Gallery 300, European Art 1100-1500, third floor (Wallace Gallery)
Main Building
Gallery 300, European Art 1100-1500, third floor (Wallace Gallery)
Main Building
By the early fifteenth century, it was customary for patrician and noble families in the German-speaking lands to suspend elaborate "death shields" (Totenschilde in German) high on the interior walls and pillars of churches, as a way to boast the distinction of their lineages and preserve the memory of their ancestors. The monumental scale of such shields ensured that the decoration would be visible to onlookers below.
Heraldic conventions of the time dictated the composition: the military shield in the center bears the family coat of arms of Jacob Ortlieb (died 1475), and is surmounted by a stylized jousting helm with a crest and mantling. Ortlieb's wife is commemorated by a small escutcheon to the side. In earlier times, memorials incorporated actual combat helms and shields recycled for funeral purposes.
Gallery 300, European Art 1100-1500, third floor (Wallace Gallery)
Title: | Memorial Shield of Jacob Ortlieb Totenschild |
Date: | c. 1475 |
Artist: | Artist/maker unknown, German |
Medium: | Gessoed, painted, and partially silvered wood; iron; leather; rope |
Dimensions: | 55 1/8 x 9 x 45 11/16 inches (140 x 22.9 x 116 cm) |
Classification: | Arms and Armor |
Credit Line: | Purchased with the John T. Morris Fund, 2007 |
Accession Number: | 2007-52-1 |
Geography: | Made in southern Germany, Germany, Europe Possibly made in Nuremberg, Germany, Europe |
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Gallery 300, European Art 1100-1500, third floor (Wallace Gallery)
Main Building