Belt clasp thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Belt clasp

Belt Fittings
1800-1850 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

These silver discs, decorated with niello, are among the first pieces of European traditional jewellery acquired by the Museum in 1853. In fact, they were acquired before the Museum even existed, by its predecessor, the Department of Science and Arts Museum, and the paper label of that museum can still be found on the back of one of them.

They were made in what is now Epirus, in northern Greece, or Albania. They were described as ‘modern Turkish’ at the time, as both places were still part of the Ottoman Empire in 1853. They are part of a belt fitting. A narrow leather strap would have hooked over the bar on one part, to attach it to the belt, and the rod on the back of the other part may have been inserted through a hole to secure the belt, although that is an unusual way to fasten an Albanian clasp. Albanian clasps were briefly very popular in Britain in the 1870s, after the fashionable Bond Street jeweller, W. H. Thornhill, included one in his Christmas range in 1874.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleBelt clasp (generic title)
Materials and techniques
cast silver with niello decoration
Brief description
Two circular silver and niello belt fittings hinged together, Albania, 1800-1850.
Physical description
Silver and niello belt fittings, consisting of two cast discs hinged together. Each part is raised in a dome in its centre, with a flat decorative rim round the edge. Each dome is richly decorated with cast floral patterns, with a broken band of niello round the base. One part has a rosette in the centre, and the other a space with a bar across it. The pin of the central hinge has a hollow bead, with spiral striations round it, on each end.

On the inside of the solid part there is the original label of the Department of Science and Art.
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 5cm
Style
Subject depicted
Summary
These silver discs, decorated with niello, are among the first pieces of European traditional jewellery acquired by the Museum in 1853. In fact, they were acquired before the Museum even existed, by its predecessor, the Department of Science and Arts Museum, and the paper label of that museum can still be found on the back of one of them.

They were made in what is now Epirus, in northern Greece, or Albania. They were described as ‘modern Turkish’ at the time, as both places were still part of the Ottoman Empire in 1853. They are part of a belt fitting. A narrow leather strap would have hooked over the bar on one part, to attach it to the belt, and the rod on the back of the other part may have been inserted through a hole to secure the belt, although that is an unusual way to fasten an Albanian clasp. Albanian clasps were briefly very popular in Britain in the 1870s, after the fashionable Bond Street jeweller, W. H. Thornhill, included one in his Christmas range in 1874.
Collection
Accession number
2745-1853

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Record createdApril 1, 2003
Record URL
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