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XIX.—On a Carved Ivory Pyx in the British Museum
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 November 2011
Extract
The pyx illustrated in Plate XXXIII., and acquired by the British Museum in the present year, was formerly in the possession of the Reverend Walter Sneyd, of Keele Hall, where it had been preserved for about half a century. It was exhibited at the Art Treasures Exhibition at Manchester in 1857 and again at South Kensington in 1862, has been figured, though imperfectly, by Grarrucci and Rohault de Fleury, and cast for the series issued by the Arundel Society.
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1903
References
page 429 note a Waring, J. B., Art Treasures of the United Kingdom (1858), 8.Google Scholar
page 429 note b Storia dell' Arte Gristiana, vol. vi. plate 439, fig. 4. Garrucci erroneously describes the pyx as belonging to the cathedral church of Sens.
page 429 note c La Messe, vol. v. plate 372, and p. 67b.
page 430 note a Darcel, A., La Collection Basilew.slcy, plate ii.Google Scholar
page 430 note b Graeven, H., in Monuments et Mémoires publiés par l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres (Fondation Eugène Plot), vol. vi. (1900). “Pyxide en os représentant la naissance d'Apollon et de Diane.”Google Scholar
page 430 note c A number of the pyxes still in existence ai-e figured by Rohault de Fleury and Garrucci in the volumes cited above.
page 431 note a Stuhlfauth, G., Die altchristliche Eilfenbeinplastik, 66. Stuhlfauth compares -with the Sneyd pyx four panels in a collection in Paris, Garrucci, plate 448,10-13. He states that the pyx originally came from Aachen.Google Scholar
page 431 note b Westwood, , Fictile Ivories, 274.Google Scholar
page 431 note c In Waring's, Art Treasures, cited above.Google Scholar
page 431 note d For the Lorsch bookcover (Maskell, , Ivory Carvings, plate opposite page 53)Google ScholarseeGraeven, H. in Byzantinische Zeitschrift, x. 1–22Google Scholar. The Bodleian bookcover (Westwood, , Fictile Ivories, plate vi.) is especially interesting because the early Christian original of one of the plaques composing it is still in existence; seeGoogle ScholarHaseloff, A. in Jahrbuch der königlich preussischen Kunstsammlimgen, 1903, pp. 47ffGoogle Scholar . The imitation of early Christian pyxes in the West is not so frequent as that of panels or plaques; but there is an example at Reichenau executed at an even later date than that suggested for the Sneyd pyx. For this information I am indebted to Dr. Hans Graeven, Director of the Trier Museum.
page 431 note e Rahn, J. R., Das Psalterium Aureum von Sanct Gallen, 36, “auswarts geschweifte Finger.”Google Scholar
page 433 note a See for example the Eusebian Canons in the Godex aureus, Harley MS. 2788 in the British Museum; and a Byzantine ivory plaque of the tenth and eleventh century at Berlin, , ElfenbeinbildwerkeGoogle Scholar, Album, plate iv. No. 9A.
page 433 note b Westwood, , The Bible of the Monastery of St. Paul near Rome, photographs 3,108 and 3,112, and Palaeographia sacra pictoria; plate reproduced from the Bible of Charles the Bald.Google Scholar
page 433 note c ComteBastard, A. de, Peintures et ornements des MSS. … pour servir à l'histoire des arts et du dessin depuis le 4mesiècle jusqu' a la Jin du 16me, livraison iii.Google Scholar
page 434 note a Hefner-Alteneck, J. H. von, Trachten Kunstwerke und Geräthnchaften vom frühen Mittelalter bis Ende des 18tnJahrhundert, vol. i. (Frankfurt, 1879), plates xxii. and xxvi.Google Scholar
page 434 note b Elfenbeinbildwerke, Berlin, 1902, No. 38, plate 12.Google Scholar
page 434 note c Strzygowski, J., Byzantinische Denkmaler, i. 33.Google Scholar
page 435 note a Garrucci, , Storia dell 'arte Cristiana, vol. vi., interprets these three figures as three apostles.Google Scholar
page 435 note b Strzygowski, J., as above, p. 37.Google Scholar
page 435 note c On Syrian influence in the West, seeScheffer-Boichorst, P. in Mittheilungen des Institute für Oesterreichische Oeschichtsforschung, (1884), v. 521 ff, “Die Syrer im Abendlande”Google Scholar ; Janitschek, H., in Festgruss an Anton Springer (Berlin and Stuttgart, 1885), Zwei Studien zur Geschichte der Garolingischen MalereiGoogle Scholar; Leitschuh, F., Der Bilderkreis der Oarolingischen Malerei (Bamberg, 1889), 7, etcGoogle Scholar.