JeepSafari  
  Rafting  
  Diving  
  Paragliding  
  Canyoning  
  Trekking  
  Biking  
  Rent a car  
 
ATSO CHAMBER
link
 
Click for Live Chat
 
Current Weather
 
Current Exchange Rates
 
Perpetual calendar
 
Guestbook
link
 
Visitor Statistics
 
Jevellary handicraft

Along with our embroideries used with the traditional costumes the “takı”, which are put around one’s neck, are also the important accessories. All civilizations lived in Anatolia, have produced works of art having artistic value with precious and semi precious stones by either working up with metals or separately. The most importance of the various methods which have come with Seljuks are Turkmen Takı. At the Ottoman period the jewelry has gained importance in parallel to the development of the Empire.

After the periods of the Bronze Age in Anatolia when the bronze have been obtained by mixing the tin with copper, the materials such as copper, gold, silver have been also worked up by using the cast and wrought technique. The most used material is copper. The techniques such as wrought, scraping, savaklama (engraving in black on silver) have been used. The handicrafts made with copper, as well as the metals such as brass, gold, silver, are tried to be kept alive today by using high quality workmanship and various designs. The copper, which is the most widespread metal work up used today, is continued to be used by making cookware by tin foiling it. The architect created from the sheltering requirement has been designed and increased in varieties according to the conditions of the environment.

ANCIENT ANATOLIAN JEWELLERY

  In the Neolithic age, when a wandering life of hunting and gathering made way for settled communities, the people of Anatolia began to place burial gifts in graves. These gifts included necklaces, bracelets and rings made of diverse stones, teeth, horns and bones of animals, and sea shells. The earliest Anatolian jewellery, dating from between 7000 and 5000 BC, has been found in excavations of Çayönü in Diyarbakir, and Çatalhöyük, Asiklar Höyük and Kösk Höyük in central Anatolia.

 Jewellery made of precious metals begins in the 4th millennium BC, although very few examples from this period have been discovered. By the 3rd millennium BC, however, skilfully crafted metal jewellery was being produced, and that made of gold found in tombs at Eskiyapar and Alacahöyük in central Anatolia dating from 2600-2000 BC is exquisite both in design and technique. Jewellery made by the Hittites, who established a powerful empire in Anatolia in the 2nd millennium BC, 

also shows great sophistication, although examples are too scarce to make any generalisations about its characteristics. Finds dating from the 7th century BC, however, are more numerous, particularly in western Anatolia. At this period city states founded by Hellenic Anatolian peoples ruled the Aegean coast, while the inland areas were under Lydian domination. The Lydian capital of Sardis was the main centre of gold jewellery production.

 Jewellery dating from the 7th and 6th centuries BC has been found in the votive pit at the Temple of Artemis in Ephesus, and in tumuli in the province of Usak. The Ephesian Artemis evolved from the Anatolian mother goddess, a universal deity who was a guardian of civilisation, ruler over nature, and queen of bees. She represented three aspects of womanhood: virginity, the married woman and motherhood. This trinity is symbolised in jewellery by the use of motifs like rosettes and double-headed axes in triplicate. The most frequently used emblems of the mother goddess are the bee, the crescent and the sparrowhawk. 

 Bees often feature on earrings, brooches, and the finials of pins. The crescent, representing Artemis as goddess of the moon, appears as crescent-shaped earrings and pendants. Sparrowhawks, often found on brooches and pendants, symbolise the goddss'ss power over nature, and plant motifs represent fertility. Granulation is the most common decorative technique on jewellery of this period.

 Jewellery made in the Aegean coastal region was mainly worn by women, the men wearing only rings or sometimes wreaths. In Lydia, however, where the influence of eastern cultures was stronger, men worn jewellery to a much greater extent. From 500 BC onwards, Anatolian cultures absorbed many aspects of Persian art, giving rise to a characteristic style known as Anatolian Persian. Large quantities of jewellery found in tombs near Sardis and Usak provide a detailed picture of this period of Persian domination.

 Since the costume of the period had changed, pins and fibulas were no longer made.

 Instead we find earrings, necklaces and pendants, bracelets, rings, buckles and appliéet ornaments for clothing. During this period the use of semi-precious stones and glass imitations of these became widespread, and hence jewellery much more colourful. Two main centres of jewellery production stand out during this period. One was Sardis, where fine jewellery had been produced since Lydian times, and the other Lampsakos (the modern Lâpseki) on the Strait of Çanakkale. Triangles and lozenges are forms characteristic of this period. The monotheist Zoroastrian faith of the Persians featured a trinity consisting of Anahita, the world mother, Ahura Mazda, representing light and righteousness, and Ahirman representing the force of evil, and it may be that the triangle was a symbol of these three aspects of divinity. 

  Necklaces often combined beads in various forms relating to fertility, such as pomegranates and sea snails. Decorative metal work techniques were filigree and granulation, the former being found from the 4th century BC onwards.

 When Alexander the Great overthrew the Persian state in 330 BC, and carried his conquests as far as India, the resulting synthesis of traditional Aegean and eastern cultures is referred to as Hellenistic. During this period we find new features, such as earrings with animal motifs and mythological figures, resulting from the modification of Persian elements by Hellenic traditions and tastes. The principal centres of production at this time were Lampsakos, and subsequently Antioch and Alexandria. The new motifs which appear at this time include the knot of Heracles and Isis or Hathor (two Egyptian goddesses who are sometimes identified). 

  But it was Aphrodite, goddess of love, that jewellery symbolised most often; sometimes in the form of Eros, and sometimes by doves or myrtle, the sacred tree of the goddess. Other plants held sacred by association with various deities are the oak of Zeus, the bay of Apollo, the vine of Dionysus and the olive of Athena.

Under eastern influence the use of semi-precious stones begins at this time, leading to a new diversity in jewellery. As well as earrings, wreaths and diadems, hair pins, necklaces, bracelets and rings, we now find such new types as breast ornaments and hair nets.

 Declining prosperity from the mid-2nd century BC became even more marked in the 1st century BC, and economic difficulties led to a demand for less costly jewellery. At this time Anatolia became part of the Roman Empire, and the precious and magnificent jewellery of the Roman period was produced not in the provinces but in Rome.

 Earrings and rings of very diverse types were made in the Roman period, and necklaces and rings often incorporated coins or medallions representing the emperors. Medallion pendants bearing mythological designs are also typical of the period, as are head and hair ornaments. During the Byzantine period jewellery production in other cities ceased, as Constantinople became the sole centre for jewellers and goldsmiths.

Anatolia has given rise to many civilizations in the course of history. Due to location of Anatolia between Europe and Asia, it became the home for many different cultures.

The earliest major empire in the area was that of the Hittites, from the 18th through the 13th century BC. Subsequently, the Phrygians, an Indo-European people, achieved ascendancy until their kingdom was destroyed by the Cimmerians in the 7th century BC. The most powerful of Phrygia's successor states was Lydia. Meanwhile, coastal Anatolia ( Ionia) was settled by Greeks. The entire area was overrun by the Persians during the 6th and 5th centuries and fell to Alexander the Great in 334 BC. Anatolia was subsequently divided into a number of small Hellenistic kingdoms (including Bithynia, Cappadocia, Pergamum, and Pontus), all of which had succumbed to Rome by the mid-1st century BC. In AD 324 the Roman emperor Constantine I chose Constantinople, now Istanbul, as the capital of the Roman Empire. It subsequently became the capital of the Eastern Roman or Byzatine Empire.

In 1055 a group of Central Asiatic Turks, the Seljuks, conquered Baghdad and established a Middle Eastern and Anatolian empire. When this empire was broken up by the Mongol invasion, one of the remaining local powers became known as the Ottoman dynasty, after its leader Osman I. The Ottoman Empire spread from northwestern Anatolia and captured Constantinople in 1453. At the peak of their power the Ottomans controlled much of the eastern Mediterranean.

The mix of these culteres in Anatolia created various type of artworks including jewelry.

  


 

 







 







 




 

 

 

 



 
 
link
 
link
 
link
 
link
 
link
 
link
 
Language selection
 
TURKEY THE PARADISE
 
Turkey Informations
 
Videos about Turkey
 
Photo galleries


Click here for more

link
 
Member Log-in
 
Email newsletter - subscribe now
 
You like this Website ?
Tell a friend - click to send a message
 
 
Make your starting side
Save to my favourites
© 2008 MAY WEBPAGE ADMINISTRATION SYSTEM  TM
About us
Our Tours
You own tour
Taxi otobus
Real estate
How to find us
Contact
About Turkey
Save the Nature
Why Turkey ?
Animals
Biodiversity
Handcraft
Turkish cuisine
Step Up
Animals Home
Anatolian lepard
Asiatic lion
Brown bear
Bald ibis
Badger
Black - eared
Caspian tiger
European wildcat
Eurasian Lynx
Eurosian otter
Fallow deer
Golden jackal
Grey wolf
Great bustard
Jungle cat
Pine marten
Red fox
Striped hyaena
Seal
Turkish angora cat
Wild goat
Step Up
Herbal Index
Glossary of herbs
Organic agriculture
Organic food
Curative plants
Actions of herbs
Step up
Handcraft
Marbling
Jevellary handicraft
Silver filigree
The weaving
Glass-made arts
Turkish carpet
Handwoven carpets
The weaving
Step up
Cousie
Salads
Soups
Organic food
Enjoying eggs
Step Up
Herbal Page 1
Herbal Page 2
Herbal Page 3
Herbal Page 4
Herbal Page 5
Herbal Page 6
Herbal Pafe 7
Geographical info
Antalya
Alanya
Belek
Golf ve Belek
Demre
Finike
Gazipaşa
Kaş
Kemer
Kumluca
Manavgat
Saklıkent
The Mediterranean C.
The Aegean Coast
The Bosphorus&Marmara
The Black Sea Coast
Central Anatolia
The Eastern Provinces
Cappadocia
Ski Resorts
Islam
JeepSafari
Rafting
Diving
Paragliding
Canyoning
Trekking
Biking
Rent a car