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Source Description
This dish, together with Walters 48.2291 and 48.2292, was discovered in the shipwreck of a large Byzantine trading vessel near Alonissos in the Aegean Sea. The ship's cargo consisted of some 1,500 pieces of tableware, most decorated with drawings incised into a thin layer of fine white clay. This technique, now called "sgraffito," was brought to Byzantium from the Islamic East. It was from the Near East, too, that the Byzantine nobility learned to hunt with specially trained falcons like the one seen here. Such sports were reserved for the wealthy, who normally ate from silver plates, but they would have been familiar also to the less affluent users of clay tableware. Because of their association with the rich and powerful, hunting animals were believed to bring good fortune. Thus, a Byzantine dream book promises its readers that "if you dream that you caught a hawk, you will have wealth in your house."
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
29630
label
Dish with a Falcon
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
29630
sourceUrl
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Dish with a Falcon
description
This dish, together with Walters 48.2291 and 48.2292, was discovered in the shipwreck of a large Byzantine trading vessel near Alonissos in the Aegean Sea. The ship's cargo consisted of some 1,500 pieces of tableware, most decorated with drawings incised into a thin layer of fine white clay. This technique, now called "sgraffito," was brought to Byzantium from the Islamic East. It was from the Near East, too, that the Byzantine nobility learned to hunt with specially trained falcons like the one seen here. Such sports were reserved for the wealthy, who normally ate from silver plates, but they would have been familiar also to the less affluent users of clay tableware. Because of their association with the rich and powerful, hunting animals were believed to bring good fortune. Thus, a Byzantine dream book promises its readers that "if you dream that you caught a hawk, you will have wealth in your house."
provenance
[Found underwater in the Northern Sporades by Bruno Löffel of Vienna, Austria, 1967]; Walters Art Museum, 1967, by purchase.
date
1090-1190 (Medieval)
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Ceramics
dishes
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Diam: 9 1/4 in. (23.5 cm)
Source extras
cul
Byzantine
dynasty
Comnenean Dynasty
RelatedObjects
35395
26315
med
ceramic
creator_ids
6640
collection_ids
BYZ
exhibition_ids
1957
246
2752
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
a32649477902f48a