Musical and dance motifs on Roman engraved gems of the Augustan Era

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1553/JMA-002-03

Keywords:

Augustus, gems, gem engravers, musical iconography, glyptic, Greek mythology, religion

Abstract

This paper presents a selection of Roman engraved gems (cameos and intaglios) which are deco­rated with musical and dance motifs, focusing primarily on artifacts dated to the Augustan era. The iconography of gems from this era varies, including figures that hold or play a musical instru­ment or dance, or sometimes only a musical instrument that covers the surface. The musicians and dancers are usually figures derived from Greek mythology and religion. This paper has three aims: first, to classify the motifs according to the mythical figures or musical instruments that they rep­resent. Second, to present/describe their iconography, and third, to interpret, how these objects were used by Roman rulers. I divided the gems examined into four categories: a) objects related to Apollo’s iconography; b) Dionysian themes; c) musical motifs with tritons; and d) single musical instruments.

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Published

2024-12-08

How to Cite

Liveri, Angeliki. 2024. “Musical and Dance Motifs on Roman Engraved Gems of the Augustan Era”. Journal of Music Archaeology 2 (December). Vienna, Austria:53–87. https://doi.org/10.1553/JMA-002-03.

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