Uttoxeter Casket
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The Uttoxeter Casket
The Uttoxeter Casket also known as Philip Nelson's Casket is an Anglo Saxon reliquary which is held at the Cleveland Museum of Art in Philadelphia USA. House-shaped and carved from a single piece of boxwood, it remains the only known surviving wood-carving with such an elaborate iconographic program from this period of British history.
The lid of the box was found at a cottage near Uttoxeter, Staffordshire in the the United Kingdom in the mid-19th century. Uttoxeter historian Francis Redfern in his History of the Town of Uttoxeter[1], writing in the 1850’s mentions that at Croxden “A curious carved oak panel of Jesus and the Twelve Apostles has lately come to light, and been a subject of discussion at a meeting of a brotherhood of antiquaries at Manchester.”
The ruined Cistercian Croxden Abbey as the largest religious building in the locality, would be the most logical source of such an object. In all probability the box was pillaged or hidden at the time of the dissolution of the monasteries when Croxden Abbey surrendered to the Crown in 1538.
In 1936, the lid, which had first been re-discovered in Uttoxeter eight decades earlier, entered the Victoria & Albert Museum for an opinion. It was by this time owned by the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Hammersmith (London). A Liverpool collector and specialist, Dr. Philip Nelson, had purchased the bottom piece in 1921 from a private owner in Warrington, Cheshire, for the sum of £175. Dr Nelson (1872-1953) from Liverpool was a man of independent means who devoted much of his energy and resources to antiquarian pursuits. He was well known in numismatic circles for a number of publications. The lid came to Dr Nelson’s attention and it was realised that the two wooden items belonged together. Nelson, convinced the convent to sell the lid to him for £120. The box and its lid were reunited for the first time in at least a century and possibly much longer.
Dr. Nelson lent this important box to the V&A where it remained on exhibit from 1937 until his death in 1953. He published an article on it in the academic publication Archaeologia[2] in 1937. After Nelsons death the reliquary left the country as it was sold to an American dealer, and subsequently to The Cleveland Museum of Art.
The casket is a rare possibly unique example of high quality Anglo Saxon wood carving, dating from roughly 1050. It is decorated with scenes from Christ’s life. On one long side, the Christ child rests in the manger. Above, the Crucifixion is shown with mourners gathered below the cross and two angels flanking it on either side. On the other long side is the Ascension, God’s hand pulling Christ heavenward. Christ in Majesty appears above. The short sides show Christ’s entry into Jerusalem and the other his baptism though it is possibly first bath at the hands of the Emea (midwife) and Salome. It has a similar design influence to the Hereford Gospels and Troper, where the figures are said to resemble one another stylistically[3].
The box measures 15cm (6 in) in length, 5.5cm (2¾ in), in width, and has a total height of 8.5cm (3½ in). It is missing its lock and one hinge. The remaining hinge is made from a copper alloy.
Catherine Karkov in her book The Art of Anglo Saxon England[4], Suggests that if the box is a reliquary, the way in which the figure of Christ appears centrally suggests it may have held a relic from one of the events of Christ’s life. As the box is made of wood, a piece of the True Cross would have been especially appropriate.
References
- ^ Redfern, Francis (1850). The History of the Town of Uttoxeter. J Russell Smith, London.
- ^ Nelson, Philip (January 1937). "IV.—An Ancient Box-Wood Casket". Archaeologia. 86: 91-100.
- ^ Janet Backhouse (Author), D.H. Turner (Author), Leslie Webster (Author). The Golden Age of Anglo-Saxon Art (First Edition (26 Nov. 1984) ed.). British Museum Press. ISBN 0714105325.
{{cite book}}
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has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Karkov, Catherine. The Art of Anglo Saxon England (Reprint edition (17 Mar. 2016) ed.). Boydell. p. 348. ISBN 1783270950.
External links
Dr. Nelson's Boxwood Casket http://library.clevelandart.org/node/291669
Uttoxeter Casket https://www.flickr.com/photos/27305838@N04/10497026543
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