Communion Cup thumbnail 1

Communion Cup

1545-1546 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This cup was used in Protestant worship to serve the consecrated wine during Holy Communion.

During the Reformation the crown commissioners confiscated or destroyed much of the goldsmiths’ work of the medieval church. Some parishes concealed or sold their silver before the commissioners arrived, but by the early 1550s many were left with just a single cup and paten.

St Margaret Pattens had acquired this domestic cup by about 1600, possibly to supplement the vessels left by the commissioners. Before the Reformation only the priest consumed the consecrated wine, but now communion was offered to all churchgoers, so several cups were required for a busy church.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Silver gilt
Brief description
Silver-gilt, London hallmarks for 1545-6, mark, a queen's head
Dimensions
  • Height: 199mm
  • Of cup diameter: 125mm
  • Of base diameter: 119mm
Marks and inscriptions
  • London hallmarks for 1545-6
  • Mark: a Queen's head (unidentified)
Gallery label
(22/11/2005)
Cup
This cup was used in Protestant worship to serve the consecrated wine during Holy Communion.

During the Reformation the crown commissioners confiscated or destroyed much of the goldsmiths’ work of the medieval church. Some parishes concealed or sold their silver before the commissioners arrived, but by the early 1550s many were left with just a single cup and paten.

St Margaret Pattens had acquired this domestic cup by about 1600, possibly to supplement the vessels left by the commissioners. Before the Reformation only the priest consumed the consecrated wine, but now communion was offered to all churchgoers, so several cups were required for a busy church.

London, England, 1545–6; maker’s mark a queen’s
head. Silver gilt
On loan from the Guild Church Council of
St Margaret Pattens church, London
Credit line
Lent by Guild Church Council of St. Margaret Pattens church, London
Historical context
The Reformation in England
On the eve of the Reformation, churchgoing in England was a colourful, sensory experience, rich in ceremony. In the 1530s, however, Henry VIII threw off the authority of the pope. Under his successor Edward VI (reigned 1547-53) major changes in worship and church decoration were introduced.

English Reformers wanted a return to a simpler, more direct form of worship. Their boldest move was to reject the Roman Catholic belief in 'transubstantiation', in which the bread and wine are miraculously transformed during the Mass into the body and blood of Christ. They proposed instead a symbolic service of shared communion, conducted in interiors stripped of distracting furnishings and images. The congregation would play an active role in the communion, regularly taking wine as well as bread, whereas before they had been chiefly spectators.

Crown commissioners confiscated or destroyed much of the goldsmiths' work of the medieval church. Some parishes concealed or sold their silver before the commissioners arrived, but by the early 1550s, many were left with just a single cup and paten. Some churches had no precious metal at all.

Consolidation
The success of the Reformation by 1600 owed much to an ingrained culture of obedience to the crown. During the brief reign of Mary I (1553-8) England returned to Catholicism, but under Elizabeth I it swung back to Protestantism, spurred on by state propaganda that Catholicism represented a political threat. Even so, this rupture with the past met with quiet resistance as many people were attached to the old faith and its trappings.

To consolidate this break with traditional religion, the church authorities launched a programme from about 1560 to replace the 'old massing chalices' with 'decent' communion cups of prescribed design. This gave a massive boost to the goldsmiths' trade and the great demand led to the formal establishment of assay offices outside London, at Chester, York, Norwich and Exeter. About 2000 communion cups from the period survive.
Summary
This cup was used in Protestant worship to serve the consecrated wine during Holy Communion.

During the Reformation the crown commissioners confiscated or destroyed much of the goldsmiths’ work of the medieval church. Some parishes concealed or sold their silver before the commissioners arrived, but by the early 1550s many were left with just a single cup and paten.

St Margaret Pattens had acquired this domestic cup by about 1600, possibly to supplement the vessels left by the commissioners. Before the Reformation only the priest consumed the consecrated wine, but now communion was offered to all churchgoers, so several cups were required for a busy church.
Collection
Accession number
LOAN:ST MARG PATTENS.2

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Record createdNovember 8, 2005
Record URL
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