Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Medieval and Renaissance, Room 10c

Tile

1250-1300 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Pavements of decorated ceramic tiles were a medieval innovation. They were used to add richness and splendour to great churches initially but they were subsequently used in secular contexts, including castles and royal residences. The design on this example, from Abbotsbury Abbey in Dorset, has been created by inlaying white decoration into the surface of the tile.

The griffin combines the wings and head of an eagle with the body of a lion. The main source of inspiration for the portrayal of creatures was the Bestiary, a collection of descriptions of beasts to which Christian and allegorical interpretations were added.

Similar tiles depicting griffins were used to decorate the floors of royal apartments at Clarendon Palace, Wiltshire. At Clarendon tiles featuring lions and griffins were used in pavement dated between 1250-1252. Designs established at Clarendon were repeated at sites throughout the south-west of England and South Wales.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Inlaid and glazed earthenware
Brief description
Red earthenware with an impressed design of a griffin infilled with white slip and covered with a clear lead glaze. From Abbotsbury Abbey in Dorset. English, second half 13th century.
Physical description
The square tile is made of glazed earthenware and is decorated with a inlaid pattern of white clay consisting of a griffin within a circle. The griffin is represented in profile, facing to the right with one foot raised. The griffin is depicted with two wings, the head of an eagle and the body of a lion. The object number is placed just above the bottom edge of the tile in the centre. The inlaid circle features four points of foliage at each corner. The surface of the top-left had corner is damaged and the white inlaid detail of foliage that once decorated this area is now missing.
Dimensions
  • Height: 13.3cm
  • Width: 13.3cm
  • Depth: 2.4cm
  • Weight: 0.64kg
Measured for the Medieval and Renaissance Galleries
Styles
Production typeMass produced
Gallery label
Text for the current display to which the tile belongs reads as follows (transcribed 07-11-2006). British Medieval Tiles Wessex Tiles 13th to 14th century The earliest known pavement of two-colour inlaid tiles in England was made for a new chapel built for Henry III at Clarendon Palace laid between 1240 and 1244, the pavement consisted of a series of concentric bands of tiles. It is likely that some of the tilers responsible for this pavement moved on into Somerset where they produced similar pavements at Muchelney Abbey. Further tiled pavements were commissioned by Henry II for Clarendon Palace between 1250 and 1252. The tiles were probably made at Salisbury, where similar tiles, decorated with lions, gryphons, birds and foliated ornament were being produced for the new cathedral. The craftsmen who made the tiles moved from place to place according to where commissions could be found. Their designs became widespread throughout Wiltshire, Hampshire, Somerset and nearby counties during the second half of the 13th century.
Object history
From Abbotsbury Abbey, Dorset.
Historical context
Similar tiles depicting griffins were used to decorate Queen Philippa's apartments at Clarendon Palace, Wiltshire where they were set into the floor (Eames 1992, p40-41) (Cherry 1991, p16-17). The pavement at Clarendon is dated to between 1250-52. At Clarendon tiles featuring lions and griffins were opposed. The V&A's griffin tile is similar in design to those used at Clarendon, but is not identical, having two clearly separated wings.

Designs established at Clarendon were repeated at sites throughout the south-west of England and South Wales. For example opposed griffins and lions were also used at Keynsham Abbey in Somerset (1000-1892; 1001A-1892; 1000A-1892; 1001-1892) (Graves 2002, 1.13, p17) The British Museum has a very similar griffin tile to this example in its collections (Eames 1980, Catalogue No. 416, Design No. 1873) which is associated with Tintern Abbey.

The V&A's tile was acquired with two others also from Abbotsbury Abbey, Dorsetshire in England. Emden gives a brief history of Abbotsbury Abbey which he notes was founded in 1044 and dissolved in 1539. He gives a brief account of excavations at the site between the years 1871 and 1967. Emden includes two references to tiles which have the same design as 1289-1892, noting that there is an example at St Mary's Church , Tarrant Rawston and another in the Ashmolean Museum, both of which are also from Abbotsbury Abbey.

The griffin was thought to combine the wings and head of an eagle with the body of a lion. The main source of inspiration for the portrayal of creatures was the Bestiary, a collection of descriptions to which Christian and allegorical interpretations were given. Griffins were depicted on range of medieval object types, including textiles and metalwork.
Production
The tile is from Abbotsbury Abbey in Dorset.
Subject depicted
Summary
Pavements of decorated ceramic tiles were a medieval innovation. They were used to add richness and splendour to great churches initially but they were subsequently used in secular contexts, including castles and royal residences. The design on this example, from Abbotsbury Abbey in Dorset, has been created by inlaying white decoration into the surface of the tile.

The griffin combines the wings and head of an eagle with the body of a lion. The main source of inspiration for the portrayal of creatures was the Bestiary, a collection of descriptions of beasts to which Christian and allegorical interpretations were added.

Similar tiles depicting griffins were used to decorate the floors of royal apartments at Clarendon Palace, Wiltshire. At Clarendon tiles featuring lions and griffins were used in pavement dated between 1250-1252. Designs established at Clarendon were repeated at sites throughout the south-west of England and South Wales.
Bibliographic references
  • John Cherry Medieval Decorative Art (London: British Museum Press, 1991), p16
  • Elizabeth S Eames Catalogue of medieval lead glazed earthenware tiles on the Department of Medieval and Later Antiquities, British Museum. Vol 1. (London: British Museum Publications)
  • Elizabeth S Eames Catalogue of medieval lead glazed earthenware tiles on the Department of Medieval and Later Antiquities, British Museum. Vol 2. (London: British Museum Publications)
  • E Eames English Tilers (London, British Museum Press, 1992)
  • A B Emden Decorated Tiles in Dorset (Phillimore: London, 1977), p18-20
  • Alun Graves Tiles and Tilework of Europe (London, V&A Publications, 2002)
  • Arthur Lane A Guide to the Collection of Tiles (London, HMSO, 1960)
Collection
Accession number
1289-1892

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Record createdNovember 23, 2006
Record URL
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