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Westwood, J. O.; South Kensington Museum [Editor]
A descriptive catalogue of the fictile ivories in the South Kensington Museum: with an account of the continental collections of classical and mediaeval ivories — London: Chapman & Hall, 1876

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.75314#0517
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Ivories in German, and Auftria. 433

Augsburg (Bavaria). Church of SS. Ulrich and Afra (Chapel
of St. Ulrich).
Ivory relic box ornamented with engravings filled in with black, in augsburg.
the ftyle of niello work. G. F. Waagen, Kunftwerke und Kunftler in chapel of
Deutfchland, vol. ii. st.ulrich.
Comb of St. Conrad in church of St. Ulrich, Augfburg. Proc. Soc.
Antiquar. London, 2nd Ser. 2, p. 55.
The comb of St. Ulrich, with a figure of St. George and the Dragon.
Figured by Hertfelder, Bafilica S. Udalrici. 1627. Fol. pl. 25.

Bamberg Cathedral.
Conf. Jaeck, Vollftandige Befchreibung d. OfFentlichen Bibliothek bamberg.
zu Bamberg; Waagen, Kunft in Deutfchland, vol. i.; Liibke, Vor- CATHE-
fchule zur Kirchlichen Kunft, 5 edit.; Labarte, Hiftoire des Arts DRAL°
Induft., vol. i., Text.
Comb of the Emprefs Cunegunda (+ 1040). On one fide of the
middle part are two dogs ; on the other fide are two rude birds drinking
out of a vafe. Becker und Hefner, Kunftw. d. Mittelalt., pl. 28.
A fecond comb of the fame Emprefs, the middle part on each fide
with three circles, the outer ones with two animals, each with a fhort
curved horn on its forehead and a tongue thruft out of its mouth, and
the central circle with an ornamental rofette.
A great crucifix (A.D. ioo8)in the cathedral. Defer. Kugler, Kl.
Schrift, i., 160.
Carved ivory crozier of St. Otto, Bifhop of Bamberg, the crook
formed by a ferpent, with a reprefentation of the Annunciation within
the whorl. Beginning of 12th century.
Reliquary, furrounded with figures of ivory in high relief reprefent-
ing the twelve apoftles ftanding under narrow rounded arches, the cover
ornamented with remains of enamel work, with the Adoration of the
Magi and Shepherds. 12th century.
Ivory knife-iheath, with interlaced ribbon-patterns on the fides,
affirmed to have belonged to the Emperor St. Henry II., and to contain
the knife with which St. Bartholomew was flayed alive. Figured,
Hefner, Trachtenbuch, pl. 54.
30670. EE
 
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