Object structure

Publication Details:

Medieval and Early Modern Armenian Studies is a biannual (two issues per year), peer-reviewed academic journal published in English, French, German, and Italian by the ''Matenadaran'' Mesrop Mashtots Institute of Ancient Manuscripts. It encourages interdisciplinary research on medieval and early modern history and culture, with a particular emphasis on Armenian Studies.

Journal or Publication Title:

Matenadaran: Medieval and Early Modern Armenian Studies (MEMAS)

Date of publication:

2024

Volume:

1

Number:

2

ISSN:

e-3041-5063

Additional Information:

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Title:

"Don't Forget about the Silver Covers!"

Remainder of title:

Newly Discovered Silverwork by the ArmenianSilversmiths of Kayseri (Seventeenth–EighteenthCenturies)

Creator:

Merian, Sylvie L.

Contributor(s):

Editor-in-Chief Aram Topchyan ; Managing Editor Ani Shahnazaryan

Subject:

History

Uncontrolled Keywords:

Kayseri ; silversmiths ; silver bindings ; Chinese porcelain

Coverage:

173-215

Abstract:

A seventeenth to eighteenth-century workshop of Armenian silversmiths from Kayseri, Cappadocia, is notable for having produced repoussé silver covers for religious manuscripts, liturgical objects, and luxury household articles. These objects were manufactured in silver, gold, or silvered copper, and were occasionally further embellished with colorful enamels and/or gems. Nearly seventy objects from this workshop have been identified; about a third are inscribed with the name of the silversmith and the date and place of production (Kayseri). Uninscribed objects created in this same workshop have been identified on the basis of technical and stylistic comparisons with the inscribed ones. This article will summarise the history of this workshop, discuss examples of the objects produced, and explain the iconography, which inspired the silversmiths. I will then introduce some newly identified objects from the workshop, a dish and bowl set in the collection of the Alex and Marie Manoogian Museum (Southfield, Michigan). The materials, technique of manufacture, and style confirm their origin in this Armenian atelier.

Publisher:

Mesrop Mashtots Institute of Ancient Manuscripts

Type:

Article

Format:

pdf

Language:

ge ; en ; it ; fr