Rosary bead, Memento mori
- Place of origin:
France (possibly, made)
Netherlands (south, possibly, made)
- Date:
- Artist/Maker:
- Materials and Techniques:
Carved ivory with traces of red and black paint
- Museum number:
- Gallery location:
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This small ivory carving conveys one of the most profound themes of the late Middle Ages, serving as a memento mori, a reminder of the transitory nature of life and the inevitability of death.
The repetition of prayers and liturgical texts was an important part of late medieval devotion. The rosary, which became popular by the fourteenth century, is a collection of these texts devoted particularly to the Virgin Mary. Strings of beads to assist those saying the long sequences of recitations also came to be known as rosaries. Such carvings as this one are pierced vertically for suspension, consistent with their original function as pendants to rosaries or chaplets (shorter strings of devotional beads).
Dating from the late Middle Ages through the seventeenth century, there are many surviving memento mori pendants from rosaries. Frequently double-sided, the pendants are often decorated with a skull on one side and a youthful face on the other. This is a rare example of a pendant showing four figures and no close analogue is known.
The words inscribed on the fillet encircling the dying man's brow, VADO MORI, may be an allusion to the tradition of 'Vado Mori' poems which had their origin in the thirteenth century. In such poems, or 'carmina de morte', a distich is put into the mouth of each type of individual, young and old, poor and rich, learned and unlearned, layman and cleric, of low and high social grade. Each distich begins and ends with the words 'Vado Mori'.
Physical description
Bead from a chaplet or rosary; carved ivory with traces of red and black paint. Formed of four half-length figures placed back to back. One represents a man in the costume of the time with cap turned up and jewelled; underneath is incised 'AMOR M(un)DI'. At his back is the same person dying, his figure emaciated, with ribcage visible beneath the skin and an open mouth as if gasping for breath; on a fillet the words 'VADO MORI'. The third figure appears to be a devil, or imp with bulging eyes and lolling tongue, the stomach filled with a hideous head. This figure has locked arms with the dying figure as if to pull him away; underneath is 'SEQUERE ME'. The fourth is a skeleton holding an hourglass; underneath is 'EGO SUM'. A snail and snakes crawl over the skull. The pendant is pierced vertically for suspension.
Place of Origin
France; Netherlands
Date
ca. 1525-1550 (made)
Artist/maker
Unknown
Materials and Techniques
Carved ivory with traces of red and black paint
Marks and inscriptions
"Amor M(un)di" The Love of the World
"VADO MORI" I rush/am rushing to death.
"SEQUERE ME" Follow me.
"EGO SUM" I am/I exist
Dimensions
Height: 5.1 cm
Width: 3.7 cm
Depth: 3.4 cm
Weight: 0.04 kg
Measured for the Medieval and Renaissance Galleries
Object history note
Acquired from the Bernal Collection (Sale, Christie's, March, 1855, No. 1635).
Historical context note
This small ivory carving conveys one of the most profound themes of the late Middle Ages, serving as a memento mori, a reminder of the transitory nature of life and the inevitability of death.
The repetition of prayers and liturgical texts was an important part of late medieval devotion. The rosary, which became popular by the fourteenth century, is a collection of these texts devoted particularly to the Virgin Mary. Strings of beads to assist those saying the long sequences of recitations also came to be known as rosaries. Such carvings as this one are pierced vertically for suspension, consistent with their original function as pendants to rosaries or chaplets (shorter strings of devotional beads).
Dating from the late Middle Ages through the seventeenth century, there are many surviving memento mori pendants from rosaries. Frequently double-sided, the pendants are often decorated with a skull on one side and a youthful face on the other. This is a rare example of a pendant showing four figures and no close analogue is known, although it has been compared to pendants showing three figures: an embracing couple on one side and a figure of death on the reverse (e.g. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 17.190.305, see Images in Ivory: Precious Objects of the Gothic Age, Princeton, 1997, pp 277-78, No. 79).
Descriptive line
Bead from a chaplet or rosary, ivory with traces of red and black paint, formed of four half-length figures placed back to back, Flanders or northern France, first half of the 16th century
Subjects depicted
Men; Death; Skeleton; Memento Mori; Corpse
Categories
Sculpture; Religion; Death
Collection code
SCP