Dating Engraved Gems
ANCIENT GEMS
AND FINGER RINGS FROM ASIA MINOR
Dating
Engraved Gems
Gems cannot be
dated as accurately as other artefacts such as coins, ceramic shards or sculpture
fragments. Style, technique and subject, as well as the variety and shape of
gems, are useful dating criteria, but they remain relative indicators. There
has been recently an increase in the number of studies focusing on the techniques
of engraving, and chronological systems have been devised on the basis of these
observations. Such efforts are constantly checked by finds of gems from dateable
contexts. Recently, for instance, the dating of the 'Incoherent grooves style'
has been down-dated in view of new finds. A good example of a securely dated
context is the house of Pinarius Cerialis in Pompeii, in which a jewellery box
containing a number of plain and engraved gems, among them 24 intaglios and
six cameos, was found. This hoard is of value in providing an undisputed chronological
pointer, for all must have been made before the destruction of the city in 79
A. D.Tomb finds are also very useful evidence for advancing our knowledge, as
they are sometimes associated with other dateable objects such as coins. One
difficulty, however, is the long survival rate of gems, which could be passed
as heirlooms from one generation to another. Examples of old gems set in later
rings are not uncommon.
Shapes and materials
used for rings have also evolved with time, and these variations can also help
in dating the gems set in them. When specialists date a gem, they usually do
so within a century or two, and at best within half a century. Unless there
is conclusive dating evidence, such as the portrait of an emperor whose regnal
years are known, any attempt at greater accuracy would only be rash in the present
circumstances. Future finds coupled with more thorough studies will no doubt
refine what is today a choronological arrangement that is only partially satisfactory.