Powder flask with Heliodorus, and Christ driving the traders from the Temple
Powder Flask
ca. 1575 - ca. 1600 (made)
ca. 1575 - ca. 1600 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This powder flask, made out of a stags horn is carved in relief with a representation of the Old Testament story of Heliodorus attempting to raid Solomon's temple (II Maccabees 3), a prefiguration of the scene of Christ driving the traders from the temple.
Heliodorus entered the temple in Jerusalem in order to steal its treasure but he was turned back in three forms of God. Powder flasks or horns are portable containers of wood, horn, metal, leather or ceramic used to hold the priming powder or gunpowder for firearms. They normally terminated in a metal nozzle which also served as a powder measure, closed by a plug or spring cap, and are often highly decorated.
Gunpowder began to be transported in pouches or more rigid containers at about the same date as the introduction of hand-held firearms in the fifteenth century. Such flask might have a military purpose, or be used for hunting. The very decorative pieces were above all a singn of rank, and at the same time aesthetic objects in their own right, and probably never actually functioned as containers for gunpowder.
Heliodorus entered the temple in Jerusalem in order to steal its treasure but he was turned back in three forms of God. Powder flasks or horns are portable containers of wood, horn, metal, leather or ceramic used to hold the priming powder or gunpowder for firearms. They normally terminated in a metal nozzle which also served as a powder measure, closed by a plug or spring cap, and are often highly decorated.
Gunpowder began to be transported in pouches or more rigid containers at about the same date as the introduction of hand-held firearms in the fifteenth century. Such flask might have a military purpose, or be used for hunting. The very decorative pieces were above all a singn of rank, and at the same time aesthetic objects in their own right, and probably never actually functioned as containers for gunpowder.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Powder flask with Heliodorus, and Christ driving the traders from the Temple (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Stag horn, carved, gilt metal mounts |
Brief description | Powder flask, stag horn, story of Heliodorus, probably France, ca. 1575-1600 |
Physical description | Powder flask of a stag horn, carved in relief with a representation of the story of Heliodorus. With gilded metal mounts of a later date. A kneeling figure and angels are to be seen towards the base. |
Dimensions |
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Content description | The horn is carved with the Old Testament story of Heliodorus attempting to raid Solomon's temple (II Maccabees 3), a prefiguration of the scene of Christ driving the traders from the temple. |
Object history | Bought for £52 10s. in 1894 (Cosier Collection, Christie's, London, 5 April 1894, lot 158). Analagous carved staghorns are in the collection of the Louvre, Paris, and in the Musée de l'Oevre Notre-Dame, Strasbourg. Comparisons with these suggest the piece is French, and dates from the late sixteenth century. |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This powder flask, made out of a stags horn is carved in relief with a representation of the Old Testament story of Heliodorus attempting to raid Solomon's temple (II Maccabees 3), a prefiguration of the scene of Christ driving the traders from the temple. Heliodorus entered the temple in Jerusalem in order to steal its treasure but he was turned back in three forms of God. Powder flasks or horns are portable containers of wood, horn, metal, leather or ceramic used to hold the priming powder or gunpowder for firearms. They normally terminated in a metal nozzle which also served as a powder measure, closed by a plug or spring cap, and are often highly decorated. Gunpowder began to be transported in pouches or more rigid containers at about the same date as the introduction of hand-held firearms in the fifteenth century. Such flask might have a military purpose, or be used for hunting. The very decorative pieces were above all a singn of rank, and at the same time aesthetic objects in their own right, and probably never actually functioned as containers for gunpowder. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | 170-1894 |
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Record created | January 5, 2009 |
Record URL |
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