Abstract
Three glass vessels and 45 pieces of jewelry were retrieved from the tombs discovered behind the apse wall of the church at Kursi. Among the vessels is a mold-blown, hexagonal jug with a rare symbolic motif, hitherto unknown from an excavated context. The finds also included two glass pendants, a ribbed bracelet and many beads of varied shapes and sizes, made of glass, carnelian, resin, bone and coral. Two of the beads were decorated: a mosaic-glass bead and a carnelian bead with a drawn pattern. The entire assemblage is typical of the sixth–early seventh centuries CE.
Keywords
eulogia, Christian pilgrimage, mask molds, secondary blowing, Christian symbolism, Golgotha, St. John the Baptist, saint, art, iconography, millefiori beads, eye beads
Recommended Citation
Katsnelson, Natalya
(2014)
"Glass Finds and Assorted Beads from Three Tombs at Kursi-Gergesa (pp. 199–208),"
'Atiqot: Vol. 79, Article 10.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.70967/2948-040X.1697
Available at:
https://publications.iaa.org.il/atiqot/vol79/iss1/10
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