The Knossos 'Jewel Fresco' Reconsidered

View/ Open
Issue Date
2008Author
Younger, John G.
Publisher
British Archaeological Reports
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The "Jewel Fresco" from Knossos shows a man's thumb and two fingers in relief touching a necklace of yellow beads with pendant beads in the shape of frontal faces. Conventionally, the fresco is reconstructed as a "sacred marriage": a man touches an elaborate necklace worn by a seated woman. There are problems with this interpretation. Above all, there are no certain representations of men and women in physical contact in Aegean art. The necklace's frontal
faces have few parallels. The white area about the necklace does not depict a woman's neck; it should be in relief, not flat. Thus, the black line at left does not belong to her hair. And the blue tassel-like objects resemble more the net patterns on frescoes from Phylakopi, and this suggests that they represent the string and tassel ends of the necklace itself. Might the man therefore be holding his own necklace? Men wear necklaces almost as often as women. A woman touching or carrying a necklace is a common topos; the Jewel Fresco may present our only surviving (so far) male
counterpart.
Collections
- Classics Scholarly Works [151]
Citation
"The Knossos 'Jewel Fresco' Reconsidered." DIOSKOUROI. Studies Presented to W.G. Cavanagh and C.B. Mee on the Anniversary of Their 30-year Joint Contribution to Aegean Archaeology. British Archaeological Reports-IS 1889. Eds. Chrysanthi Gallou, Mercourios Georgiadis and Georgina M. Muskett. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, 2008, 76-89 Print.
Items in KU ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
We want to hear from you! Please share your stories about how Open Access to this item benefits YOU.