The "Crown of the Andes" is considered one of the most important
surviving examples of goldsmith work from colonial Spanish America.
Notable for its rarity, richness, and exquisite craftsmanship, the crown
represents the most distinctive artistic achievement of a locale whose
wealth derived from the mining of gold and emeralds.
The "Crown of the Andes" was made to adorn a sacred image the Virgin of
the Immaculate Conception venerated in Popayán cathedral, in the former
Spanish viceroyalty of New Granada (now Colombia). An attribute of
Mary's divine queenship, the gold crown is encircled by scrolls of
acanthus leaves set with emeralds in blossom-shaped clusters that
symbolize the Virgin's purity. The diadem, made in the mid-seventeenth
century, is surmounted by four imperial arches made a little more than a
century later. Pear-shaped emerald pendants are suspended beneath them
and they are topped by a cross-bearing orb that signifies Christ's
dominion over the world. The crown is encrusted with nearly 450
emeralds, the largest one being a twenty-four-carat gemstone known as
the "Atahualpa emerald."
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