account and/or less than 10 positive feedback I may call ebay to verify your account(s), as I usually do. If there are no issues you are good to go! If
    there are any issues with your account(s) I may remove, cancel or block your bids.
    Payment is due within 2 days from end of auction/sale. eBay will
    automatically
    open an unpaid item case if not paid within 2 days. "Buy it Now" items may require immediate payment.
    If you are an EXPERIENCED EBAYER and need more than 2 days to pay, please feel free to ask.
    I am easy to work with!
    Lastly, please do not make any offers on
    AUCTION ITEMS
    or ask to end an
    AUCTION,
    or ask me to sell any listed items
    outside
    of eBay. I will not respond to those inquires so please don't take it personally.
    Sorry, no returns for this item.
    About this item(s):
    Please refer to pictures as they are part of the description.
    Vintage 925 Silver Brooch Pin Scene of Ancient Greek Minoan Bull-Leaping Fresco.
    Archaic Ritual.
    Tarnished, Not cleaned.
    13.73 grams
    The info below regarding the Bull-Leaping Fresco is from Nat Geo & Wikipedia
    The most famous image of bull-leaping is probably the Bull-Leaping Fresco from the palace at Knossos, Crete, Greece. The
    fresco
    was painted around 1400 BCE, and depicts a young man performing what appears to be a handspring or flip over a charging bull. Two young women
    flank
    the bull. (We know the sexes of the stylized figures by the way they are painted—women’s skin is usually much lighter than men’s in ancient Greek art.)
    Jump to navigation
    Jump to search
    Bull-Leaping Fresco
    Greek:
    Ταυροκαθάψια (Taurokathapsia)
    Artist
    Unknown
    Year
    1450 BC
    Type
    Fresco
    Medium
    Stucco
    panel with scene in relief
    Dimensions
    78.2 cm × 104.5 cm (30.8 in × 41.1 in)
    Location
    Heraklion Archaeological Museum
    ,
    Heraklion
    , Crete
    Owner
    Hellenic Republic
    The
    Bull-Leaping Fresco
    , as it has come to be called, is the most completely restored of several
    stucco
    panels originally sited on the upper-story portion of the east wall of the palace at
    Knossos
    in Crete. It shows a
    bull-leaping
    scene. Although they were
    frescos
    , they were painted on stucco
    relief
    scenes. They were difficult to produce. The artist had to manage not only the altitude of the panel but also the simultaneous molding and painting of fresh stucco. The panels, therefore, do not represent the formative stages of the technique. In
    Minoan chronology
    , their polychrome hues – white, pale red, dark red, blue, black – exclude them from the Early Minoan (EM) and early Middle Minoan (MM) Periods. They are, in other words, instances of the "mature art" created no earlier than MM III. The flakes of the destroyed panels fell to the ground from the upper story during the destruction of the palace, probably by earthquake, in Late Minoan (LM) II. By that time the east stairwell, near which they fell, was disused, being partly ruinous.
    The subject is common in
    Minoan art
    , one of a number depicting the handling of bulls.
    Arthur Evans
    , Keeper of the
    Ashmolean Museum
    , owner of the palace and director of excavation, presents the topic in Chapter III of his monumental work on Knossos and Minoan Civilization,
    Palace of Minos
    . There he calls the several frescos "The Taureador Frescos."
    [1]
    There are more fragments than are included in the famous reconstruction, and it is generally thought that there were several bull-leaping scenes. A proposed reconstruction by M. Cameron has four very similar scenes, each with a left-facing bull and three human figures, one upside-down over the bull's back, and then one at each end, the ones at the front holding the bull's horns.
    [2]
    Sorry, no returns for this item.
    Thank you!!
    International Buyers, outside of USA -
    Please check your country's laws before purchasing this item! I cannot be responsible for items that may be
    illegal
    in your country or doesn't pass
    customs.
    CUSTOMS
    -
    Duties, fees, taxes.......
    Items shipping internationally
    may be subject to customs processing depending on the item's declared value.
    Sellers
    set the item's declared value and must comply with customs declaration laws.
    Buyers
    may be subject to additional charges for customs clearance.
    Visit eBay's page on
    international trade
    .
    RETURNS
    -
    Only allowed on items if "Not as described". Returns must be received exactly as they were shipped to you & as pictured in the listing. No part(s) shall be missing, broken, etc. Once the returned item is received, the item will be examined very closely & compared to the numerous pictures taken prior to shipping.
    *Item
    (s) described in the above description & pictures is the actual item(s) you will receive. Only the item(s) described. All other items are not part of this sale & are used for scale or background.