The Priuli Wine Cup (popular title)

İsim The Priuli Wine Cup (popular title)
Yazar Unknown
Basım Tarihi: 1400
Basım Yeri Syria (made) Damascus (decorated) Egypt (made) -
Konu Metalwork Africa
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Height: 25.5cm (Note: Height of the highest handle. Height of the bowl under the handle is 22.5cm ), Width: 39.5cm (Note: With the handles. The width of the bowl measuring across the side without handles is 31cm although it is not completely circular. ),
Kütüphane: Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası 311-1854
Kayıt Numarası 311-1854
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Tarih 1400
Notlar Middle East, Metalwork. The Priuli Wine-Cup, cup with pedestal foot and handles, both added later in Italy, brass with engraved and silver-inlaid decoration in horizontal registers of flowers, foliate scrollwork and cartouches of cruciforms and Arabic poetry inscriptions, Egypt or Syria, 1400-1500
Örnek Metin Inside the bowl: coat of arms of the Priuli family of Venice, On the exterior: Two verses from an Arabic poem known also found on other Mamluk metalwork
Tarihsel bağlam This object belongs to a genre of metalwork long known as 'Veneto-Saracenic' on the presumption that these elaborately inlaid wares were made by Muslim craftsmen ('Saracens') working in Venice. While this theory is no longer considered tenable, the trade links between Venice and the Middle East were indeed strong, and the Mamluk export industry based in Damascus was a major source of inlaid brassware for the Venetian market in the late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The popularity of these wares eventually inspired Venetian metalworkers to develop a host of imitation-Islamic brasses of their own.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Brass, engraved and damascened Brass Engraved Inlay
Fiziksel açıklama Wine cup with two handles and a high foot; both the handles and the foot are separate pieces which were added later. Brass, incised and inlaid with silver in bands of vegetal ornament. Two prominent Arabic inscriptions on the side of the bowl come from a poem which also appears in examples of Mamluk metalwork, while the inside of the bowl was later incised with the coat of arms of the Priuli family of Venice set within imitation-Islamic vegetal ornament.
Üretim Foot added in Venice about 1450-1500, also the handles 1550-1600
Kaynağa git Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru
Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru Victoria and Albert Museum

The Priuli Wine Cup (popular title)

Yazar Unknown
Basım Tarihi 1400
Basım Yeri Syria (made) Damascus (decorated) Egypt (made) -
Konu Metalwork Africa
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Height: 25.5cm (Note: Height of the highest handle. Height of the bowl under the handle is 22.5cm ), Width: 39.5cm (Note: With the handles. The width of the bowl measuring across the side without handles is 31cm although it is not completely circular. ),
Kütüphane Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası 311-1854
Kayıt Numarası 311-1854
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Tarih 1400
Notlar Middle East, Metalwork. The Priuli Wine-Cup, cup with pedestal foot and handles, both added later in Italy, brass with engraved and silver-inlaid decoration in horizontal registers of flowers, foliate scrollwork and cartouches of cruciforms and Arabic poetry inscriptions, Egypt or Syria, 1400-1500
Örnek Metin Inside the bowl: coat of arms of the Priuli family of Venice, On the exterior: Two verses from an Arabic poem known also found on other Mamluk metalwork
Tarihsel bağlam This object belongs to a genre of metalwork long known as 'Veneto-Saracenic' on the presumption that these elaborately inlaid wares were made by Muslim craftsmen ('Saracens') working in Venice. While this theory is no longer considered tenable, the trade links between Venice and the Middle East were indeed strong, and the Mamluk export industry based in Damascus was a major source of inlaid brassware for the Venetian market in the late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The popularity of these wares eventually inspired Venetian metalworkers to develop a host of imitation-Islamic brasses of their own.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Brass, engraved and damascened Brass Engraved Inlay
Fiziksel açıklama Wine cup with two handles and a high foot; both the handles and the foot are separate pieces which were added later. Brass, incised and inlaid with silver in bands of vegetal ornament. Two prominent Arabic inscriptions on the side of the bowl come from a poem which also appears in examples of Mamluk metalwork, while the inside of the bowl was later incised with the coat of arms of the Priuli family of Venice set within imitation-Islamic vegetal ornament.
Üretim Foot added in Venice about 1450-1500, also the handles 1550-1600
Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru
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