12019-05-08T16:17:50-07:00Emilia Porubcin63ec028064958b3240cc8e4e010f355faa0c8e12332305Used in tandem with a mirror, this decorative hairpin offers yet another material connection between ancient personal practices and those of contemporary society. A luxury item, hairpins were used by wealthy Roman Egyptian women to maintain their elaborate hairstyles. Although many hairpins were straight, some, like this one, were crescent-shaped. Of a type known as an orbis, this piece was meant to be seen, simultaneously showing an Egyptian aesthetic and acting as a status symbol.plain2019-06-22T10:42:42-07:00332 BCE-641 CEPhysical objectObject ID 20595Archaeology; AfricaBronzeStanford UniversityExcavated by the Egypt Exploration Fund in 1906–1907, acquired by Timothy Hopkins from Fund and donated to Stanford in 1911RomanRoman EgyptianEmilia Porubcin63ec028064958b3240cc8e4e010f355faa0c8e12
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12019-04-16T19:38:15-07:00Emilia Porubcin63ec028064958b3240cc8e4e010f355faa0c8e12DAILY LIFEChristina J. Hodge16plain2019-09-10T18:23:10-07:00Christina J. Hodgeb0448a0ebf7b6fff7b74ba40ef2cdd594c9bfcf9