Christian Cut Glass Kandile with Suspension Bronze Crosses Chain

Description

The clear yellowish cut glass globular lamp with deep cobalt-blue rim, with suspension three chains with crosses, on a central hanging domed medallion. The lamp walls cut with a horizontal register framed by two lines above and below. In between are three cut medallions, each with a bust of a saint identified by Greek abbreviations: Π–Τ–Ο for Peter, Γ–Ρ–Ο for Gregory, and Ρ–Η–Α for Andrew.

The kandile – a thick-walled, globular glass lamp of substantial weight, intended for suspension in an ecclesiastical setting. The vessel has a rounded body and a wide rim enriched with a continuous band of fused cobalt-blue glass, carefully integrated during reheating. The glass body is pale yellow-green with numerous small bubbles, characteristic of medieval tank glass.

The exterior is decorated with a wheel-engraved circular three medallions enclosing a frontal bust of three saints.

The figures are rendered in a schematic, hieratic style, with large almond-shaped eyes, linear beard and hair, and vertically striated garments. Around the medallion are engraved Greek letters forming an abbreviated devotional inscription consistent with Middle Byzantine Christological formulae.

Technique and Manufacture

The lamp is distinguished by its heavy glass fabric, markedly thicker than the more common thin-walled blown Byzantine lamp cups. Such vessels represent a technically demanding and higher-status production, likely intended for prominent liturgical use.

The cobalt-blue rim is integral to the vessel and not applied superficially. The use of cobalt glass in Byzantine ecclesiastical vessels is documented but rare, typically reserved for objects of symbolic or prestige value. The rim shows micro-chipping, rounding, and surface devitrification consistent with medieval manufacture and long-term suspension.

The engraving was executed by wheel, with variable line depth and rounded profiles softened by corrosion.

The combination of: figural imagery, engraved technique, heavy glass body, and cobalt-enriched rim place this lamp within a

restricted and elite group of Byzantine liturgical glass.

As no parallels have been found, the dating is based preliminary on the engraved figures of the saints, with the typical saints names abbreviations, style and iconography of the Byzantine liturgical art.

Cf. Early Byzantine and Later Glass Lamps

REFERENCE #

GL-BZ-1016

CIVILIZATION

Byzantine, 8th – 12th century AD

CONDITION

Fine condition

PRICE

SOLD