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Wikimedia Commons · Public domain · Hover to magnify, click for fullscreen
Original fileHuman hair is contained in this gold brooch. The jewellery is encased in a gold frame and on a pearly background. Such ‘hairwork’ was a craft often associated with mourning in Europe in the 1700s and 1800s. This is because much jewellery contained intricately moulded locks of hair from a departed loved one. The brooch was also a memento mori. These objects remind the living of both the dead and the fragility of life. Women in Victorian Britain were permitted to wear hairwork jewellery in the ‘second stage’ of mourning. This began a year and a day after the loved one's death. maker: Unknown maker Place made: Europe
Medical Photographic Library Keywords: human hair; memento mori; brooch
Object
Digital Source
Wikimedia Commons · Public domain
3888 × 3186 px