Gold Finger Ring
2 cm diameter
Cloisonne Enamel
13th century B.C.

Royal Gold Sceptre
height 16.5 cm
cloisonne enamel
11th century B.C. |
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by Dr Panicos Michaelides
Enamel is a kind of glass fused to metal, usually copper, silver or
gold, at high temperatures [around 800 degrees Centigrade].
Although the technique of enameling may have been invented independently
in widely separated regions the history of "The Earliest Cloisonne
Enamels" starts from Cyprus.
An Island in the Eastern Mediterranean, with a history of more than
8000 years, Cyprus was one of the earliest producers of Copper in the world,
had a flourishing metal industry and during the Cypro-Mycenaean period
[1400-1050 B.C.], the "Golden Age" of Cyprus, the Island enjoyed a high
level of prosperity. This brought a great number of settlers and
craftsmen from neighbouring countries. In order to escape the troubles
on the Greek mainland Mycenaean refugees arrived in Cyprus establishing
important workshops and introducing new ideas and techniques that played
an important role in artistic creation. During this period a new
decorative technique, that of cloisonne enameling, unknown elsewhere at
the time, appeared in Cyprus.
In a Mycenaean tomb that was discovered at Kouklia, Cyprus, in 1952
and dated the thirteenth century B.C. there were six gold rings decorated
with cloisonne enamel that appears to have been fused in place. A
little later [11th century B.C.] a magnificent Royal Gold Sceptre
with cloisonne enamel was discovered in a tomb at Kourion.
These are the earliest findings with enamel that exist to-day in the
whole world and indicate that the technique of cloisonne enameling was
first practised in Cyprus during the thirteenth century B.C.
With the kind permission of:
The Cyprus Archaeological Museum , Nicosia and
"Glass on Metal", April 1989
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