1. Fragments of a Bini-Portuguese spoon or fork.
1525–50. Ivory, length c.7.6 cm. (From C. Redman:
Qsar es-Seghir: An Archaeological View of
Medieval Life, Orlando 1986, p.130).
Non-western art unattributed:
2. Technical drawing based on Fig.1.
(J. Gonçalves).
English and Scottish Silver Spoons, Medieval to Late Stuart and Pre-Elizabethan Hall-Marks on English Plate, Vol.III |
author: How, G. E. P.
, author: How, Jane Penrice
Book Review
English and Scottish Silver Spoons, Mediaeval to Late Stuart, and pre-Elizabethan Hall-Marks on English Plate
A-(a) Cup, 1657-8, (b) Miniature Cup, Probably by John Sharpe. Jacobean, about 1620. The Lloyd Roberts' Bequest of Old English Plate to Manchester
Attributed works:
D-Chalice with Paten Cover, by John Plummer. York Plate of 1602-3. The Lloyd Roberts' Bequest of Old English Plate to Manchester
Western art unattributed:
B -Set of Six Spoons, 1652-3. Engraved with Crest and Monogram. The Lloyd Roberts' Bequest of Old English Plate to Manchester
Western art unattributed:
C -Cup, Once the Property of Barnard's Inn. About 1617-8. The Lloyd Roberts' Bequest of Old English Plate to Manchester
Western art unattributed:
E -Snuff Box, Made in Dublin in 1801 and Engraved with the Names of the Officers of the 38th Foot (1st Staffordshire Regiment). The Lloyd Roberts' Bequest of Old English Plate to Manchester
(1) Silver Spoon. (2 and 3) Details, Three Times Natural Size. Mr. Basil Oxenden s Collection. (4) Bowl of "Stepped" Spoon Found in an Anglo-Saxon Grave at Basset Down, Wiltshire. Devizes Museum. (5) Spoon from Desborough. Northamptonshire. British Museum. (6) Roman "Stepped" Spoon. Museum of Northern Antiquities, Copenhagen. (7) Bowl of "Stepped" Spoon from Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Haslingfield. Cambridgeshire. (8) Anglo-Saxon Spoon from Sarre, Kent. Kent Archæological Society's Museum. Maidstone. An Early Spoon Found in Kent
Apostle Spoons, circa 1460-1475, (A) S. Philip, (B) S. James the Greater, (Three Views). Mr H. D. Ellis's Collection. Some Steps in the Evolution of the Apostle Spoon
Article
Early Scottish Spoons in the National Museum of Antiquities, Edinburgh