Calice

ca. 1230–50
On view at The Met Cloisters in Gallery 14
Questi oggetti sacri, sontuosamente ornati con motivi disegnati da un sottile fil di ferro e da immagini a repoussé e niello, furono creati per essere utilizzati durante la messa: un piattino (patena) per il pane e un calice con cannuccia per il vino. Le cannucce, spesso in coppia, erano talvolta usate per evitare di versare il vino consacrato come sangue di Cristo. Sul calice e sulla patena sono abbinate scene della vita di Cristo con storie del Vecchio Testamento che ne rappresentano il prologo. La coppa del calice è decorata tutt’intorno dai dodici apostoli, mentre san Trudperto, patrono del monastero nei pressi di Freiburg im Breisgau da cui provengono questi oggetti, è in grande risalto sulla patena, di fronte a Cristo nel medaglione in alto.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Titolo: Calice
  • Data: ca. 1230-50
  • Area geografica: Provenienti dal monastero benedettino di San Trudperto a Münstertal, nei pressi di Freiburg im Breisgau
  • Cultura: Tedeschi
  • Materiale e tecnica: Argento, argento dorato, niello, pietre preziose
  • Dimensioni: Alt. del calice 20,3 cm
  • Crediti: The Cloisters Collection, 1947
  • Numero d'inventario: 47.101.26
  • Curatorial Department: Medieval Art and The Cloisters

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Cover Image for 55. Chalice

55. Chalice

Gallery 14

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NARRATOR: These liturgical objects were once used by the clergy to administer the sacrament of Holy Communion. They are central to the performance of mass and are probably the most sacred instruments of the church. The chalice held the consecrated wine -- believed to be the blood of Christ. Straws like this one were used to prevent even a drop of wine from spilling. The paten, or plate, held the Eucharist, consecrated bread believed to be the body of Christ, and received in Holy Communion. The origin of the Christian Eucharist is in the gospel accounts of Christ's Last Supper when Jesus gave bread and wine to his disciples. This chalice, paten, and straw are from southwestern Germany and were made for the monastery of Saint Trudpert in 1235. The chalice is silver and elaborately decorated with gems, engraved scenes, and silver filigree. Look at the portraits surrounding the bowl's outer surface. Christ and his apostles are depicted here. Episodes from the Old Testament adorn the base of the chalice, while intricate scenes of Christ's life are rendered on the stem's knobs. The paten is also bejeweled and shows scenes of Abel and Melchizedek, Christ holding the sacraments, and the monastery's patron saint, Saint Trudpert.

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