Bowl
1340-1350 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Medieval diners drank from shallow bowls like this or cups and beakers of various shapes. This bowl was probably intended for drinking although it is shallow, and might also have been used for sweetmeats. The bowl forms part of the so-called 'Rouen Treasure' hoard, said to have been found in an iron box when pulling down a house in Rouen in 1864. Three further bowls, four silver spoons and a gold écu of Philip VI of Valois (ruled 1328-50) from this hoard are also in the V&A.Other bowls, spoons and a beaker are in collections in Paris ( the Louvre and the Cluny Museum) and St Petersburg ( the Hermitage)
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Silver, parcel-gilt, with embossed, chased, punched, matted and set with a medallion of translucent enamel |
Brief description | Circular bowl, silver, parcel-gilt, set with a central medallion of translucent brown, green, yellow, light blue and dark blue enamel showing a lady leading a lion out of a castle courtyard. |
Physical description | Circular bowl, silver, parcel-gilt, set with a central medallion of translucent brown, green, yellow, light blue and dark blue enamel showing a lady leading a lion out of a castle courtyard. The embossed and chased decoration (hammered into relief) around the medallion consists of stylised vine leaves and buds on a matted ground. Radiating out from the well is an embossed design consisting of six unmatted ogee arches forming a star on a matted ground. Between each arch is an unmatted trefoil cartouche and punched floral devices. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Object history | The bowl forms part of the so-called 'Rouen Treasure' hoard, said to have been found in an iron box when pulling down a house in Rouen in 1864. Three further bowls (106, 108 and 109-1865), four silver spoons (110 to 113-1865) and a gold écu of Philip VI of Valois (ruled 1328-50) from this hoard are also in the V&A. In 1961 Charles Oman suggested that they originally belonged to a larger hoard of silver, whose origin is unknown but was possibly near Gaillon in Normandy. This hoard also included pieces now found in the Musée de Cluny (traditionally thought to have been excavated in 1851 at the Château of Gaillon, once the country palace of the archbishops of Rouen), in the Basilewsky Collection now in the Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg and in the Musée du Louvre, Paris. French domestic silver of this period is extremely rare. |
Historical context | This bowl was probably designed as a drinking vessel for wine for an affluent French household (called a hanap in contemporary French inventories, which also indicate they were often made in sets). The 1379-80 inventory of Charles V of France's household goods describes gilt or parcel-gilt hanaps d'argent (silver hanaps) decorated with enamelled prints and rich ornament hammered into relief. A similar-shaped bowl can be seen in use as a drinking vessel on folio 55 of the illuminated manuscript Oeuvres de Guillaume de Machaut, Paris, about 1350 from the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris [Fr.1586], illustrated in eds. Pierre Ennès, Gérard Mabille and Philippe Thiébaut, Histoire de la Table (Paris, Flammarion, 1994), p. 42. |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | Medieval diners drank from shallow bowls like this or cups and beakers of various shapes. This bowl was probably intended for drinking although it is shallow, and might also have been used for sweetmeats. The bowl forms part of the so-called 'Rouen Treasure' hoard, said to have been found in an iron box when pulling down a house in Rouen in 1864. Three further bowls, four silver spoons and a gold écu of Philip VI of Valois (ruled 1328-50) from this hoard are also in the V&A.Other bowls, spoons and a beaker are in collections in Paris ( the Louvre and the Cluny Museum) and St Petersburg ( the Hermitage) |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | 107-1865 |
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Record created | June 28, 2005 |
Record URL |
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