Cup
1690-1700 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This is a late 17th-century tourist souvenir. It comes from the Spania Dolina (formerly Herrengrund) copper mines in modern day Slovakia, a place where the water was said to perform miracles almost akin to alchemy. High in copper sulphate, the water was diverted into hollows where iron scraps had been placed. The copper sulphate reacted with the iron depositing a coating of copper on the scraps giving them the appearance of copper rather than iron. This gave rise to the legend that the water had mysterious, magical properties. The inscription on the outside of the rim translates as, 'I come from iron but the power of the water has turned me into copper in a mine in Herrengrund.'
In the centre of the cup is the small figure of a miner at work, hammering away at crystals of iron pyrites. The inside of the bowl is plain and functional giving rise to the possibility that this is a working souvenir. Its owner may have been encouraged to take the bowl and scoop up the local water and watch the copper deposits appear on the iron pyrites.
In the centre of the cup is the small figure of a miner at work, hammering away at crystals of iron pyrites. The inside of the bowl is plain and functional giving rise to the possibility that this is a working souvenir. Its owner may have been encouraged to take the bowl and scoop up the local water and watch the copper deposits appear on the iron pyrites.
Delve deeper
Discover more about this object
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Copper gilt, copper sulphate, silver, iron pyrites |
Brief description | Copper-gilt cup decorated with a fish-skin pattern and with a plain gilded bowl, in the centre of which is a gilded pole on which sits the small silver figure of a miner hammering at a cluster of iron pyrites, Spania Dolina (formerly Herrengrund), Slovakia, around 1690-1700 |
Physical description | Decorated on the outside with a fish-skin pattern, and an inscription around the rim. In the centre of the cup is a pillar on which is a miner at work, surrounded by crystals of iron pyrites. |
Dimensions |
|
Marks and inscriptions | Ich stame her von Eissen, doch eines wassers macht, hat mich zu kupffer beissen in Herrengrunden schact (Inscription around the rim)
|
Object history | This is a late 17th-century tourist souvenir. It comes from the Spania Dolina (formerly Herrengrund) copper mines in modern day Slovakia, a place where the water was said to perform miracles almost akin to alchemy. High in copper sulphate, the water was diverted into hollows where iron scraps had been placed. The copper sulphate reacted with the iron depositing a coating of copper on the scraps giving them the appearance of copper rather than iron. This gave rise to the legend that the water had mysterious, magical properties. The inscription on the outside of the rim translates as: 'I come from iron but the power of the water has turned me into copper in a mine in Herrengrund.' In the centre of the cup is the small figure of a miner at work, hammering away at crystals of iron pyrites. The inside of the bowl is plain and functional giving rise to the possibility that this is a working souvenir. Its owner may have been encouraged to take the bowl and scoop up the local water and watch the copper deposits appear on the iron pyrites. It is likely that cups such as this were made by goldsmiths in a town a few miles from Spania Dolina called Banská Bystrica (formerly Neusohl). |
Historical context | The inscription alludes to the method of obtaining copper, by allowing deposits of it to form on pieces of iron, placed in a flow of a solution of copper sulphate from the mines of Herrengrund. |
Subjects depicted | |
Association | |
Summary | This is a late 17th-century tourist souvenir. It comes from the Spania Dolina (formerly Herrengrund) copper mines in modern day Slovakia, a place where the water was said to perform miracles almost akin to alchemy. High in copper sulphate, the water was diverted into hollows where iron scraps had been placed. The copper sulphate reacted with the iron depositing a coating of copper on the scraps giving them the appearance of copper rather than iron. This gave rise to the legend that the water had mysterious, magical properties. The inscription on the outside of the rim translates as, 'I come from iron but the power of the water has turned me into copper in a mine in Herrengrund.' In the centre of the cup is the small figure of a miner at work, hammering away at crystals of iron pyrites. The inside of the bowl is plain and functional giving rise to the possibility that this is a working souvenir. Its owner may have been encouraged to take the bowl and scoop up the local water and watch the copper deposits appear on the iron pyrites. |
Bibliographic reference | Turner, Eric An Introduction to Brass, London, HMSO, 1982 p.17 ill. ISBN 0112903762 |
Collection | |
Accession number | 796-1891 |
About this object record
Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.
You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.
Suggest feedback
You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.
Suggest feedback
Record created | August 29, 2002 |
Record URL |
Download as: JSONIIIF Manifest