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Rosary bead, carved in boxwood

1500/1525

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

A rosary bead (sometimes referred to as a 'prayer nut' or 'paternoster bead') is characteristic of the minutely detailed, small-scale boxwood carvings used for private devotion. These types of delicate and complex objects were owned by members of the nobility or wealthy merchant classes in northern Europe, and were highly prized as masterpieces of carving and invention. A complete rosary, bearing the arms of England and probably dating to the first third of the sixteenth century, survives in the collections of the Dukes of Devonshire. This spherical bead is carved on the outside with Gothic architectural detail, while the interiors are carved variously with scenes from the Old Testament and the New Testament. The upper half is fitted with two doors, carved on both the inner and outer panels, which open to reveal the Crucifixion, crowded with miniscule figures in high relief. The lower half is fitted with one door, carved on both sides and opening to reveal a complex scene showing the Bearing of the Cross. The achievement of these perspectives in both low relief and in high relief attests to the great skill of the craftsman, who probably had to work using a magnifying glass.

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  • Title: Rosary bead, carved in boxwood
  • Date Created: 1500/1525
  • Physical Dimensions: Length: 13.20cm (open); Width: 9.40cm (upper doors open); Diameter: 5.70cm (upper half); Diameter: 6.50cm (lower half); Diameter: 4.70cm (upper half interior); Diameter: 5.20cm (lower half interior); Depth: 3.50cm (upper half); Depth: 4.80cm (lower half); We
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: carved; relief
  • Subject: crucifixion; old testament; life of virgin; deposition; annunciation; nativity; circumcision of christ; presentation in temple; christ among doctors; road to calvary
  • Registration number: WB.236
  • Production place: Made in France. Made in Belgium. Made in Flanders
  • Material: boxwood
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Bequeathed by Rothschild, Ferdinand Anselm
British Museum

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