Page:A History of Art in Chaldæa & Assyria Vol 2.djvu/392

 354 A History of Art in Chald^ea and Assyria. Kings and other high personages were not content with such simple adornments. It would seem that princes wore necklaces made up of separate pieces each of which had an emblematic signification of its own (Fig. 239), because we find them constantly reappearing in the reliefs, sometimes around the sovereign's neck, sometimes distributed over the field of a stele. In the stele of Samas-Yul, the king only wears a single ornament Figs. 232, 233. — Bracelets ; from Rawlinson. on his breast ; it is exactly similar to what we call a Maltese cross (Fig. 116). These ornaments must have been of gold and of some considerable size. The grand vizier, and the king when his tiara is absent, wear a diadem about their foreheads in which the rosette is the chief element of the decoration (Vol. I. Figs. 25 and 29). The queen's diadem, in the " Feast Fig. 234. — Ear-drop. British Museum. of Assurbanipal," is crenellated (Fig. 117), reminding us of that worn by the Greek Cybele. In the same monuments the wrists of kings and genii are surrounded with massive bracelets (Vol. I. Pigs. 4, 8, 9, 15, 23, 24, 29, &c). In the Louvre there is a bronze bracelet of exactly the same type (Fig. 24c). 1 We 1 De Longpérier, Notice des Antiquités assyriennes du' Musée du Louvre, third edition, No. 212.