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Ivories Ancient and Mediæval

Chapter 2: LIST OF FULL PAGE PLATES
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About This Book

A concise handbook surveying ancient and medieval ivory carving, comparing true elephant ivory with walrus, narwhal, hippopotamus and fossil mammoth ivory, and discussing material properties and sourcing. It describes carving techniques, common forms (diptychs, reliquaries, triptychs, mirror-covers, combs, chessmen, staffs, and horn oliphants), regional styles and workshop practices, and provides catalog-like descriptions illustrated with woodcuts and plates drawn from museum collections. The text examines size and working of large plaques, the use of bone as substitute material, iconography, and functional contexts of objects, aiming to inform collectors and readers about history, manufacture, and classification of ivory artifacts.

LIST OF FULL PAGE PLATES

  FOLLOWING
PAGE  
PASTORAL STAFF CARVED IVORY WITH FIGURES. Frontispiece
IVORY CARVING. ONE LEAF OF THE DIPTYCHON MELERETENSE. 34
IVORY CARVING. CIRCULAR MIRROR COVER. DATE 1300-1330. 74
IVORY CARVING, HEAD OF A TAU OR T SHAPED STAFF, IN WALRUS  
  TUSK, THE COMPARTMENTS CONTAINING THE SIGNS OF THE ZODIAC. 85
CROSIER IN CARVED IVORY AND GILT METAL. 86
TRIPTYCH, SERVING AS A RELIQUARY IN CARVED IVORY ABOUT 1480. 96
HORN OR OLIPHANT. IVORY. BYZANTINE. 11TH CENT. 114
PLAQUES OR PANELS OF A CASKET, ONE A FRAGMENT, IVORY, FRENCH. 116
CARVED IVORY BOX, WITH ARABIC INSCRIPTION. HISPANO-MORESCO. 118