GOLD AND SILVER MARRIAGE BELT Germany, 17th and l8th century elements.

AUCTION 11 | Tuesday, November 28th, 2000 at 1:00
Important Hebrew Printed Books and Manuscripts From the Library of the London Beth Din

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Lot 317
GOLD AND SILVER MARRIAGE BELT Germany, 17th and l8th century elements.

Est: $8,000 - $10,000
Whether they were seen as a way to embellish the costume of every bride and groom in the community, regardless of financial means, or as symbols of commitment and fidelity, “marriage belts, known as Sivlonot Guertel, were very popular especiallly in Germany during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries... In some communities., the future bride and bride-groom exchanged giflts, known as Sivlonot. These were usually of silver for the groom, and gilt or gold for the bride, and were worn during the wedding ceremony.” Christie’s, Judaica, Amsterdam, June 19, 1991, Lot 152. For a depiction of a German Jewish bride wearing a marriage belt with dangling ornament, see Frankfurt Jewish Museum Catalogue, Moritz Daniel Oppenheim: Jewish Identity in Nineteenth Century Art (1999), p. 287. For another example sold at auction, see Christie’s, Judaica, Amsterdam, June 1991, Lot 152.