-
Objecttableware: Bowl
-
Type of arts & crafts
-
MediumSilver, silver gilt, and niello
-
SizeOverall: 3 1/8 x 6 7/8 in. (7.9 x 17.5 cm)
-
Geography detailsMade in
United Kingdom -
Country today
-
Datelate 12th century
-
CultureBritish or Scandinavian
-
Type of sourceDatabase “Metropolitan Museum of Art”
-
Fund that the source refers toMetropolitan Museum of Art
-
With its lively nude male figures and dragons entwined in foliage, this bowl was likely a part of a secular drinking cup rather than a ciborium (a vessel that holds the Host) or a chalice for use in the Mass, as was once thought. Between the principle compartments inhabited by the nude figures and dragons are smaller areas with basilisks. The heads of the men and beasts are in high relief, and the bands between the compartments and the palmette frieze below the rim are crisply rendered. The decoration of the bowl has parallels in twelfth-century English art, but similar pieces have also been found in Sweden. This example was discovered near the Ob’ River in Siberia, an indication of how objects in Middle Ages sometimes circulated far from their place of manufacture.