If You"ve Found it Hard To Find Vintage Empire Sterling , This is The Place For You!
![]() |
![]() SIGNED UNGER STERLING SILVER ART NOUVEAU SEAL US $95.00
|
![]() Wallace Sir Christopher Dinner Knife 9 1 8 US $56.95
|
![]() vintage salt pepper shakers sterling silver US $69.99
|
![]() 2 Empire Oyster Seafood Forls 1 Washington Arms US $2.99
|
![]() Vintage Empire sterling silver salt pepper shaker set US $36.00
|
![]() VINTAGE EMPIRE STERLING SILVER CANDLE HOLDER CANDELABRA 620 US $21.50
|
![]() Vintage Lot of 4 Silver Glass Overlay Coasters Salt Pepper Shakers US $39.99
|
![]() TOWLE RAMBLER ROSE EARRINGS 1937 VINTAGE STERLING US $69.99
|
![]() INTERNATIONAL FAIR OAK EARRINGS 1913 SILVERPLATE US $34.99
|
![]() TOWLE DANISH BAROQUE GOLD EARRINGS 1974 STERLING US $89.99
|
![]() TOWLE DANISH BAROQUE EARRINGS 1970 STERLING US $69.99
|
![]() GORHAM FAIRFAX EARRINGS 1910 VINTAGE STERLING US $89.99
|
![]() International Danish Princess Bracelet VINTAGE 1938 US $49.99
|
![]() INTERNATIONAL GOLDEN ROYAL DANISH EARRINGS STERLING US $69.99
|
![]() INTERNATIONAL Vintage Bracelet Silverplate Grapes 1904 US $49.99
|
![]() NATIONAL SMITH HOLLY EARRINGS 1904 SILVERPLATE US $56.99
|
![]() ONEIDA LA CONCORDE EARRINGS 1910 SILVERPLATE VINTAGE US $47.49
|
![]() ONEIDA LA VIGNE EARRINGS 1908 SILVERPLATE VINTAGE US $47.49
|
![]() Fingernail buffer vintage Empire Art Silver vintage US $95.00
|
![]() Vintage Empire Silver Co Sterling Silver Serving Spoon US $45.00
|
![]() Vintage Empire Sterling Silver Salt and Pepper Shakers US $49.99
|
![]() INTERNATIONAL DUBARRY EARRINGS 1968 VINTAGE STERLING US $99.99
|
![]() Vintage Sterling Silver Candle Holder Candlestick Signed Empire US $33.00
|
![]() PAIR OF VINTAGE EMPIRE CANDLE HOLDER NICE CONDITION US $59.99
|
![]() INTERNATIONAL PRELUDE EARRINGS 1939 VINTAGE STERLING US $89.99
|
![]() Vintage Rouleau Saskatchewan Sterling Silver Spoon US $19.99
|
![]() INTERNATIONAL WILD ROSE EARRINGS 1948 STERLING US $89.99
|
![]() Vintage EMPIRE Sterling Salt Pepper Shakers Weighted Glass Lined US $59.99
|
![]() INTERNATIONAL CROMWALL NAPKIN RINGS SILVERPLATE 2 PCS US $34.99
|
![]() NEW LISKEARD CANADA Sterling Silver SOUVENIR SPOON US $24.99
|
![]() Vintage Rogers Empire Oval Soup or Tablespoon US $1.99
|
![]() 2 Lg Vintage Serving Spoon BES4 Benedict Empire US $3.00
|
![]() GORHAM ENGLISH GADROON EARRINGS 1939 VINTAGE STERLING US $74.99
|
A Brief History of Byzantium - Silver, and More of Its Jewelry
A preview: Starting with a quick story of how Byzantium began, I briefly chronicle the transfers in possession of the city. I share chain of events for Constantine's control and the city's fame, much of which came from the arts and fabricating pieces of jewelry individually.
A Brief History of Byzantium (bih-zan'-shee-um),
Byzantium silver, and more of its Jewelry
Around 650 B.C., a leader named Byzas sailed a ship from Megara, fifteen miles west of Athens, approached the Bosporus and landed at Chalcedon. Colonists consulted the oracle priestess before leaving. They didn't understand, for she had said that they would find a new home opposite the city of the blind. The Bosporus was twenty miles long and very narrow. There, they could control trade between the Black and Aegean Seas. They went from Chalcedon two and a half miles northwest to the other side of the Bosporus. Chalcedon's harbor facilities couldn't compare to the wide beautiful, large harbor they had founded; it could hold any number of ships and with water on three sides, it was easily defended. While they couldn't understand Chalcedon's inferior choice of neighborhood, they did come to understand that the oracle had been speaking of Chalcedon as the city of the blind. The city of Byzantion, named from Byzas' vanity, we know from Latin as Byzantium. Though ancient Geeks founded it, perhaps Byzas never existed and the name came from Byzantium's meaning of "compact", its city pressed together on their tongue of land.
The Byzantine Empire lasted approximately 2000 years, 1129 if counted from 324 when Constantine moved his capital there from Rome. By 1453, the Byzantines had lost their empire to the Ottoman Turks, Constantinople continuing as the capital in the new Ottoman Empire, which changed to Istanbul in 1930 in Turkey. When Constantine (1st) ruled western Rome and Licinius dominated eastern Rome, Byzantium (Constantinople) included, commercialism prospered the Byzantines busily, but with little renown. They were the crossroads between Europe and Asia.
July of 323 to September, Constantine (1st) chased Licinius through Byzantium to Chrysopolis, just north of Chalcedon, for the last battle settling the dispute, and Constantine won the rest of the Roman Empire. After Byzantium's surrender, he wiped their commercial center. Expanding, he had walled it off and built his imitation of Rome, the new capital known as "New Rome", which was completed on May 11, 330. People referred to it as Constantine's city, Constantinople to us. Byzantium with its new name became the largest, the wealthiest, the most cultured, and the most famous city of its time. The Byzantines did not lose influence. No, not at all, for a new coin that Constantine created was called a "bezant", and Byzantine silver and other jewelry fabricated then remain well known and are still very popular to this day.
By that time, Rome interwove itself with Christianity and as Roman tradition continued in early Byzantine jewelry, Christian themes emerged in the 5th century. Crosses and Byzantine chain necklaces became very popular. Byzantine silver and many finger rings bore Christian symbols. Christ, his mother, angels, and saints widely represented in sterling silver Byzantine jewelry surfaced with other precious metals and precious stones along with many allegorical representations, which brought out earlier floral, faunal, and geometric designs. From their illustrious passion to connect their values, their arts to the world, jewelers in Constantinople savored their renown far, far beyond their borders. In the eighth century, Byzantine styles greatly influenced European jewelry: heavy Byzantine necklaces-4mm-12mm, Bali Byzantine silver, Byzantine chain necklaces, heavy Byzantine bracelets-4mm-12mm, Byzantine chain bracelets and more. Early Byzantines and Romans also favored emeralds while jewelers fancied adding gold and silver, enamel, pearls, precious and semi-precious stones to the same pieces of Byzantine jewelry. They created colorful effects in many pieces with enamel, which became popular and oxidizing sterling silver enhanced the vintage feel of Byzantium medieval times.
While most Christian articulations surfaced in the 5th and 6th centuries, Byzantine crosses date back to the fourth century with the beginning of Constantinople, created impassionedly as a result of Constantine Christianizing the Roman Empire. The Byzantine crosses unearthed in digs showed-off attributes possessing the ardor of the craftsmen infused with holiness and spiritual tincture that illuminated Byzantium heart and soul. Before today's mass production, Byzantines brought mastery to their artisanship in an era elucidating exceptional virtuosity, provocative architecture, and creating immaculate jewelry only the focused attention enlivened in one piece at a time can endow.
We hope this leaves you enlightened about a very famous Byzantine society and the art they loved in medieval times. Click the resource link and discover many Byzantine silver styles available for your selection.
About the Author
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: My name's Timothy G. Cochran. My experience writing articles, poems, short stories and more spans a couple of decades. Enjoy some of the unique Silver Byzantine Bracelets & Necklace Chains designs at: http://www.silverwow.co.uk
We grant anyone and everyone PERMISSION to reprint this article as long as nothing is changed in the article, or the resource box. You may, however, add your link under the existing one at web sites where two or more are allowed.


US $95.00
























































































