Abstract

During the 2016 campaign of the Danish-German Jerash Northwest Quarter Project, a gem was discovered in a fill layer, which had been intentionally filled in in order to close a large, well-constructed Roman-period cistern. The amuletic ring-stone considered here adds to the magic material known from Jerash. Although the gem was found out of its primary context, both the iconographic scene on the obverse and the magical inscription on the reverse are unparalleled. The stone belongs to a group of magical amulets in which an image prompted by Classical mythology is combined with an inscription that transforms the image into a specifically magical object intended to act as a love spell.

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