Transcriber’s Note:
List of Illustrations entry: Greek and Roman Intaglio Rings Page 49 corrected to Page 50.
Obvious printer errors corrected silently.
Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.
The author presents a concise, illustrated survey of glyptic art from antiquity through the Renaissance and later revivals, cataloging engraved stones, cylinders, seals, cameos, and intaglios and tracing stylistic and technical developments across Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Persian, Etruscan, Phoenician, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, medieval, and Renaissance examples, with sections on Gnostic and early Christian tokens, typologies such as historic cameos, mythological and animal subjects, and non‑Western materials. Emphasis falls on classification, museum arrangement, and the rise, decline, and occasional revivals of workmanship, illustrated by specimens and interpretive notes linking iconography, religious themes, and craftsmanship.
List of Illustrations entry: Greek and Roman Intaglio Rings Page 49 corrected to Page 50.
Obvious printer errors corrected silently.
Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.