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Aquamanile

In modern usage, an aquamanile (plural aquamanilia or simply aquamaniles) is a ewer or jug-type vessel in the form of one or more animal or human figures. It usually contained water for the washing of hands (aqua + manos) over a basin, which was part of both upper-class meals and the Christian Eucharist. Historically (since the 6th century) the term was used for a basin used for priest's ablutions. The water was supplied by a subdeacon, and aquamanile was a symbol of subdeaconate. The term was later transferred onto secular ewers.[1] Most surviving examples are in metal, typically copper alloys (brass or bronze), as pottery versions have rarely survived.

Aquamanile in the Form of a Lion
An 11–12th century Islamic aquamanile from Iran, later used in liturgy by Medieval Spanish Christians

Islamic art Edit

Persian aquamaniles predate any zoomorphic aquamaniles known in Europe. An Iranian (Abbasid caliphate), aquamanile in the form of an eagle, bearing the date 180 AH/CE 796-797 is the earliest dated Islamic object in metalwork. It is cast in bronze, inlaid with silver and copper, and can be found in the Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia. The city of origin is unknown, as the inscription allows for a variety of interpretations. However, it is theorized that it was made in Iraq or Syria, due to the elaborate technique of decorative inlays that would only have been known to those areas at the time. It is possible that at one point, it was used as a weathervane, due to a hole between the feet; however, this has not been confirmed.[2]

Among the latest in date is one also at the Hermitage, an Islamic aquamanile depicting a zebu and calf, from Khorasan dated 1206. This object is also a rare example of an Islamic automaton, as the (now lost) harness and bridle were movable, as well as the tail, and the bell wrapped around its neck would have rung when poured.[3] The symbolism of the young lion on the top of the aquamanile has been subject to academic debate, due to academic disagreement as to whether the lion is attacking the zebu or suckling on its back. However, some suggest that it is a depiction of the young mythological king Fereydun and represents his slow ascent to kingship from his humble beginnings as a cattle breeder.[3]

While Islamic law forbids the use of animal depictions in religious settings, and few examples of Islamic aquamaniles survive, it is believed that they were used to a great extent in the Islamic world.[4] The inscription on the zebu and calf from Khorasan states that it was "cast in one," or, in other words, was cast using the lost-wax casting process.[5] The complexity of the piece suggests that the artisans involved had accomplished such a technical feat many times before.[4] Aquamanilia were often commissioned by the emerging Islamic upper middle class as a display of wealth.[3] Despite their uniqueness and rarity, Islamic aquamanilia are understudied.[6]

Europe Edit

 
Bronze aquamanile in the form of a mounted knight, second half of the 13th century, Lower Saxony

The Byzantine Empire's cultural connections with Sassanid Persia and the Abbasid caliphate, never peaceful in the political sphere, nevertheless brought the aquamanile into the Christian Mediterranean world. The earliest European portable aquamaniles date to the eleventh century. Ewers and basins were needed in Christian liturgy for the ritual of the lavabo, in which the officiating priest washes his hands before vesting, again before the consecration of the Eucharist and after mass. As a ritual object, metal was considered more suitable than pottery, although most examples in pottery no doubt were broken and discarded. The aquamaniles made in the Mosan – or Meuse valley – region, using the brass alloy of silvery tint called dinanderie (from the center of its manufacture in the region of Dinant) were often fantastic and zoomorphic in their forms, which were constrained only by the need for a larger opening for filling the vessel and a spout for pouring. Church records inventory aquamaniles in silver or gilt copper, but the great majority of surviving examples are in base metals, which were not worth melting down.

As well as the altar, aquamaniles were used at the tables of the great, where extravagant designs of symbolic or fantastical beasts – lions were especially popular – were developed in purely secular iconography. A gold aquamanile, c. 1215, in the treasury of the cathedral at Aachen, takes the form of a man's bust; it is a rare survival of an aquamanile in a precious metal. An aquamanile (ref. Metropolitan Museum) in the form of Aristotle on hands and knees, being ridden by Phyllis, bore several moral lessons, with ribald undertones; such an aquamanile was distinctly secular in nature.

Bronze aquamaniles in the form of leopards were part of court ritual in Benin, where the concept may have arrived from the Islamic north. An 18th-century bronze leopard aquamanile from Benin is in the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.

From the Renaissance elaborate versions of the conventional ewer were preferred to zoomorphic forms. A late version of the aquamanile was the silver-gilt mounted rider on a stand, bought in 1700 for the treasury of the Basilica of St-Denis and sold in 1798. Its form is recorded in an engraving by Félibien. (ref. St-Denis) The idea of ewers in fantastic shapes has never died out.

Examples Edit

The following aquamanilia in collections are set in approximate chronological order:

  • State Hermitage Museum, Aquamanile in the form of an eagle, signed by "Suleiman" dated 180 AH/796-797
  • Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, Aquamanile in the form of a goose, Khurasan, Iran, 12th century[7][8]
  • Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, Elephant aquamanile, Syria, 12th or early 13th century[9][10]
  • Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg, Aquamanile in the form of a lion, ca. 1200[11]
  • National Gallery of Art, Washington, Aquamanile in the form of a lion, north French or Mosan, c. 1200[12]
  • State Hermitage Museum, Aquamanile of a cow with her calf, Khorasan, dated CE 1206; handle in the form of a lion, attacking the cow by the hump of its back.
  • Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, Large aquamanile in the form of a feline, Iran or Afghanistan, early 13th century.[13][14]
  • National Gallery of Art, Washington, Aquamanile in the form of a horseman, English or Scandinavian, 13th century[15]
  • Rijksmuseum, Aquamanile in the form of a horse, bronze, Maas/Meuse region, 13th century 2006-09-29 at the Wayback Machine
  • Legion of Honor, San Francisco, Aquamanile of a lion, German, 13th century
  • Harvard University Art Museums, Fogg Museum, Aquamanile (water vessel) in the form of a lion, 13th or 14th century
  • Art Institute of Chicago, Aquamanile in the form of a lion, 1325–75
  • Metropolitan Museum of Art, Aquamanile in the form of a mounted knight, bronze, Lower Saxony, late 13th century
  • Walters Art Museum, Aquamanile in the Form of a Lion, brass, ca. 1300
  • Rijksmuseum, Aquamanile in the form of a lion, last quarter of the 14th century
  • Germanisches National Museum, Aquamanile in the form of a lion, ca. 1400
  • Metropolitan Museum of Art, Aquamanile in the form of Aristotle and Phyllis, Lorraine, c. 1400
  • The Cloisters Collection, Aquamanile in the form of a lion, copper alloy, Nuremberg, c. 1400
  • Detroit Institute of Arts, Lion aquamanile, 1425–50[16]
  • The Hunt Museum, Horse Aquamanile, Germany, 15th century
  • "The Treasure of Saint Denis"
  • State Hermitage Museum, Aquamanile Shaped like a Rider from Augsburg, Germany, ca. 1665.[17]

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

  • Bartmann jugs, also known as Bellarmine jubs, pottery jugs with bearded faces manufactured in Europe in 16th and 17th centuries.
  • Toby jug, pottery jug in the form of a seated person, or the head.
  • Cow creamer, ceramic or silver cream dispenser in the shape of a cow.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Murray & Murray 1998.
  2. ^ "Hermitage Museum -- Aquamanile Shaped like an Eagle". Hermitage Museum.
  3. ^ a b c Facts and artefacts : art in the Islamic world : festschrift for Jens Kröger on his 65th birthday. Kröger, Jens., Hagedorn, Annette., Shalem, Avinoam. Leiden: Brill. 2007. ISBN 978-90-474-2281-5. OCLC 503441025.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. ^ a b Allan, James W.; Kana'an, Ruba (2017-06-20), Flood, Finbarr Barry; Necipoğlu, Gülru (eds.), "The Social and Economic Life of Metalwork", A Companion to Islamic Art and Architecture, Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., pp. 453–477, doi:10.1002/9781119069218.ch18, ISBN 978-1-119-06921-8, retrieved 2020-11-08
  5. ^ Laviola, Valentina (2017-02-26). "Artisans' Signatures from Pre-Mongol Iranian Metalwork. An Epigraphic and Palaeographic Analysis". Eurasian Studies. 15 (1): 80–124. doi:10.1163/24685623-12340027. ISSN 1722-0750.
  6. ^ Rosser-Owen, Mariam (2012). "Mediterraneanism: how to incorporate Islamic art into an emerging field". Journal of Art Historiography, Glasgow. 6: 1–33 – via ProQuest.
  7. ^ "Islamic Art | Aquamanile in the Form of a Goose". Khalili Collections. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  8. ^ Rogers 2008, p. 91.
  9. ^ "Islamic Art | Elephant Aquamanile". Khalili Collections. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  10. ^ Rogers 2008, p. 116.
  11. ^ "Aquamanile in the form of a lion". Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg. Retrieved 2020-08-18.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ Luchs, Alison (1993). "Aquamanile in the Form of a Lion". Western Decorative Arts, Part 1 (PDF). Cambridge University Press. pp. 25–28. ISBN 978-0894681622.
  13. ^ "Islamic Art | Large Aquamanile or Table Fountain in the Form of a Feline". Khalili Collections. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  14. ^ Rogers 2008, p. 113.
  15. ^ Luchs, Alison (1993). "Aquamanile in the Form of a Horseman". Western Decorative Arts, Part 1 (PDF). The Collections of the National Gallery of Art, Systematic Catalog. Washington: Cambridge University Press. pp. 28–32. ISBN 978-0894681622.
  16. ^ "Lion aquamanile 2008.1". Detroit Institute of Arts. Retrieved 2020-08-18.
  17. ^ "Aquamanile Shaped like a Rider". Hermitage Museum.[permanent dead link]

References Edit

  • Legner, Anton (ed). Ornamenta Ecclesiae, Kunst und Künstler der Romanik. Catalogue of an exhibition in the Schnütgen Museum, Köln, 1985. 3 vols.
  • Rogers, J. M. (2008). The arts of Islam : treasures from the Nasser D. Khalili collection (Revised and expanded ed.). Abu Dhabi: Tourism Development & Investment Company (TDIC). OCLC 455121277.
  • Murray, Peter; Murray, Linda (1998). "Aquamanile". The Oxford Companion to Christian Art and Architecture. Oxford University Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-19-860216-3. OCLC 1055176997.

Further reading Edit

  • Barnet, Peter; Dandridge, Pete (2006). Lions, Dragons, & Other Beasts: Aquamanilia of the Middle Ages, Vessels for Church and Table. (Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts, Design & Culture). Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11684-7.
  • Ettinghausen, Elizabeth S. (2007). "Analysing a Pictorial Narrative The Aquamanile in the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg". In Jens Kröger; Annette Hagedorn; Avinoam Shalem (eds.). Facts and artefacts: art in the Islamic. Islamic history and civilization: Studies and texts. Vol. 68. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-15782-8.
  • Grabar, Oleg (2002). "About a Bronze Bird". In Sears, Elizabeth; Thomas, Thelma K. (eds.). Reading Medieval Images: The Art Historian and the Object. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. pp. 117–125. ISBN 0-472-09751-2.
  • Gross, Uwe (1983). "Das Aquamanile der "rotbemalten Feinware" aus Speyer". Pfälzer Heimat (in German). 4/1983: 145–155.
  • Museo civico medievale di Bologna. L'acquamanile del Museo civico medievale di Bologna. Conference proceedings. Milan: Silvana editoriale, 2013.
  • К. Ш. Барекян. Средневековый акваманил: оригинал и копия. Новый взгляд на атрибуцию акваманилов из коллекции ГМИИ имени А. С. Пушкина. (in Russian) Архивная копия от 6 марта 2016 на Wayback Machine// Актуальные проблемы теории и истории искусства: сб. науч. статей. Вып. 4. / Под ред. А. В. Захаровой,

External links Edit

  • European sculpture and metalwork, a collection catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on aquamanile (see index)
  • Peter Barnet, "Medieval Aquamanilia" from the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History, September 2009.

aquamanile, modern, usage, aquamanile, plural, aquamanilia, simply, aquamaniles, ewer, type, vessel, form, more, animal, human, figures, usually, contained, water, washing, hands, aqua, manos, over, basin, which, part, both, upper, class, meals, christian, euc. In modern usage an aquamanile plural aquamanilia or simply aquamaniles is a ewer or jug type vessel in the form of one or more animal or human figures It usually contained water for the washing of hands aqua manos over a basin which was part of both upper class meals and the Christian Eucharist Historically since the 6th century the term was used for a basin used for priest s ablutions The water was supplied by a subdeacon and aquamanile was a symbol of subdeaconate The term was later transferred onto secular ewers 1 Most surviving examples are in metal typically copper alloys brass or bronze as pottery versions have rarely survived Aquamanile in the Form of a Lion An 11 12th century Islamic aquamanile from Iran later used in liturgy by Medieval Spanish ChristiansContents 1 Islamic art 2 Europe 3 Examples 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksIslamic art EditPersian aquamaniles predate any zoomorphic aquamaniles known in Europe An Iranian Abbasid caliphate aquamanile in the form of an eagle bearing the date 180 AH CE 796 797 is the earliest dated Islamic object in metalwork It is cast in bronze inlaid with silver and copper and can be found in the Hermitage Museum St Petersburg Russia The city of origin is unknown as the inscription allows for a variety of interpretations However it is theorized that it was made in Iraq or Syria due to the elaborate technique of decorative inlays that would only have been known to those areas at the time It is possible that at one point it was used as a weathervane due to a hole between the feet however this has not been confirmed 2 Among the latest in date is one also at the Hermitage an Islamic aquamanile depicting a zebu and calf from Khorasan dated 1206 This object is also a rare example of an Islamic automaton as the now lost harness and bridle were movable as well as the tail and the bell wrapped around its neck would have rung when poured 3 The symbolism of the young lion on the top of the aquamanile has been subject to academic debate due to academic disagreement as to whether the lion is attacking the zebu or suckling on its back However some suggest that it is a depiction of the young mythological king Fereydun and represents his slow ascent to kingship from his humble beginnings as a cattle breeder 3 While Islamic law forbids the use of animal depictions in religious settings and few examples of Islamic aquamaniles survive it is believed that they were used to a great extent in the Islamic world 4 The inscription on the zebu and calf from Khorasan states that it was cast in one or in other words was cast using the lost wax casting process 5 The complexity of the piece suggests that the artisans involved had accomplished such a technical feat many times before 4 Aquamanilia were often commissioned by the emerging Islamic upper middle class as a display of wealth 3 Despite their uniqueness and rarity Islamic aquamanilia are understudied 6 Europe Edit nbsp Bronze aquamanile in the form of a mounted knight second half of the 13th century Lower SaxonyThe Byzantine Empire s cultural connections with Sassanid Persia and the Abbasid caliphate never peaceful in the political sphere nevertheless brought the aquamanile into the Christian Mediterranean world The earliest European portable aquamaniles date to the eleventh century Ewers and basins were needed in Christian liturgy for the ritual of the lavabo in which the officiating priest washes his hands before vesting again before the consecration of the Eucharist and after mass As a ritual object metal was considered more suitable than pottery although most examples in pottery no doubt were broken and discarded The aquamaniles made in the Mosan or Meuse valley region using the brass alloy of silvery tint called dinanderie from the center of its manufacture in the region of Dinant were often fantastic and zoomorphic in their forms which were constrained only by the need for a larger opening for filling the vessel and a spout for pouring Church records inventory aquamaniles in silver or gilt copper but the great majority of surviving examples are in base metals which were not worth melting down As well as the altar aquamaniles were used at the tables of the great where extravagant designs of symbolic or fantastical beasts lions were especially popular were developed in purely secular iconography A gold aquamanile c 1215 in the treasury of the cathedral at Aachen takes the form of a man s bust it is a rare survival of an aquamanile in a precious metal An aquamanile ref Metropolitan Museum in the form of Aristotle on hands and knees being ridden by Phyllis bore several moral lessons with ribald undertones such an aquamanile was distinctly secular in nature Bronze aquamaniles in the form of leopards were part of court ritual in Benin where the concept may have arrived from the Islamic north An 18th century bronze leopard aquamanile from Benin is in the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts From the Renaissance elaborate versions of the conventional ewer were preferred to zoomorphic forms A late version of the aquamanile was the silver gilt mounted rider on a stand bought in 1700 for the treasury of the Basilica of St Denis and sold in 1798 Its form is recorded in an engraving by Felibien ref St Denis The idea of ewers in fantastic shapes has never died out Examples EditThe following aquamanilia in collections are set in approximate chronological order State Hermitage Museum Aquamanile in the form of an eagle signed by Suleiman dated 180 AH 796 797 Victoria and Albert Museum Aquamanile in the form of a griffin ca 1130 Khalili Collection of Islamic Art Aquamanile in the form of a goose Khurasan Iran 12th century 7 8 Khalili Collection of Islamic Art Elephant aquamanile Syria 12th or early 13th century 9 10 Museum fur Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg Aquamanile in the form of a lion ca 1200 11 National Gallery of Art Washington Aquamanile in the form of a lion north French or Mosan c 1200 12 State Hermitage Museum Aquamanile of a cow with her calf Khorasan dated CE 1206 handle in the form of a lion attacking the cow by the hump of its back Khalili Collection of Islamic Art Large aquamanile in the form of a feline Iran or Afghanistan early 13th century 13 14 National Gallery of Art Washington Aquamanile in the form of a horseman English or Scandinavian 13th century 15 Rijksmuseum Aquamanile in the form of a horse bronze Maas Meuse region 13th century Archived 2006 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Wartburg Eisenach Aquamanile in the form of a lion 13th century Legion of Honor San Francisco Aquamanile of a lion German 13th century Harvard University Art Museums Fogg Museum Aquamanile water vessel in the form of a lion 13th or 14th century Art Institute of Chicago Aquamanile in the form of a lion 1325 75 Metropolitan Museum of Art Aquamanile in the form of a mounted knight bronze Lower Saxony late 13th century Walters Art Museum Aquamanile in the Form of a Lion brass ca 1300 Rijksmuseum Aquamanile in the form of a lion last quarter of the 14th century Germanisches National Museum Aquamanile in the form of a lion ca 1400 Metropolitan Museum of Art Aquamanile in the form of Aristotle and Phyllis Lorraine c 1400 The Cloisters Collection Aquamanile in the form of a lion copper alloy Nuremberg c 1400 Detroit Institute of Arts Lion aquamanile 1425 50 16 The Hunt Museum Horse Aquamanile Germany 15th century The Treasure of Saint Denis State Hermitage Museum Aquamanile Shaped like a Rider from Augsburg Germany ca 1665 17 Gallery Edit nbsp Aquamanile Aristotle and Phyllis Musee Dobree Nantes France nbsp Aquamanile in the form of a lion 12th century made of copper alloy with glass inlays overall 19 5 x 21 9 x 8 7 cm in the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City nbsp Aquamanile about 1170 80 Aachen Cathedral Treasury nbsp Aquamanile in the shape of a horse brass 15th century The Hunt Museum Limerick Ireland nbsp Aquamanile in the Form of a Goose 12th century AD Khalili Collections Quaternary copper alloy with surface engraving and traces of black compound the eyes inlaid with turquoise glazed potterySee also EditBartmann jugs also known as Bellarmine jubs pottery jugs with bearded faces manufactured in Europe in 16th and 17th centuries Toby jug pottery jug in the form of a seated person or the head Cow creamer ceramic or silver cream dispenser in the shape of a cow Notes Edit Murray amp Murray 1998 Hermitage Museum Aquamanile Shaped like an Eagle Hermitage Museum a b c Facts and artefacts art in the Islamic world festschrift for Jens Kroger on his 65th birthday Kroger Jens Hagedorn Annette Shalem Avinoam Leiden Brill 2007 ISBN 978 90 474 2281 5 OCLC 503441025 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Allan James W Kana an Ruba 2017 06 20 Flood Finbarr Barry Necipoglu Gulru eds The Social and Economic Life of Metalwork A Companion to Islamic Art and Architecture Hoboken NJ USA John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 453 477 doi 10 1002 9781119069218 ch18 ISBN 978 1 119 06921 8 retrieved 2020 11 08 Laviola Valentina 2017 02 26 Artisans Signatures from Pre Mongol Iranian Metalwork An Epigraphic and Palaeographic Analysis Eurasian Studies 15 1 80 124 doi 10 1163 24685623 12340027 ISSN 1722 0750 Rosser Owen Mariam 2012 Mediterraneanism how to incorporate Islamic art into an emerging field Journal of Art Historiography Glasgow 6 1 33 via ProQuest Islamic Art Aquamanile in the Form of a Goose Khalili Collections Retrieved 2021 04 29 Rogers 2008 p 91 Islamic Art Elephant Aquamanile Khalili Collections Retrieved 2021 04 29 Rogers 2008 p 116 Aquamanile in the form of a lion Museum fur Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg Retrieved 2020 08 18 permanent dead link Luchs Alison 1993 Aquamanile in the Form of a Lion Western Decorative Arts Part 1 PDF Cambridge University Press pp 25 28 ISBN 978 0894681622 Islamic Art Large Aquamanile or Table Fountain in the Form of a Feline Khalili Collections Retrieved 2021 04 29 Rogers 2008 p 113 Luchs Alison 1993 Aquamanile in the Form of a Horseman Western Decorative Arts Part 1 PDF The Collections of the National Gallery of Art Systematic Catalog Washington Cambridge University Press pp 28 32 ISBN 978 0894681622 Lion aquamanile 2008 1 Detroit Institute of Arts Retrieved 2020 08 18 Aquamanile Shaped like a Rider Hermitage Museum permanent dead link References EditLegner Anton ed Ornamenta Ecclesiae Kunst und Kunstler der Romanik Catalogue of an exhibition in the Schnutgen Museum Koln 1985 3 vols Rogers J M 2008 The arts of Islam treasures from the Nasser D Khalili collection Revised and expanded ed Abu Dhabi Tourism Development amp Investment Company TDIC OCLC 455121277 Murray Peter Murray Linda 1998 Aquamanile The Oxford Companion to Christian Art and Architecture Oxford University Press p 30 ISBN 978 0 19 860216 3 OCLC 1055176997 Further reading EditBarnet Peter Dandridge Pete 2006 Lions Dragons amp Other Beasts Aquamanilia of the Middle Ages Vessels for Church and Table Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts Design amp Culture Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11684 7 Ettinghausen Elizabeth S 2007 Analysing a Pictorial Narrative The Aquamanile in the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg In Jens Kroger Annette Hagedorn Avinoam Shalem eds Facts and artefacts art in the Islamic Islamic history and civilization Studies and texts Vol 68 Brill ISBN 978 90 04 15782 8 Grabar Oleg 2002 About a Bronze Bird In Sears Elizabeth Thomas Thelma K eds Reading Medieval Images The Art Historian and the Object Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press pp 117 125 ISBN 0 472 09751 2 Gross Uwe 1983 Das Aquamanile der rotbemalten Feinware aus Speyer Pfalzer Heimat in German 4 1983 145 155 Museo civico medievale di Bologna L acquamanile del Museo civico medievale di Bologna Conference proceedings Milan Silvana editoriale 2013 K Sh Barekyan Srednevekovyj akvamanil original i kopiya Novyj vzglyad na atribuciyu akvamanilov iz kollekcii GMII imeni A S Pushkina in Russian Arhivnaya kopiya ot 6 marta 2016 na Wayback Machine Aktualnye problemy teorii i istorii iskusstva sb nauch statej Vyp 4 Pod red A V Zaharovoj External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aquamaniles European sculpture and metalwork a collection catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries fully available online as PDF which contains material on aquamanile see index Peter Barnet Medieval Aquamanilia from the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History September 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aquamanile amp oldid 1177457904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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