|
Date: |
|
Description: | A corroded and misshapen fragment of a Medieval cast lead pilgrim ampulla (c. 1300-c. 1500).Due to damage it is irregular in form and would have had a rounded body with a flaring neck. On one side, between the body and neck, are two horizontal parallel ridges. This side is decorated with a raised rose or rosette on a cross-hatched back ground. The other side may have been decorated but nothing can now be seen. The stub of a suspension loop survives.This ampulla is corroded overall and has ragged breaks. Where a patina is present it has an even buff colour.Height: 50.7mm; width: 22.0mm; thickness: 8.1mm. Weight: 14.96g.Brian Spencer, formerly Senior Keeper at the Museum of London, who made a life-time study of ampullae, has written: 'Ampullae or miniature phials were an important kind of souvenir. Generally flask-shaped, but with a narrow, flattish section, they were designed to contain a dose of the thaumaturgic water that was dispensed to pilgrims at many shrines and holy wells. Ampullae were made of tin or lead or tin-lead alloy and were provided with a pair of handles or loops so that they could be suspended from a cord or chain around the wearer's neck. Coming into use in the last quarter of the twelfth century, they were, in England, almost the only kind of pilgrim souvenir to be had during the thirteenth century. They were nevertheless available at a number of shrines, and thanks to returning pilgrims or to local entrepreneurs, probably featured as secondary relics in virtually every thirteenth-century English parish church. Until the early fourteenth century, ampullae took various forms, were frequently inscribed and usually bore representations of the cult-figure or relic that they were intended to commemorate......Ampullae could be comfortably kept on the person or easily hung up in the home, or suspended , for the benefit of livestock, in the stable or cow shed or on the beehive. Ampullae were often donated to the neighbourhood, to be hung in the parish church. Almost as a matter of course, churches throughout thirteenth-century England secured possession of Canterbury ampullae containing what was perhaps the most famous of all elixirs, the water of St Thomas, tinged with the martyr's miracle-working blood' (Spencer, B. 1990, 57-58).Spencer, B. 1990. Pilgrim Souvenirs and Secular Badges. Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum. Salibury.
Original Image | Publisher: | http://finds.org.uk | Source: | Portable Antiquities | Identifier: | http://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/r... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
AMPULLA
A complete Medieval lead pilgrim…
-
AMPULLA
An incomplete Medieval cast lead…
-
-
AMPULLA
An incomplete and misshapen Medieval…
-
AMPULLA
An incomplete Medieval cast lead…
-
AMPULLA
An incomplete cast lead pilgrim…
-
AMPULLA
An incomplete and misshapen Medieval…
-
AMPULLA
An incomplete, corroded and misshapen…
-
AMPULLA
An incomplete cast lead pilgrim…
-
AMPULLA
Cast lead ampulla dating to…
|