Nuremberg bowl, brass, 16th century

Nuremberg bowl.

Germany, Nuremberg, 16th Century

Brass.

Wed 36 cm.

The state of preservation clearly indicates the age of the item and the fact that the bowls were used intensively to the limit.

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1 200 zł tax incl.

The bottom of the bowl passes almost perpendicularly into a not very high side wall. Wide collar with a turn-up hem. The convex center of the bottom of the bowl underlined with a small circle and surrounded by two half-rounds. Then sixteen teardrop-shaped curls in a spiral pattern surrounded by a pin. The rest of the surface was probably filled with inscriptions and streaks right next to the sidewall. The collar also had an ornament.

r: # 888888; ">Nuremberg bowls - decorated metal vessels, the main center of their production was located in Nuremberg. In 1493, bowl breakers were given the status of a guild, only Nuremberg townspeople could do it. In 1618, the law was repealed and the craft collapsed. The bowls were widely used. In the houses of the poorer townspeople, they were only decorations, in the richer they were used for washing hands, they were used by barbers during their work. In the 17th century, when they began to go out of fashion, they were eagerly handed over to churches, where they served as sacrificial or baptismal bowls for ashes or earth.

: # 888888; ">Source: B. Bartkowiak, Brass Nuremberg bowls in the collection of the Archdiocese Museum in Poznań, Ecclesia. Studies in the history of Greater Poland, vol. 7, 2012.