A loop in loop chain complete with its original elongated hook and eye clasp.
A loop in loop chain complete with its original elongated hook and eye clasp.
Provenance
Shlomo Gabbay (1919-1995) Collection, thence by descent
Shlomo was born in Basra, Iraq, son of Joseph Elias Gabbay (aide-de-camp to King Faisal I and vice-president of the General Assembly of Iraq). After the death of his father in 1927, he emigrated with his mother and siblings to Palestine, where he was educated at the Scottish College in Safed. He served in the British Army during the Mandate, subsequently qualifying as an advocate in law at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
After establishing himself as a well-known lawyer in the 1950s, he began to cultivate his interests in archaeology in the 1960s, gradually developing an impressive collection of antiquities including coins, ancient pottery and glass which he acquired through various dealers including Yaakov Meshorer, Moussaiff, and Zadok and Sons.
After Shlomo retired in 1975 he moved to England with his wife and daughters. Before leaving Israel he sold his collection of antique pottery and glass, but kept his precious weights collection and coins, most of which were auctioned in the 1980s in Germany. He died in London in 1995.
Literature
This loop in loop chain was a popular style in Imperial Rome; for a similar example see The Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession no. 17.190.1718.