|  | View other images of this object
			 
| 
  | 
        |   Body, back
 |  |  | 
  | 
        |   End, right
 |  |  | 
  | 
        |   Body, front
 |  |  |  
| 
  | 
        |   Lid
 |  |  | 
  | 
        |   Overview
 |  |  | 
  | 
        |   Bottom
 |  |  |  
| 
  | 
        |   Body, back
 |  |  | 
  | 
        |   Body, front
 |  |  | 
  | 
        |   Lid
 |  |  |  
| 
  | 
        |   End, right
 |  |  | 
  | 
        |   End, left
 |  |  |  Links 
			SubjectSecular. Romance.
 
			  Repository Institution
www.britishmuseum.org
 
                        To purchase an image
www.bmimages.com
 
 |  |  
                      
		      
			 London, The British Museum 1892,0801.47 (Dalton 367)  
                      
		      
                      
		      
                      
		      
                      
                      
		      
			 Ivory;metal (hinges;nails) Height: 97mmWidth: 226mm
 Depth: 108mm
  
                      
		      
			 Romance of the Châtelaine de Vergi.Lid
 Register 1: Courting couple (meeting of lovers); the Châtelaine secretly meets the knight; dog. Châtelaine discussing with the knight. The knight rejects the advances made by the Duchess of Burgundy; bed. The Duchess tells the Duke of Burgundy that the knight has offended her.
 Register 2: the Châtelaine trains her dog to be her messenger. The Châtelaine sends her dog to the knight. The knight and the Châtelaine meet in her bedroom. The Duke of Burgundy threatens the knight, kneeling; sword. The knight, to exonerate himself, tells the Duke about his liaison with the Châtelaine.
 Rosettes and masks in the spandrels.
 Body, back
 The knight brings the duke of Burgundy through the forest. The knight embraces the Châtelaine, her dog is at her feet. The duke tells the duchess about their idyll; bed. The Châtelaine receives an invitation to the Carnival ball organised by the Duchess; trees.
 End, left
 Ladies dancing a carole; the Duchess compliments the Châtelaine on her skill at training dogs; two musicians blowing trumpets.
 Body, front
 The Châtelaine, seeing that her secret has been betrayed, dies of sorrow; bed; sword; servant. The knight, discovering the dead body of the Châtelaine, commits suicide by piercing his chest with a sword. The Duke, discovering the two corpses, removes the sword from the body of the knight and goes in search of the Duchess.
 End, right
 The Duke beheads the Duchess at the ball; two musicians holding trumpets.
 
 Koechlin Number: 1307  
                      
		      
			   Dalton 1909: French, 14th century.Koechlin 1924: French, 1st half of 14th century.
 Detroit 1997: French (Paris), c. 1320-1340.
 Robinson 2008: French (Paris), c. 1320-1340.
 Museum's opinion 2011: French (Paris), c. 1320-1340.
 
 
		        
		      
		      
			
			  AttributionUnknown
 
			  ReverseCarved on all sides.
 
			  Object ConditionMissing: fittings and lock.
 Crosshatching where the lost fittings used to be.
 
			  ProvenanceCollection of Augustus Wollaston Franks (b. 1828, d. 1897); British Museum, by donation, 1892.
 
			  BibliographyA. Kemp-Welch, The Chatelaine of Vergi: a 13th-century Romance (London and Paris, 1903).
 O. M. Dalton, Catalogue of the Ivory Carvings of the Christian Era in the British Museum, (London, 1909), no. 367, pl. LXXXIII-LXXXV.
 C. Borinski, La Châtelaine de Vergi in der Kunst des Mittelalters, in Monatschefte für Kunstwissenschaft (1909), pp. 58-63 (p. 58).
 R. Koechlin, Les Ivoires gothiques français (Paris, 1924), I, p. 509; II, no. 1307.
 Images in Ivory. Precious Objects of the Gothic Age, ed. by Peter Barnet, exhibition catalogue, Detroit, The Detroit Institute of Arts, and Baltimore, The Walters Art Gallery, 1997, fig. 63b, p. 244.
 J. Robinson, Masterpieces of Medieval Art (London, 2008), p. 220.
 
 
		      Image
		     
		      
		     
		      
			© The British Museum, London.
		        
 All images on this website are made available exclusively for scholarly and educational purposes and may not be used commercially. |  |