Lost Wax Jewelry OfAntiquity
Joyas a la cera perdida, unearthed in the rugged valleys of the Sierra de los Cármenes near Granada, Spain, originates from the late Bronze Age, approximately 1200 BCE.
The artifact glistens with a translucent amber hue, its surface etched by millennia of wind‑carved calcite veins and the slow dissolution of surrounding limestone, while the waxy resin once enveloped it has fossilized into a resilient patina that preserves the delicate impressions of ancient hands.

Its presence bridges the material culture of prehistoric Iberian metallurgists with early experiments in pyrotechnic glazing, offering laboratories of chemistry a rare glimpse into ancient trade routes and ritual symbolism.
It evokes the quiet dialogue between human ingenuity and the relentless carving of mountains, a whisper of memory that lingers like sunrise on a forgotten altar.
Today it stands as a silent sentinel, its ancient shine reflecting in modern eyes, reminding us that while empires fade, the beauty they forged endures, echoing through the corridors of time.
✓ max
Joyas a la cera perdida, unearthed in the rugged valleys of the Sierra de los Cármenes near Granada, Spain, originates from the late Bronze Age, approximately 1200…