Skip to content

Woman from Palmyra with a unique headband

On many Palmyra reliefs, women have more or less decorative headbands with floral motifs. This relief from the Manchester University Museum dated to the late 2nd century is different. A woman is wearing a headband (fillet) with an unique ornament in the center – a head surrounded by leaves at the central plaque.

A very similar ornament as on the relief from Manchester, a head surrounded by leaves, appears on a golden wreath from the beginning of the 3rd century BCE, which have been found in the grave of a woman at Lete, near Thessaloniki. Despina Ignatiadou in the article “Gold Wreaths and Diadems, Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki” describes it as a head of Aphrodite Antheia among oak leaves: “Aphrodite Antheia, the goddess ruling life and death, is depicted at the center of this unique gold diadem found in the grave of a woman. The goddess’s head is attached to a “Herakles knot”, flanked by two pairs of oak leaves. The hoop of the diadem consists of two tubes, supporting twenty pairs of spirals, oak leaves, and five-petalled flowers with spiral stems. The tubes terminate in wire hoops for the fastening fillet.”

The only similar motif from Palmyra I have found so far is this architectural ornament, head of a child flanked by leaves. Thus, as a child with a braid, Eros is depicted in antiquity.

© Gerard Degeorge


SOURCES: