ca. 1330-50
Town possibly Genoa,
Italy
Italy
Object qualities
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Object
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Type of arts & crafts
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MediumSilver, with traces of gilding and enamel; modern textile support
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Size65 3/8 Г— 1 5/16 Г— 9/16 in. (166 Г— 3.3 Г— 1.4 cm) Other (waist size): 21 1/16 - 33 7/16 in. (53.5 - 85 cm) Other (width of textile support): 7/8 in. (2.3 cm) Other (From end of belt buckle to change in orientation): 34 1/16 in. (86.5 cm) Other (From end of belt strap to change in orientation): 40 3/16 in. (102 cm)
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Geography detailsMade in
Town possibly Genoa,
Italy -
Country today
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Dateca. 1330-50
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CultureNorth Italian
Source of information
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Type of sourceDatabase “Metropolitan Museum of Art”
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Fund that the source refers toMetropolitan Museum of Art
Description
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The celebrated Italian poet Giovanni Boccaccio (1313–1375) tells of a silver belt stolen from a virtuous Genoese woman that was offered for sale in the market at Acre, a principal arrival point for European Christian pilgrims. The story bears witness to the lucrative and lively commerce between Italian merchant cities and the Holy Land. This belt, which combines typically European motifs like that of a woman spinning with images of men in Persian inspired costumes, boasts of the same wide world that Boccaccio took for granted.