Early Victorian Coral Manu Fica Pendant
Early Victorian Coral Manu Fica Pendant
$1,250.00
Description
DATE: Victorian, c.1840
Cool antique coral 'manu fica' amulet dating from the early Victorian period, circa 1840. It's gold-topped with finely engraved detailing, and the coral is coloured beautifully - a slightly muted pinkish-orange. The coral is Italian, likely picked up by a Grand Tourer on the Roman leg of their European adventure.
The Manu Fica (aka figa, fig hand, mano fico) is an ancient obscene gesture, intended to figuratively represent sexual union. It was used to ward of the Evil Eye, apparently on the assumption that evil can be repelled by obscenity; that even demons will flee from the notion of sex/reproduction. The fig (fica in Latin) was a fruit sacred to Bacchus, and associated by the Romans with female fertility and eroticism. Among Early Christians, the gesture was known as the manus obscena, or "obscene hand".
Although it has long since fallen out of use in Italy, the fig hand is still used as a rude gesture in certain parts of Greece, Turkey, Korea, and Madagascar. In Japan, Indonesia, and the Netherlands it's a gesture symbol for sexual intercourse, and in Russia, Poland, Lithuania, Croatia, and Serbia it's used when denying a request, or refusing to do something. In many other countries, the UK and US included, the gesture is - bizarrely - only really used as part of a game whereby one person pretends to steal the other's nose.
STONES
Natural Coral
MEASUREMENTS
3.2 x 0.9cm
WEIGHT
2.5g
MARKS
No marks present
CONDITION
Excellent
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