Each bead of the rosary represents the bust of a well-fed
    burgher or maiden on one side, and a skeleton on the
    other. The terminals, even more graphically, show the
    head of a deceased man, with half the image eaten away
    from decay. Such images served as reminders that life is
    fleeting and that leading a virtuous life as a faithful
    Christian is key to salvation.

    PSA: Yes I know it does not look like a Rosary! But that’s the description of it given everywhere including the Museum so it is what it is.

    by CryptographerKey2847

    Share.

    2 Comments

    1. Future_Usual_8698 on

      Oh wow this is I want to say deep instead of dark, it’s pretty incredible! I wonder if rosaries were structured differently by region or era? I bought my brother a kind of a wrist/ man’s rosary so it was just one where you would go round and round instead of having the entire length in beads

    Leave A Reply