Try Amazon Fresh
Try Amazon Audible Premium Plus and Get Up to Two Free Audiobooks
Byzantine Bone Casket with Warriors and Mythological Figures, 10th-11th Centuries
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Byzantine cavalryman on the 2nd plaque on the long side of the casket.
Byzantine cavalryman in lamellar armour and conical helmet with knob on the 2nd plaque on the long side of the casket.
Casket with Warriors and Mythological Figures
Date: 10th–11th century
Geography: Made in Constantinople
Culture: Byzantine
Medium: Bone plaques and ornamental strips over wood; silver lock plate
Dimensions: Overall: 4 5/8 x 17 1/4 x 7 1/8in. (11.7 x 43.8 x 18.1cm)
Classification: Ivories
Credit Line: Gift of J. Pierpont Morgan, 1917
Accession Number: 17.190.237
Provenance: [ George Brauer, Paris (sold to Morgan)]; J. Pierpont Morgan (American), London and New York
Bone caskets, used by the Byzantines in their homes, were often decorated with themes from classical antiquity.
In the Middle Ages many such caskets reached western Europe, where despite their non-Christian decoration they were used in churches as containers for relics.
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Previous: Swordsmen on the front of the casket
Next: Swordsman and dancer on the rear of the casket
Back to the Byzantine Bone Casket with Warriors and Mythological Figures, 10th-11th Centuries, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York