Shell Earrings in 925 Silver and Zircons
Shell Earrings in 925 Silver and Zircons
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Shells are objects loved by almost everyone, scattered on the beaches, like sea jewels that children and adults have always collected. Few know, however, that for most of history, shells played a fundamental role for man, they were used in all fields, from money to art. Primitive people of the Stone Age used shells to decorate their jewellery, houses and boats. In many tropical countries, tribes used shells as a currency. The Incas buried shells with their dead. Throughout history, architects and artists incorporated various symbolisms into their works, including the shell. Among the ruins in Pompeii, shells were found used to decorate statues of deities.
The result of these ancient customs was that the shells were absorbed into our collective unconscious as a positive symbol.
In Greek and Roman myths, shells were a symbol of prosperity, rebirth and, if associated with the sea, they indicated the source of fertility. We all come from the sea, the shell thus became a symbol of the mother's womb and of the birth of the goddess Venus or Aphrodite.
For this reason, the shell represented the female divinity in pagan worship, and was associated with love, birth and reproduction.
In Roman mythology it is said that Venus, the goddess of love and fertility, was created from foam washed ashore on top of a shell. Many paintings representing Venus therefore depict a shell to identify her. A classic example is Botticelli's "The Birth of Venus".
The shell is linked to the famous Way of St. James (also known as "The Way of St. James"), one of the most important Christian pilgrimages in medieval times, together with Rome and Jerusalem.
“The shell is the traditional symbol of James, son of Zebedee, and is popular with pilgrims along the Way of St. James to the shrine of the apostle, in Santiago de Compostela in Spain. Medieval Christians who made the pilgrimage to her shrine often wore the conch symbol in their hats or clothing..
Few people know that the Way of St. James was built on the ruins of a much older sacred route. The pilgrimage was used to promote fertility and was traveled by young couples who wanted to have a child. Faithful to its ancient meaning, it is said that pilgrims brought a shell with them. The Christians continued this tradition in part, but dedicated the route to St. James.
The pagan symbol of the shell is therefore embedded in the collective unconscious. It has always had positive connotations, just like the next symbol we're going to look at, the diamond/rhombus.
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