Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Sculpture, Room 111, The Gilbert Bayes Gallery

Latin inscription

Cameo
350-450 CE (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The art of engraving gemstones can be traced back to ancient Greece in the 8th century BC and earlier. Techniques passed down to the Egyptians and then to the Romans. There were major revivals of interest in engraved gems in Europe during the Byantine era, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and again in the 18th and 19th centuries. At each stage cameos and intaglios, these skillful carvings on a minute scale, were much prized and collected, sometimes as symbols of power mounted in jewelled settings, sometimes as small objects for private devotion or enjoyment. Based in an earlier, Greek, tradition, gems such as this cameo, which persisted into the fifth and sixth centuries after the birth of Christ, were popular as keepsakes given to a friend or loved-one. Messages in Greek, or far less commonly in Latin, might consist of the name of the intended owner together with an exhortation or a wish for good fortune or long life, such as here. Other later cameo inscriptions had religious significance and bore Christian names and invocations such as 'Christ help'. The trail of ownership of this cameo can be followed back as far as the late seventeenth or early eighteenth century, from which period a drawing of it in an unidentified Italian collection exists. It later passed into the possession of Horace Walpole, the celebrated English collector and historian. Subsequently acquired by a wealthy Parisian banker with his own private museum, its last owner before it was bought by the Museum was Edmund Waterton, a pioneering collector who assembled a huge and important collection of around 760 rings and gems.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleLatin inscription (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Engraved gemstone; Opaque blue layer beneath creamy white layer, set in gold ring.
Brief description
Cameo, oval layered agate, set in gold ring, inscribed in Latin 'VIBAS LUXURI HOMO BONE', Italy, 350-450
Physical description
Horizontal oval cameo. Opaque blue layer beneath creamy white layer. Inscription in four lines, cut from upper white layer, with outer raised border also cut from white layer. Set in gold ring.
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 1.9cm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
'VIBAS LUXURI HOMO BONE' (Various translations of the inscription are put forward. Malcolm J Smith, former Head of Classics at Latymer Upper School, Hammersmith, suggests (email to Lucy Cullen of 22/7/2010) several possible translations, ultimately preferring 'May you live, Luxurius, you good man' (July 2010). Jeffrey Spier (see References) interprates it as reading 'May you live, Luxurius Homobonus'.)
Translation
'May you live, Luxurius, you good man' [or] 'May you live, Luxurius Homobonus'
Object history
In an unidentified Italian collection in the late seventeenth or early eighteenth century (see References re drawing by Filippo Buonarotti). In the collection of Horace Walpole, in Strawberry Hill sale of 1842. Later probably in the collection of the connoisseur and collector Louis Fould, member of the wealthy Jewish family of bankers. Fould had a large collection of antiquities, including many engraved gems, for which he built a private museum in his palatial Parisian home, instructing his architect to look for decorative motifs among his collection, "You know my fondness for art, my passion I might almost say: I love returning to the....inscribed stones... come, let us choose among my cameos and gems; we are sure to find something to decorate pediments and friezes with." The cameo passed into the Waterton Collection, and was bought by the Museum following inclusion in Christie's Sale (undated, not held), lot 42. Edmund Waterton (1830-87) is referred to as one of a group of 'pioneer collectors' by Diana Scarisbrick, 'C.D.E. Fortnum as a collector of rings and gems', C.D.E. Fortnum and the collecting and study of applied arts and sculpture in Victorian England, Ed: Ben Thomas and Timothy Wilson, 1999. His collection of approximately 760 rings, formed with the aim of illustrating the history of rings of all period and types, was acquired by the Museum in 1871 and 1899. Waterton, in 1868 'of Walton Castle, near Wakefield, in the county of York, but now residing at Ostend in the Kingdom of Belgium', got into financial difficulties, and was later to be declared bankrupt. The collection of rings was held as security against a loan by the jeweller Robert Phillips for two years from March of that year. The loan was to be repaid by Waterton by March 1870, but the deadline was not met. Phillips having first contacted the Museum regarding the possible purchase of the rings in 1869, the purchase was recommended by the Board of the Museum in a minute of 20 April 1871. The majority of the rings are held in Metalwork Section, a small number in Sculpture Section.

Historical significance: For a discussion of this and other inscriptions of this type, see Jeffrey Spier, Late Antique and Early Christian Gems, Weisbaden, 2007, pp. 135-9.
Historical context
Engraved gemstones of all dates were widely collected in Italy in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Many were brought back by British Grand Tourists, and important collections were formed.
Summary
The art of engraving gemstones can be traced back to ancient Greece in the 8th century BC and earlier. Techniques passed down to the Egyptians and then to the Romans. There were major revivals of interest in engraved gems in Europe during the Byantine era, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and again in the 18th and 19th centuries. At each stage cameos and intaglios, these skillful carvings on a minute scale, were much prized and collected, sometimes as symbols of power mounted in jewelled settings, sometimes as small objects for private devotion or enjoyment. Based in an earlier, Greek, tradition, gems such as this cameo, which persisted into the fifth and sixth centuries after the birth of Christ, were popular as keepsakes given to a friend or loved-one. Messages in Greek, or far less commonly in Latin, might consist of the name of the intended owner together with an exhortation or a wish for good fortune or long life, such as here. Other later cameo inscriptions had religious significance and bore Christian names and invocations such as 'Christ help'. The trail of ownership of this cameo can be followed back as far as the late seventeenth or early eighteenth century, from which period a drawing of it in an unidentified Italian collection exists. It later passed into the possession of Horace Walpole, the celebrated English collector and historian. Subsequently acquired by a wealthy Parisian banker with his own private museum, its last owner before it was bought by the Museum was Edmund Waterton, a pioneering collector who assembled a huge and important collection of around 760 rings and gems.
Bibliographic references
  • List of Objects in the Art Division, South Kensington, Acquired During the Year 1871, Arranged According to the Dates of Acquisition. London: Printed by George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode for H.M.S.O., p. 46
  • King, C. W. Antique Gems and Rings. London, 1872
  • Spier, Jeffrey. Late Antique and Early Christian Gems. Wiesbaden, 2007, p. 138, no. 753
  • Machell Cox, E., Victoria & Albert Museum Catalogue of Engraved Gems. London, Typescript, 1935, Part 1, p. 81a
  • Catalogue of the Classic Contents of Strawberry Hill Collected by Horace Walpole, 1842, 153, lot 44
  • Drawing of this cameo by Filippo Buonarotti in early eighteenth century manuscript in Florence; see Quartino, 'Studi inediti', 423-78, pl. 10 (Florence, Biblioteca Marucelliana, ms. A.48, c.44)
  • Catalogue de la précieuse collection d'objets d'art, d'antiquités et de tableaux de Feu M. Louis Fould, Paris, 4 June 1860, probably lot 962
Collection
Accession number
580-1871

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Record createdOctober 20, 2004
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