October 7, 2008

Fatimid ewer sells at auction

A 1,000-year-old carved rock crystal ewer, one of only seven known surviving examples, fetched 3.2 million pounds at auction on Tuesday, Christie's said.

The ewer is the same one that came up for auction in Britain in January this year, when it was catalogued as a 19th century French claret jug and valued at 100-200 pounds.

In fact experts now believe it is an extremely rare ewer from the Fatimid dynasty which ruled parts of northern Africa and the Middle East in the 10th-12th centuries.

Reflecting its importance it sold in January for 220,000 pounds, although auction house sources said that transaction was later "annulled by agreement". They gave no further details.

Further background:
Of the other six surviving examples, one is in London's Victoria & Albert Museum, two are in the treasury of the Basilica of San Marco, Venice, one is in the Cathedral of Fermo, Italy, another is in the Louvre in Paris and one was stolen from the Museum of Limoges, France, in 1980.

There was one other known ewer, but it was dropped by an employee of a museum in Florence in 1998 and shattered irreparably, according to reports.

From Reuters.

Posted by David on October 7, 2008 10:39 PM

Comments

Hmm, Shi`ites of that period did not prohibit naturalism in art? Did Sunnis of the time?

Posted by: teqjack on October 8, 2008 7:47 PM

Nope, they didn't. There are amazing ivory carvings from Spain in about the same period.

Posted by: Michael Tinkler on October 9, 2008 11:40 AM
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