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Hedwig glass

Hedwig glass with eagle, Rijksmuseum, wheel-cut relief with hatched details
The Hedwig beaker at the British Museum

Hedwig glasses or Hedwig beakers are a type of glass beaker originating in the Middle East or Norman Sicily and dating from the 10th-12th centuries AD. They are named after the Silesian princess Saint Hedwig (1174–1245), to whom three of them are traditionally said to have belonged.[1] So far, a total of 14 complete glasses are known.[2] The exact origin of the glasses is disputed, with Egypt, Iran and Syria all suggested as possible sources; if they are not of Islamic manufacture they are certainly influenced by Islamic glass.[3][4] Probably made by Muslim craftsmen, some of the iconography is Christian, suggesting they may have been made for export or for Christian clients.[5] The theory that they instead originate from Norman Sicily in the 11th century was first fully set out in a book in 2005 by Rosemarie Lierke, and has attracted some support from specialists.[6]

Glass owned by Martin Luther, now in the Veste Coburg collection

All 14 of the complete Hedwig glasses so far known all have roughly the same form: they are squat, thick-walled and straight-sided with a flange around the base. They are around 14 cm high and have a diameter of nearly 14 cm. All but one are richly decorated with wheel-cut relief with hatched details.

The glasses are mostly of a smoky metal colour with a couple of greenish or yellowish glass. The decorations are in two styles: four have abstract decorations derived from Samarra Style C; another eight have zoomorphic decorations of lions, griffins and eagles and palm trees.[1]

  1. ^ a b Ettinghausen and Grabar 196-7
  2. ^ Wedepohl and Kronz
  3. ^ "Hedwig glass beaker " The British Museum". Britishmuseum.org. 1959-04-14. Retrieved 2010-06-06.
  4. ^ "Search object details". British Museum. 2010-05-14. Retrieved 2010-06-06.
  5. ^ "A History of the World – Object: Hedwig glass beaker". BBC. Retrieved 2010-06-06.
  6. ^ "Hedwig Beakers". Rosemarie-lierke.de. Retrieved 27 November 2014.

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