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  2. Antefix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antefix

    Etruscan antefix from Cerveteri of a maenad wearing an elaborate diadem and grape-cluster earrings, The MET Roman antefix decorated with the butting heads of two billy goats, The MET Roman antefix depicting Venus (Aphrodite, the goddess of love) and her lover Mars (Ares, the god of war), The MET

  3. Girandole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girandole

    Girandole is used in jewellery design to mean an earring with a large central stone or piece with smaller stones attached. [13] A popular form of girandole earrings consists of 3 pendant drops hanging from a larger cluster in the shape of a bow or other designs, like the branches of a candelabra. [18]

  4. Etruscan jewelry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etruscan_jewelry

    Large hanging earrings, long necklaces and heavy pendants or bullae were in style and worn by both men and woman alike. Women were heavily adorned and wore large diadems, bracelets and circlets, hair spirals, heavy earrings in the shape of grape clusters, large heavy pendants (also worn by men and children).

  5. Blackamoor (decorative arts) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackamoor_(decorative_arts)

    Pair of Italian figures in painted wood, 18th century "Moor with Emerald Cluster" by Balthasar Permoser in the collection of the Grünes Gewölbe. Blackamoor is a type of figure and visual trope in European decorative art, typically found in works from the Early Modern period, depicting a man of sub-Saharan African descent, usually in clothing that suggests high status.

  6. Earring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earring

    Earrings are jewelry that can be worn on one's ears. Earrings are commonly worn with an earlobe piercing [1] or another external part of the ear, ...

  7. Jewels of Elizabeth II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewels_of_Elizabeth_II

    The pear-shaped drop diamonds each weigh about 20 carats (4 g). Diana, Princess of Wales, borrowed them in 1983 to wear on her first official visit to Australia. At a state banquet, she wore the earrings with a tiara from her family's own collection. [66] The Greville Pear-drop Earrings passed to Elizabeth II upon her mother's death in 2002. [67]

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