Oliphant - Call For Shift of Perspective
Oliphant - Call For Shift of Perspective
Oliphant - Call For Shift of Perspective
THE OLIPHANT:
A CALL FOR A SHIFT OF PERSPECTIVE
Mariam Rosser-Owen
Oliphants are ivory horns made from an elephants tusk, which may be lightly faceted
or carved with figurative motifs. Some eighty surviving oliphants decorated in a variety of
styles (Islamic, Byzantine and Latin) can be attributed to southern Italy, and possibly
other European centres, in the late 11th to the late 12th centuries. However, a decade ago
a hypothesis was advanced arguing that some of these objects the so-called Saracenic
group were conceived and carved in Fatimid Egypt. This hypothesis has never been
critiqued, and is now appearing in Islamic art scholarship. This article presents a detailed
consideration of the Cairene origin theory, and argues for a reassessment of the oliphants
by considering the Saracenic group as one small subset of a much wider, European
cultural phenomenon, which includes horns in materials other than ivory. By examining
stylistic connections with the art of southern Italy under Norman hegemony, and the
cultural conditions in which such horns were used and preserved, it aims to redirect the
focus of future studies of these objects away from the Islamic world.
INTRODUCTION
In his book, The Oliphant: Islamic Objects in Historical Context, Avinoam Shalem revisited the longdebated question of where a group of decoratively
carved elephant tusks, known as oliphants, were made
(Figs 1 and 2). This highly stimulating work was born
of many years of scholarship on the authors part, and
provides an extremely useful encapsulation of the
historiography of this subject as well as advancing new
ideas and theories about the context, function and
production of ivory horns. In his chapter on Stylistic
classification, and especially in the section on
Stylistic groups, Shalem presented the hypothesis, in
some respects quite tentatively, that some of these
ivory horns are Islamic objects that is, they were
conceptualized and produced in Fatimid Egypt, in the
early 11th century. As I will discuss in more detail
below, this attribution was based on stylistic comparisons with examples of Fatimid woodwork, in the
(significant) absence of securely identifiable examples
of Fatimid ivory with which to compare these objects,
and some observations about carving technique. The
British Archaeological Association 2015
15
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Figure 1
Oliphant in the National Museums Scotland, Edinburgh (A.1956.562) ( National Museums Scotland)
16
the oliphant
within a much larger class of horns in all materials that
had a very specific role to play in the culture of the
Latin West. Finally, in the concluding discussion, I
turn to questions of chronology, places of production
and consumption, showing that the balance of evidence very much rests with southern Italy in the late
11th to the late 12th century. It is posited that the conception and creation of oliphants was a paradigmatically Italo-Norman product.
But, first, what is an oliphant? This is the term
used to describe a tusk-shaped ivory object that has
been carved from an elephants tusk, in some cases
decoratively, in others quite simply, and that has at
some later point been presented to a European church
treasury. The eighty-odd surviving oliphants have
been assigned mainly to the 11th and 12th centuries.
The etymology of the term will be discussed below, but
first it is pertinent to understand how an oliphant is
actually made.4 The most likely process was to take
advantage of the natural morphology of an elephants
tusk (Fig. 3), in particular the pulp cavity which is a
conical-shaped hollow occupying 2030% of the length
of the fully grown tusk (it can be more in young
animals). The small and narrow examples (such as
Khnel nos 7275) may have been made from milk
teeth. Three or four centimetres of dentine are left
around the hollow core, which allows for the carving
of some surface decoration. The dentine between the
pulp cavity and the tusks bark (called cementum)
could be shaved into very thin panels to be used for
Figure 2
Oliphant in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,
Frederick Brown Fund and H. E. Bolles Fund
(50.3426) ( 2015, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
Figure 3
Diagram showing (on the right) how an oliphant is
formed from an elephant tusk along with other types
of ivory objects ( all rights reserved, D. GaboritChopin, Ivoires. De lOrient ancient aux Temps
Modernes (Paris, Muse du Louvre, 2004)
17
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oliphants, and rightly so, as it forces scholars to stop
thinking of ivory horns simply within the Crusader
context of medieval Europe.9 The surviving African
oliphants date from the late 15th/early 16th century
at the earliest, and indeed European oliphants are
known from later dates as well: the V&A collection,
for example, includes an early-14th-century oliphant
which is Gothic in style.10 These are never included in
the corpora of oliphants.
The fixation on the Saracenic group has developed
through historiographical accident. The great cataloguer of ivories, Adolph Goldschmidt (18631944),
never published his planned volume on ivory horns,
and this gap was partially filled by Otto von Falke
(18621942), who was the first to establish a division
between those oliphants he attributed on the one hand
to Egypt and Italy and, on the other, to Byzantium.11
In 1959, Khnel (18821964) took the Egypt and Italy
grouping and refined it, arguing that the whole group
was made by Muslim craftsmen active in southern
Italy, more specifically in cosmopolitan Amalfi. The
reasons for bringing Islam into the picture at all were
based entirely on style, as I shall discuss. Khnels
earlier essay was reprinted in his great posthumous
work, Die islamischen Elfenbeinskulpturen, together
with a fully illustrated catalogue of the Saracenic
group.12 A corpus of all oliphants was planned but not
completed until 2014. As a consequence, the so-called
Saracenic group is the most published and best
known, but it only comprises about one-third of the
extant ivory horns. Khnel divided the seventyfive oliphants known to him into four groups:
(i) Saracenic (about 30), thought to be made by Arab
craftsmen or at least by western workshops strongly
influenced by Fatimid motifs, which Khnel thought
was likely to be in southern Italy; (ii) a Byzantine
group (again about 30), of which he thought only
a few were actually made in Constantinople, while
probably most were again made in southern Italy
(Salerno, Amalfi or Sicily); (iii) a European group
(about 10), most of them made over the Alps, probably in England and Scandinavia; (iv) the rest of the
oliphants, each unique.13 Now that the eagerly awaited
corpus of medieval oliphants has been published, there
is finally a single place where researchers can access
images of all known ivory horns, and readily see the
great differences that exist across the wider group.14
The point of departure for this paper is, therefore, how
can we fully understand a phenomenon if we only
concentrate on one tiny sub-set of it?
A more significant hindrance to the proper consideration of this body of objects is the division of art
history into discrete disciplines. Consequently, Islamic
art historians are generally only interested in the oliphants decorated in an Islamic style, while Byzantinists
only look at those decorated in a Byzantine style. Jill
Caskey, in writing about the art of Norman southern
Italy, has called this the dissective tendency.15 We
the oliphant
same time he seems hesitant to rule out the probable
production of Group I in Fatimid Cairo. In his 2014
volume, he opts more broadly for Egypt, southern
Italy or Sicily for the locus of production. The large
number of objects associated with Group I suggests
they were commissioned by a wealthy clientele.
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While Shalem does not explicitly state in his 2007
article that he now believes these four oliphants to
have been produced in Norman Sicily, this is strongly
implied by the concentration on comparisons with
other examples produced in Rogers reign that show
the same contrasting juxtaposition of two different
styles within a single work of art (multilingual inscriptions, coins, the Cappella Palatina, and the royal
mantle). He also now appears to have rejected the
recarving argument.
Finally, Group III (comprising only three oliphants,
one each in Paris and Doha while the third was
formerly in the Eduard Gans collection) is possibly
attributed to Norman Sicily.25 This group includes
the only oliphant to feature an Arabic inscription
the horn now in Doha, which repeats al-yumn, good
fortune (Fig. 7).26 This phrase is totally generic in, for
example, the Mudjar arts of Spain, that is, Islamicstyle art made for non-Muslim patrons; for this
reason, I would agree with Shalem that this feature
suggests that the Doha horn and its companions were
carved in a Muslim ambience or in an area strongly
influenced by Muslim culture.27 For the same reason,
I would completely disagree that the presence of this
Kufic inscription might even suggest that these [oliphants] were carved by Muslim craftsmen. As historians
of the arts of medieval Spain know all too well, and
have been trying to demonstrate for many years, the
presence of Islamic aesthetic elements in a work of
art does not mean it was made by Muslims. It seems
that art historians of other multicultural areas, where
the Mudjar concept also applies, could benefit from
adopting a more nuanced approach.
The three objects in this group have a single wide
decorated band at the top and bottom, without the
usual recesses allowed for carrying straps. Their bodies
are left plain, with light faceting. The decorated bands
are carved with a straight, deep cut, with the background left undecorated. They feature motifs which
are undoubtedly Islamic, including the doublebodied sphinx with a crown on the lower band of the
Paris oliphant (Shalems fig. 65), peacocks, a seated
drinker, the scene of two lions devouring a stag or ox.
Other motifs including the lively banquet, hunting
scenes, and busy composition [. . .] in a vegetal background recall the painted ceiling of the Cappella
Palatina and the probably Fatimid openwork ivory
panels now in Berlin and the Bargello. As such, this
small group, which is clearly Islamic, is connected
with the opulent Norman city of Palermo.
Figure 4
Byzantine style oliphant in the British Museum (the
Clephane Horn, M&ME 1979,7-1,1) ( Trustees of
the British Museum)
the oliphant
Figure 5
Saracenic style oliphant in the British Museum (the Borradaile Horn, M&ME 1923,12-5,3) ( Trustees of the
British Museum)
21
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Figure 6
Oliphant in the Muse de Cluny, Paris (Cl. 13065) (Mariam Rosser-Owen, by kind permission of the Muse de
Cluny-Muse National du Moyen ge, Paris)
22
the oliphant
were an exclusively Fatimid sea in the 11th and 12th
centuries this view is now quite widespread. But
these three regions were not the same politically,
confessionally, culturally though merchants and
objects, and thus artistic styles, certainly circulated
between them. As Eva Hoffman has discussed, style
travels, and imported Fatimid textiles and ceramics
may have provided the stylistic models which were
translated (to use her term) into ivory, though paper
may also have played a role, in the form of pattern
books or illuminated manuscripts.29 We must also
bear in mind the possibility of the circulation of artisans themselves. While the presence of an inscription
in Arabic, no matter how generic the content, does
suggest that a degree of Islamic style was considered
desirable by the carvers or patron of that one oliphant,
Shalem has to concede that the fact that none of these
carved horns [. . .] bears any Arabic dedicatory inscriptions, which usually ornament costly Islamic ivory
artefacts, remains enigmatic.30
Secondly, Shalems stylistic discussion does not go
deep or wide enough. The comparisons he makes are
selective and surprisingly few in number for the
momentous conclusions that are drawn. Few of the
Fatimid objects in wood or ivory he adduces are
securely identified as such, and a vanishingly small
number of his comparisons are drawn from Sicilian or
southern Italian woodwork, which might feasibly have
a comparable carving technique and style. Full discussions of examples such as the doors from George of
Antiochs church (Santa Maria dellAmmiraglio, also
known as the Martorana), and the panel, perhaps
from a ceiling, from the Norman Palace and now
in the Galleria Regionale, would have been expected.31
I would even go so far as to ask: what makes the style
of the oliphants Fatimid anyway? Should palmettes,
roundels containing animals, hunting scenes, and so
on, be seen as distinctly and exclusively Islamic? What
Islamic art historians call the courtly cycle shares a
common inheritance from classical antiquity with the
art of Byzantium and the Latin West. We will return
to stylistic questions in Part 2, but for the moment, in
reference to the notion that friezes of running animals
are exclusively and identifiably Islamic, without parallel in the West, I cannot resist drawing attention to
the wonderful panel in the British Museum, carved
from the tip of a mammoth tusk in France around
13,000 years ago (Fig. 8).32 This panel depicts male and
female reindeer swimming one after the other, and is
carved with deep, vertical cuts to indicate the females
ribcage and looser incised strokes to indicate her long
fur, in a similar manner to the animals on the oliphants. Far from suggesting that we should see any
kind of continuum between this stunning piece of
Ice Age art and the medieval oliphants, I merely
note here the commonality in carving technique
and style between two ivories carved 10,000 years
apart again, probably due to an empirical familiarity with the material that caused craftsmen to cut and
style their works in similar ways, despite geographical
and temporal distances.
Returning to Shalems classification of the Saracenic oliphants, stylistic associations appear more
objective by reference to carving techniques, above all
the oblique cut, which is proposed as distinctively
Fatimid (it is typical of his Group II). However, the
authority on ivory carving Cutler, whom Shalem
himself cites is careful to state that three sorts of
cut are used,
each distinguishable from the other but generally used
in conjunction. Our ability to discriminate between
these techniques should not be confused with the notion
that they characterize different plaques (or carvers)
[. . .] Not all three strokes were used on every ivory. But
no ivory of which I am aware makes use of only one of
these methods.33
mariam rosser-owen
Figure 7
Oliphant (inscribed al-yumn, good fortune) in the Museum of Islamic Art, Doha (MIA IV.11) ( The Museum
of Islamic Art, Doha)
Figure 8
The Swimming Reindeer, mammoth ivory (Palart.550) ( Trustees of the British Museum)
Shalem now opts for an explanation based on conscious, multicultural hybridizing. My own study of the
Edinburgh oliphant certainly shows that it was carved
in one campaign: the surface of the ivory in the body
of the horn is at the same level as the borders, which
means it cannot have been recarved from an originally
faceted body; while the treatment of details on the
24
the oliphant
bodies of the animals within roundels is identical to
those in the borders. Compare, for example, the treatment of the ribs or the double detail at the animals
shoulder, in my Figure 9 (from the upper border)
and Figure 10 (from the body) they are identical.
All this suggests the simpler explanation that body
and border were carved in the same place, at the
same time.
A recent study by Jennifer Kingsley has come to the
same conclusion about the oliphant in the Walters Art
Museum in Baltimore.37 A detailed optical analysis of
its motifs and the execution of the carving between the
endzones and the body of this oliphant proves that all
the carving [. . .] was executed at the same moment,
probably by a single craftsman. Carving signatures
such as the way of finishing the curls inside the scrollwork (endzone) and on a birds wing (body) are identical; while the interlacing snakes that occupy the full
length of the inner curve of the horn cannot have been
carved in a second phase, firstly because they are at the
same level as the carving around them and secondly,
as Kingsley points out, the design of the encircling
borders has not been planned to match up if the snake
motif were to be removed. Kingsley also shows how
the overall design of the oliphant has been conceived
to accommodate both vertical and horizontal axes
of symmetry, which can only have been produced
in a single campaign. Significantly, Kingsley does
not believe the stylistic differences between body and
border to be ideologically motivated:
Figure 9
Cut with a rounded edge around the body of an animal
(upper border)
Figure 10
Cut with a rounded edge around the body of an animal
(body)
Figure 11
Straight cut around interstitial leaf and wall of
roundels (body)
Details of the oliphant in the National Museums
Scotland, Edinburgh (A.1956.562). (Mariam RosserOwen, by kind permission of the National Museums of
Scotland)
25
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over the body decoration of this oliphant, they must
have been part of his putative second carving campaign. The frieze of animals around the bottom of the
body section presents a problem for the Christianizing
interpretation of this recarving proposal, one which
Ebitz acknowledged but did not fully elaborate on.
If created in a totally different aesthetic from the
Islamic style borders, why do they look so in keeping
with Islamic modes themselves? Apart from prowling
lions we have an animal combat scene, showing a lion
attacking a deer with its head turned back. They
reminded Ebitz of the
Figure 12
Detail of animals on the oliphant in the Muse de
Cluny, Paris (Cl. 13065) (see Fig. 6) (Mariam
Rosser-Owen, by kind permission of the Muse de
Cluny-Muse National du Moyen ge, Paris)
26
the oliphant
Figure 13
Lehels horn (Byzantine style) in the Jsz Mzeum at Jszberny, Hungary (Bela Zsolt Szakacs, with kind
permission)
within the decoration of these horns has not been discussed by Shalem, Hoffman or Ebitz, and no arguments about recarving have been advanced to explain
this supposed hybridity. This is because the three
horns I just described have simply been left out of consideration.
I will return in Part 2 to all these objects, but for
now I note that there is no need to resort to elaborate
arguments about recarving. In terms of the visual
effect of this small group, I concur with Kingsley in
not seeing anything of deeper ideological significance
here: perhaps the Cluny oliphant was always intended
for an ecclesiastical context, hence its striking Ascension scene. We know nothing about the structure of
the workshops in which the oliphants might have been
produced, if workshops existed at all, but the differences perceived on these objects may simply have been
a matter of different hands one craftsman excelled
in geometricized palmette borders, another was better
at animals, and sometimes did both borders and
bodies, as on the Edinburgh oliphant.
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feature musician couples in a garden. Rice comments
that they have a distinctive European (one is tempted
to say Italian Trecento) flavour and recall early examples of European genre painting. While they have
haloes in the Islamic tradition, the figures poses, the
cut of their robes and rendering of drapery, their
hairstyles, and the shape of the benches on which they
sit are all Western. Rice concludes, There can be no
doubt that the models for these scenes with musicians
were European works of art and probably Italian.
The dating of the candlestick in the late 13th or
early 14th century fits perfectly with the diplomatic
contacts with Europe, especially with the Vatican,
which followed the Mongol invasions, and the subsequent opening up of the Mongol lands to Italian
merchants, who brought portable European works
of art that began to influence local artistic production,
as Rice goes on to discuss. It is tempting to wonder
whether the unusual motif of the ox- or zebu-riding
horn-blower on the Topkap candlestick is based on
another European prototype.
Shalem adds new examples, but none is without
problems. Apart from the clear depiction of a man
blowing a horn on the southern Italian ivory casket in
Maastricht an object from Shalems Group I and
thus a self-fulfilling argument he adds a postSasanian gilded silver plate, perhaps made in Central
Asia in the 9th to 10th centuries, which may depict the
Biblical story of the fall of Jericho. However, this is
a notoriously problematic group of objects, many of
which are probably fakes.46 His other two examples
are a Coptic wooden panel from the Muallaqa church
in Old Cairo, depicting the Harrowing of Hell,
datable c. 1300, and thus to the Mamluk period; and
a Crusader icon at Mount Sinai, also depicting the
Harrowing of Hell and datable c. 125075. None of
these can really be claimed as examples of Islamic art:
the latter two, although made in Egypt, are both
from Christian religious contexts and thus draw their
references from Christian iconographical and hagiographical traditions, not to mention the possible influences of Crusader art. The most interesting aspect of
these two examples is that they were produced during
the Mamluk period, an issue to which I shall return.
Another example was not known to Shalem, since it
only came to light when it appeared on the London art
market in April 2008; it is now in the Museum of
Islamic Art in Qatar (Fig. 14).47 This is a long, carved
wooden beam, broken at its right-hand side, featuring
four and a half triple arches embedded in luxurious
vegetation, within and around which a hunt scene
plays out: at the far left, a male figure very obviously
blows a horn. The beam is described in the Christies
sale catalogue as late Umayyad or early Taifa Spain,
11th century; the museum label opts for the simpler
and more impressive Umayyad. If this were true, this
would indeed be a clear Islamic example of horn- or
oliphant-blowing. But there is no way that this wooden
beam can date from the 10th or 11th century, since the
Figure 14
Detail of the horn blowing man from the Mudjar
wooden beam in the Museum of Islamic Art, Doha
(MIA WW.141) ( The Museum of Islamic Art,
Doha)
the oliphant
created within the idiom of the earlier art and architecture of al-Andalus, its closest parallels are with the
Mudjar art of northern Spain and perhaps particularly Toledo, which was famous for its woodwork.50
The arch type seen here is not earlier than the late 12th
century, and other motifs in the beam have parallels
from 13th- and 14th-century Mudjar examples. There
is no problem with accepting this beam as part of the
decoration of a luxurious house or palace, constructed
for a Christian within the Mudjar artistic world of
Toledo or further north, possibly as late as the 14th
century. It is not, however, the missing link it has been
claimed to be an unproblematic Islamic depiction
of an oliphant.51
Figure 15
Ivory siwa of Pate after J. de Vere Allen (1976) fig. 2
29
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contexts datable to the 16th century.64 More are known
from textual sources, such as the looting by the Portuguese of four siwas from Pate in 1679.65 However, the
vast majority of surviving African oliphants hail from
West Africa. Portuguese travel accounts of the late
15th and early 16th centuries talk of elephant tusks
and objects worked from ivory on the West African
coast, and it is now well established that by the 16th
century carvers from the ivory coast that is, Sierra
Leone, Congo, Nigeria were producing objects,
including oliphants, for the European market.66 Their
carving and decoration was increasingly influenced by
Europe, including copying motifs from imported
European prints; some of the hunting scenes on the
Sapi-Portuguese horns look extremely close to
medieval European oliphants carved three hundred
years earlier.67 In the African tradition, oliphants are
blown from an opening at the side, not the end as in
the European oliphants, and those African horns that
do have a blow-hole at the end are those we know to
have been made for the Portuguese market. Though
the African examples have largely survived through
their preservation in European royal and courtly collections, it is not insignificant that they are all postmedieval, and seem to have responded to a European
function and aesthetic.
As with the oliphants themselves, the Pate siwa
should be discussed within its proper context, rather
than isolated as the missing link to the putative
Islamic ivory horn. It should not be a surprise that
countries close to sources of raw ivory and which
engaged in the ivory trade should have made use
of elephant tusks as horns. Secondly, why suppose a
derivation from an imported Arab source, for which
there is otherwise absolutely no physical evidence?
And, most significantly, how does a presumed Mamluk
model explain why a group of ivory horns were made
in Cairo under the Fatimids in the 11th century? Such
a Mamluk model cannot be earlier than the late 15th
century: this is the earliest date for which we have a
textual reference to the presence of ivory siwas on the
East African coast; and, as we shall now discuss, there
is no evidence within the Mamluk context for the use
of horns before the 15th century.
date. According to Ward, its shape is unique in enamelled glass, and the depictions of Christian saints and
its anodyne Arabic inscription indicate that it was
a special commission for a European merchant.69 Its
shape is identical to those of drinking horns made
from aurochs and European bison, discussed in Part 3
of this article, and this commission would fit with a
revived taste for drinking horns in central Europe in
the 14th to 16th centuries.70
Apart from this unique example, Mamluk depictions of horns are all abstracted into the emblems
which comprise composite blazons datable to the very
end of the 15th/beginning of the 16th century (Fig. 16);
no horn is contextualized by being represented in
figurative scenes showing people actually blowing
them, and thus their identity as horns, though likely,
has not been definitively established.
Shalem gives a clear account of the Arabic term bq,
pl. bqt or abwq, used in medieval sources to describe
a conical wind instrument irrespective of material,
possibly deriving from the Greek or Latin
buccina, implying an instrument that was introduced
to the Mediterranean Arabs by their western neighbours.71 This term is used by al-Maqrizi (13641442)
to refer to some of the riches of the Fatimid treasury
during the reign of al-Mustansir (r. 103694), though
this does not mean that these wind instruments were
ivory oliphants. Trumpets of peace are described by
a late Fatimid/early Ayyubid historian, Ibn al-Tuwayr,
as being used during Fatimid Nile flooding ceremonies, but it is particularly during the Mamluk period,
when interaction with the West and with crusaders in
particular were intensive, that horns are mentioned.72
Most significant is the all-too-brief statement by
al-Qalqashandi (d. 1418) that the investiture of an
Figure 16
Textile fragment with composite blazon showing horns,
Mamluk period, late 15thearly 16th century, Egypt.
Wool, appliqued and embroidered. H. 22.9 cm, W. 30.5
cm. Rogers Fund (1972.120.3) ( Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York)
30
the oliphant
amir included the presentation to him of a horn and a
flag (ummira bil-bq wal-alam); as Shalem points
out, this is probably reminiscent of the medieval western idea of horns of tenure.73 This seems to be the only
occasion on which the bq as an amiral accoutrement
is referred to in texts.
Despite this, the horn was not one of the recognized
Mamluk symbols of office. While other symbols
regularly depicted on works of art commissioned for
Mamluk amirs can be linked to specific positions in
the sultans household (the cupbearer, keeper of the
inkwell, bearer of the royal cloth, etc.), there is no
office for which a horn is emblematic. As L. A. Mayer
stated,
The figure does not recall any of the devices mentioned in Arabic literature and is the first of a series of
badges which have to be interpreted without the aid
of any contemporary meaning. We are forced to
guess both at the objects they represent and at their
meaning.74
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PART 2. RAISING REASONABLE DOUBT:
NON-SARACENIC OLIPHANTS AND
NON-ISLAMIC MOTIFS
believe a group of objects, whose production presupposes abundant availability of the raw material, to
be Fatimid, when there is actually very little other
evidence for Fatimid ivory carving? The answer comes
down to style, and the circulation of motifs in the
Mediterranean during a period when there were close
trade and diplomatic contacts between Egypt and
southern Italy, when many objects travelled, especially
ceramics and textiles.85 Hoffmans notion of pathways of portability provides a useful framework
within which to see the translation of motifs from
Fatimid portable objects onto works of art made
locally, though it is another matter whether such
motifs were identifiably Islamic.86
We must also recognize, however, that many of the
textiles and ceramics which came to Italy, and were
preserved as bacini in church faades, were not
Fatimid. In fact, only 4.6% of the bacini have been
identified through scientific analysis as being of
Egyptian manufacture, with Byzantine ceramics a
close second at 3.2% and only 1.9% from the Islamic
Near East (Syria, Iran, etc.). The vast majority of
the bacini an astonishing 90.3% have been shown
to originate from the central and western Mediterranean, in particular from Islamic Sicily (10%), and the
areas corresponding to present-day Tunisia (40%)
and Spain (40%).87 These ceramics generally date from
the last quarter of the 10th to the mid-13th century,
and provide a good indicator of the period in which
Mediterranean trade was exploding. They are also the
tip of the iceberg, standing for the many textiles and
perishable goods which were traded alongside the
ceramics but have not survived. The failure to pay
due attention to the contribution of the western
Mediterranean is symptomatic of a more widespread
historiographical neglect of the Islamic West and especially North Africa, and it is important to keep in mind
that not all imports or sources of artistic influence
came from the East.88
I will consider stylistic questions below, but first
I want to broaden out the group of objects under
discussion, to include those oliphants that do not
easily fit with the main classifications. Since the objective of the historiography to date has been to localize
the oliphants places of production, those objects
that defy easy categorization have simply been left
out of consideration, or subjected to outlandish
explanations such as the recarving argument
discussed above in order to explain a perceived
non-conformity to the idea of what Islamic or
Islamic-style objects should look like. However, once
we take into consideration the oliphants that do not
form part of the Saracenic group, we start to see
many points of contact between these objects, even
when stylistically they are totally unalike. As Ebitz
cautioned, the formal classification into Islamic or
Byzantine groups has given rise to false distinction[s]
and taken too much attention away from the smaller
the oliphant
with the Jszbernyi oliphant, including its rather
highly placed lower band of interlace. Such connections between the different oliphant groups should be
considered rather than ignored, and this will be much
easier to do in future with the arrival of Shalems new
corpus.
Eastmond examines four oliphants from the
Byzantine group, considering just how Byzantine
they are.91 Two are decorated with chariot-racing, the
pre-eminent sport associated with Constantinople
(see Fig. 4), and two with a miscellany of hunting and
fighting scenes, mixed in with mythological beasts
(Fig. 13). Apart from these shared visual schemes,
stylistically there is nothing in common between these
individual objects. They cannot be easily grouped
and, as Eastmond notes, their styles do not fit any
[. . .] Byzantine carving[s] in ivory or other materials
that we know about in this period. Just as Khnel
observed that no oliphant has ever been found in
Egypt, the same can be said for Byzantium. Eastmond
concludes that these four oliphants should be placed
within the broader mainstream of oliphant production, that is, they should also be attributed to southern Italy in the 11th and 12th centuries.92 This region
had, of course, been a Byzantine province until the 9th
century, and, as Eastmond discusses, the schemes on
these horns present a distant memory of Byzantium.
He cites one connection between the Clephane
horn and the art of southern Italy: its double comma
drapery and conical hats [. . .] can be compared to the
telamones who hold up the episcopal throne in the
church of San Nicola, Bari, made by archbishop Elias
for the visit of pope Urban II in 1098.93 In addition,
we may note the tendency in the Byzantine group not
Figure 17
Horn of Ulf, York Minster ( By kind permission of the Chapter of York)
33
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to confine the decoration within any kind of organizational structure, but to let it play out across the whole
surface of the ivory in a rather haphazard way, as on
the Jszbernyi (Fig. 13) and Copenhagen horns.94
This recalls the decoration of some mosaic pavements
in southern Italian contexts. One vivid example
carpets the nave at Otranto Cathedral, datable 1163
65, where an axial motif of a tree is surrounded by a
chaotic mix of Old Testament and legendary scenes;
the motifs here include a crenellated building, as on
the Jszbernyi horn.95
The next major group that has not yet been fully
incorporated into the study of oliphants, though it
was discussed by Hanns Swarzenski and more recently
by Valentino Pace and now comprises Group B in
Shalems new corpus, is a stylistically coherent group
of six oliphants, of differing sizes, associated with the
Horn of Ulf in York Minster (Fig. 17).96 Though this
horn is not the largest or most heavily decorated of the
group, it is the one for which there is associated documentary evidence to suggest a possible date in the 11th
century. Its 17th-century silver mounts provide the
information that the horn was given to York Minster
by Ulf, a chieftain of the Western Deira, with all his
lands.97 The oliphant is thus an archetypical horn of
tenure, a physical symbol of the gift of land to the
Church, as I will discuss in Part 3. However, the documentary record for this gift goes back no further than
the late 14th century, though the horn was associated
with Ulf at least a century earlier, as it is represented
along with the benefactors attributed arms in the
carved heraldry on the north side of the nave, begun
in 1291.98
Antiquarian writers identified this Ulf as the powerful Danish nobleman who ruled what is now Yorkshire during the reign of King Cnut (r. [in England]
101635), and associated the gift with a period soon
after Cnuts death when controversy arose between
Ulfs sons about sharing their fathers lands.99 This
would put the horns date of manufacture some time
before the 1030s. Art historians have taken this as a
fixed point in the chronology of the oliphants, which
has lent support to the view that some were made as
early as the early 11th century.100 However, Christopher Norton has rightly pointed out that very little is
likely to have survived the destruction of Anglo-Saxon
York Minster by the Normans in 1069, during which
the building, its library, archives and treasury were
destroyed and pillaged, leaving nothing that can be
attributed today to pre-conquest York.101 Moreover,
Norton points out that Ulf was a common name in
11th-century Yorkshire and several are listed in the
Domesday Book. One of these held land in 1066
(the time of the census), which by 1086 had become
the property of the see of York. This would fit with the
historical association of the horn with a man named
Ulf, but it would mean a post-conquest date for the
land gift and associated horn.102 This would seem to be
Figure 18
Oliphant in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Maria
Antoinette Evans Fund (57.581) ( 2015, Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston)
the oliphant
Figure 19
Saracenic style ivory casket in the Museum of Islamic Art, Doha (MIA IV.12.98) ( The Museum of Islamic
Art, Doha)
mariam rosser-owen
The last group that should not be forgotten in discussing the oliphants are those which are totally plain,
uncarved apart from the faceting of their bodies. These
tend only to be discussed or published by art historians
when they have interesting mounts. Examples include
the Savernake horn in the British Museum (Fig. 21),
which was in the possession of the Sturmy family by
the second half of the 12th century.110 Its embellishments consist of two silver and enamelled bands
datable 132550, and other later silver bands which
probably replaced older ones. Another plain oliphant,
extremely large at 72 cm in length, comes from the
Treasury of the church of St Servatius in Maastricht,
and is now in the Muse du Cinquantenaire in Brussels
(inv. 4). It is decorated with gilt-copper mounts added
by a Mosan atelier around 116080, to turn it into
a reliquary.111
No doubt there are many other plain oliphants in
international collections or still in church treasuries
that have not yet become part of the oliphant discussion, though happily Shalem includes this category as
Group E of his new corpus. Their lack of decoration
makes assigning these horns to a particular region or
date problematic. As we will see in Part 3, however,
cornua eburnea, without any reference to further
decoration except sometimes to metal mounts, are frequently mentioned in medieval church inventories,
and thus these plain horns have just as significant a
role as decorated examples in understanding the creation and consumption of oliphants. The light faceting
of the body of these sometimes huge oliphants allows
the ivory material itself to be displayed, perhaps stemming from a desire to show off the use of this expensive
material, or from a fascination with the exotic beast
from which the tusk originally came. Such interesting
questions certainly deserve some consideration.
One last word on the expanded group should be
given to the anomalous horns, which can be no more
than mentioned here, in the hope that eventually they
will be better understood and contextualized. These
include an oliphant in the V&A, the only example
known so far of an oliphant with incised decoration, in
a manner similar to some of the Siculo-Arabic ivories
of the 12th century.112 Paul Williamson has recently
suggested a very early date, in the first half of the
11th century, based on the radiocarbon analysis of
the tusk, and the crudity of the figural style which he
associates with the tenacity of Longobardic heritage
in central and southern Italy. Another unusual example, in the Kunstgewerbemuseum in Berlin (K3105),
was published by Von Falke in his article on Byzantine
oliphants, and attributed to early-13th-century
Sicily.113 It has rich, three-dimensional scrolling ornament totally covering its upper and lower zones; the
scrolls consist of unusual leaf forms and contain rather
naturalistic animals, alone or in combat, as well as
disembodied human heads facing each other among
the foliage. Highly unusual are the bands of pseudoKufic inscriptions, carved in relief at the horns upper
Figure 20
Border panels from the Salerno ivory group, Museo
Diocesano, Salerno (Francesca DellAcqua, with kind
permission)
The resemblance is not just stylistic but resides in the
handling of how these motifs are carved. The Salerno
border scrolls also feature birds and animals: the longbodied hare apparently trapped within a scroll has the
same almond-shaped eyes, long rounded ears, and a
ruff of fur which only covers the top half of its body.
These same features characterize the deer on the Ulf
group, seen for example in Figure 18. Very similar vegetal motifs are also occasionally seen on the plaques
themselves.108
While it is broadly agreed that the Salerno ivories
were made in southern Italy (whether in Salerno
itself or in a neighbouring community such as Amalfi),
there is still no real consensus on when they were
made. Robert Bergman considered the consecration of
Salerno Cathedral in 1085 as the most likely context
for the commission, while more recent studies favour
a date in the early 12th century.109 A late-11th-century
date for the existence of the Salerno ivories workshop
would fit neatly with the information outlined above
for the Horn of Ulf. Indeed, perhaps the Horn of Ulf
provides a date for the Salerno ivories, while the
Salerno ivories offer the oliphants a locale.
36
the oliphant
Figure 21
The Savernake horn (M&ME 1975,0401.1) ( Trustees of the British Museum)
has understandably deterred scholars from undertaking it, since it also requires an approach that cuts
across art historical disciplines and specialisms. This
task will be facilitated immeasurably by Shalems
publication of the oliphant corpus. Here, I would
like to attempt a first look at certain motifs on the
oliphants, some of which have been assumed to be
indicative of their Islamic style or even origins, while
the significance of others has not been highlighted as
perhaps it should. It is important to note that several
motifs recur on the oliphants that are unusual within
the repertoire of Islamic art. A discussion of these
motifs, which can only be superficial in the confines of
an article, serves to ask the question: what makes the
style of the oliphants Fatimid anyway?
As with all the motifs discussed here, there are many
more examples that could be gleaned from a comprehensive art historical survey. My selection is admittedly random. I am also not the first person to draw
connections between motifs on the oliphants and those
of contemporary Italian sculpture. But this approach
has previously been taken (by Pace, for example) in
order to localize the ivory workshop in a particular
part of southern Italy. That is not my aim here, though
I will return to the question of production centres in
my conclusion. Rather, I aim to show that the oliphants style and iconography was current in Italian art
of the late 11th to late 12th century, especially but not
exclusively in architectural sculpture. There is thus no
need to look to Islamic art for the immediate source of
the decoration on the oliphants.
rim, and incised around the zone where the mounts are
attached. I have already mentioned the Gothic example in the V&A.114 Since horns are depicted being
worn and used by hunters in European art into the
15th century, it makes sense that there should still be a
market for the creation of such objects, and Gothic
carvers clearly had the available ivory and a wealthy
enough clientele to sustain it.115 Thus, not only might
some of the oliphants be earlier than the usual chronological focus of study, other examples take us considerably beyond that period, and suggest that we should
look to other medieval centres of ivory production,
perhaps even in northern Europe.
Stylistic connections
It is clear that the stylistic connections within and
beyond the oliphant group are more wide-ranging
than a simple one-way conversation with Fatimid
art. Ultimately, a comprehensive stylistic analysis is
needed, which takes all the extant oliphants into
account, and looks at the connections across the whole
group, highlighting especially the incidental details
in borders, interstices, stylistic tells in the representation of eyes, fur, and so on that are often ignored
but which say so much about the hands involved in
production. Such a study should take into account
comparative material carved in ivory as well as stone
and wood, and should range across the Italian Peninsula, and probably beyond. The enormity of this task
37
mariam rosser-owen
Starting with the purely ornamental motifs those
which might be considered to be more Islamic in
origin than the figurative motifs I begin with the
motif of alternating triangles containing heart-shaped
palmette scrolls, as seen in the wide border at the bellend of the plain oliphant in Boston (Fig. 2). Shalem
associates this elegant design with his quintessentially
Islamic Group II, though he cites no Islamic examples
of this motif. However, this pattern along with
other purely ornamental designs, often contained
within roundels or vegetal scrolls, and bearing a strong
textile aesthetic is found in the mosaic decoration
of the window embrasures of the royal Norman church
foundations in Sicily. The pattern from the Boston oliphant is matched exactly by windows at the Cathedral
of Monreale, founded by William II and dating to the
1170s80s (Fig. 22).116 The rather swirling style of the
scrolls within a geometric framework, which characterize the oliphants of Shalems Group II, are matched
by the mosaics of other window embrasures, including
the lower range in the outer walls of the Cappella
Palatina in Palermo, datable to the new campaign of
mosaics added to the nave and aisles under William I
in the 1150s60s.117
Such examples show that these motifs were current
in the elite art of Norman Sicily in the second half of
the 12th century. In fact, most of the purely ornamental motifs seen in the decoration of the oliphants have
parallels in the illuminated ornament of Byzantine
manuscripts, which likely provided one of the models
for the mosaics.118 For what M. Alison Frantz describes
as the motif of triangular palmettes dovetailed
together and filling a zigzag, the best parallels seem to
be 11th-century manuscripts.119 Herbert Bloch illustrates several manuscripts copied at Monte Cassino in
the late 11th century with the same type of scroll within
a geometricized structure.120 There are also parallels
in Byzantine illumination for the other border motifs
we regularly see on the oliphants, including the
ubiquitous half-palmette scroll (seen in Figs 1, 2 and 6,
for example).121 The wide geographical spread of this
motif surely attests to the use of portable models,
such as manuscripts, or possibly pattern books. The
intricate knotwork that fills the borders of several
oliphants (seen in Fig. 6, for example) was, according
to Frantz, one of the characteristic motifs of southern
Italian illumination from the 9th to 11th centuries.122
She notes that this kind of interlace had become one
of most prevalent forms of ornamental decoration by
the 8th century. It is seen, for example, in the marble
slab from the side of an ambo in the church of San
Salvatore in Brescia, datable to the 8th or 9th centuries. Originally one of an affronted pair, this Lombard
carving shows an elegant peacock surrounded by
vegetal scrolls including bunches of grapes, and a
border of elaborate knotted circles running along the
base.123 Jumping forward to the mid-12th century, we
see knotwork filling some of the lower soffits of the
arcades in the Cappella Palatina, between the roundels
depicting haloed figures; knotwork closer in style to
that on the oliphants fills some of the long panels
of sandstone carvings on the right-hand portal of
the Basilica di San Michele in the former northern
Lombard capital of Pavia, dating to the early 12th
century.124 An elaborate knotwork design surmounts
the main portal of the church of San Benedetto in
Brindisi, datable to the late 11th or early 12th century.125 Whatever the ultimate derivation of this type
of ornament whether from Islamic or Celtic art
by the 11th century, these motifs were integrated and
widespread in the decorative repertoire of medieval
Italy.
The next motif I want to examine is that of structuring decoration within linked roundels. The largest
group of oliphants is decorated in this way, dubbed by
Hoffman the roundel design group. It is this group
above all on which she bases her reading of the oliphants as central to the expression of Crusader ideology
and identity, attesting to the Crusader experience
in the Eastern Mediterranean.126 To summarize her
argument, the designs of this group of oliphants were
specifically modeled on Fatimid portable objects in
circulation in Italy, in particular ceramics and textiles
decorated with animal motifs inside roundels, which
the oliphants appropriated. Their hunting imagery
Figure 22
Alternating triangle-and-scroll motif in mosaic in
window embrasure in Monreale Cathedral, Sicily
(Mariam Rosser-Owen)
38
the oliphant
aptly allude[d] [. . .] to the prowess of the owner of the
horn during the hunt or in battle, an allusion easily
translatable in Crusader terms. Hoffman asserts that
the eastern Mediterranean origin of these motifs would
be emphatically recognized by viewers of the oliphants, indeed that these objects became identifiably
Islamic by virtue of their decoration being contained
inside roundels. These motifs even authenticated the
owners association with the Crusader experience, and
provided a tangible link to the Holy Land. The notion
of the material transfer of holiness extended to
Italian architecture as well, where the construction in
certain cities of buildings modelled on holy monuments in Jerusalem provided a strategy through which
the topography of Jerusalem could be transferred to
[Italy], linking citizens and their civic identities to the
earthly and heavenly Jerusalem.
Unfortunately, Hoffman provides no references to
primary sources which would support her assertions
that this motif was indeed understood in this way by
contemporary viewers. One has to query how many
Crusaders in the Levant at this period could afford or
be able to access lustrewares or silk textiles made in
Cairo and usually shipped from Alexandria by Italian
merchants. If anything, the structuring of the decoration within roundels alluded to luxury imports, as
Hoffman argued in earlier studies; but those imports
were not exclusively Fatimid. As we saw above, the
vast majority of the ceramics reused as bacini in church
faades originated in Ifriqiya (modern-day Tunisia)
and Islamic Spain, two centres whose trade propped
up the Italian economy in the 11th century. How might
visual references to these luxurious commodities have
carried a link to the Holy Land and the Crusader
experience?
From the late 11th century well before Roger II
of Sicily remodelled Norman kingship on the splendid
courts of Cairo and Constantinople such luxury
imports were providing inspiration for Italian architectural decoration in an almost unmediated state.
Caskey recently published a moulded stucco panel,
probably originally from a chancel screen, which was
found in excavations at the church of Santa Maria
di Terreti in Reggio Calabria; this is one of three
churches, all decorated with plaster, which can be
associated with the patronage of Roger I (d. 1101).127
The panel in question features roundels containing
paired birds in the upper register and paired quadrupeds (deer?) below, with the interstices filled by leaf
decoration not unlike that seen on the Edinburgh
oliphant (Fig. 1) and its closest associates. The
roundels are linked by a small loop containing a fourpetalled rosette, and grouped in twos within vertical
rectangles whose borders probably mask the scar
left by the plaster mould. This decoration is very
obviously based on an Islamic textile, though not
necessarily one from the Fatimid realm. The whole
composition is surrounded by a rather wobbly pseudoKufic ornament, indicating a clear Islamic origin for
the model.
mariam rosser-owen
Figure 23
Warrior angels within linked roundels, Monreale Cathedral, Sicily (Mariam Rosser-Owen)
the oliphant
the Ulf group were remarkable for the intrusion of
classical themes among this array of oriental beasts,
singling out the man carrying a quadruped on his
shoulders on the Chartreuse de Portes oliphant, which
evokes the Kriophoros, the prototype of the Good
Shepherd; on the associated oliphant in Boston
(Fig. 18), a semi-nude Hercules figure wrestles with the
antlers of a hind, in almost exactly the same pose as
seen on a 4th-century marble carving in Ravenna
(Swarzenskis fig. 25); while the dog-headed giant seen
on the Boston oliphant is probably the Cynocephalus,
one of the marvels of the East as reported
in the De Rerum Naturis of Rabanus Maurus (c. 780
856), and a popular motif in 11th- and 12th-century
art.140 In addition to these motifs, there are centaurs
on the Boston oliphant and the Byzantine-style
Jszbernyi horn; a mounted hunter on the Chartreuse
de Portes oliphant wearing the same classical-style
tunic as the Hercules and the hind motif; other naked
huntsmen; obviously Norman knights, identifiable by
their helmets and kite-shaped shields; and beasts,
real and fantastic, all of which have parallels in the
contemporary art of southern Italy. This art may also
provide the source of the odd, disembodied demon
head which pokes out between the roundels of the
St Petersburg oliphant (Khnel fig. 64b), or the bird
pecking at its breast on the V&A (roundel style)
oliphant (Khnel fig. 66b), which Pace associated with
ai pellicani di ascendente simbologia cristiana.141 On
the horn in Auch (Khnel no. 76), there are even three
equal-armed crosses a motif which is also present
on the Cappella Palatina soffits nestling between
the apparently Islamic beasts!
Two particularly distinctive motifs are a type of
snake or dragon with a body which curls over itself
into loops; and the motif of two birds on either side of
a bowl, vase or fountain, sometimes drinking from it
(both motifs are visible in Fig. 5). Both of these motifs
derive from Roman or late antique precedents, and
both are known from sarcophagi. The motif of the
birds drinking from a fountain is more ubiquitous,
perhaps because it came to have a Christian allegorical
significance of ingesting eternal life.142 It is seen on a
sarcophagus from the mausoleum of Galla Placidia,
datable to the 6th century and now in the Archiepiscopal Museum in Ravenna; and on Roman spolia reused
in Christian contexts, such as the interior lintel above
the entrance to Charlemagnes Palatine Chapel in
Aachen, founded c. 798. Also in Ravenna, the motif is
seen on abaci above some of the basketwork capitals
in the early-6th-century church of San Vitale. It is
occasionally encountered in early medieval contexts
before undergoing a revival across 11th-century
Europe, most spectacularly in western France. In
northern Italy it appears several times on the
early-12th-century portal of the Basilica di San
Michele in Pavia; while in a southern Italian context,
there are several examples in the remarkable sculptural capitals in the Monreale cloisters (Fig. 25).143
Figure 24
Cluster of four columns at one of the corners of
Monreale Cloister, Monreale Cathedral, Sicily
(Mariam Rosser-Owen)
mariam rosser-owen
On the oliphants, particularly elaborate examples of
the motif of two birds drinking from a fountain are
seen on the Ulf group: an almost identical presentation of the motif is seen on the oliphants now in
Boston, Paris and Zaragoza.144 Like the unicorn,
another motif which is not widespread in medieval
Islamic art, it is one of the motifs that unites the oliphants in this group.145 However, it is also seen on the
Saracenic oliphants, including the Borradaile horn in
the British Museum, where it occurs in the top register
of roundels on both sides of the body (Khnel nos.
65a, c, excluded from Shalems groupings). Here the
fountain is depicted distinctively as a high bird-table
with loops at top and centre, which is also how it
appears in the front border of the lid of the Doha
casket (Fig. 19), whose carving style and technique is
otherwise close to the oliphant in Edinburgh (Fig. 1).
This motif, with its Christian origins and allegorical
meaning, is thus embedded in the iconography across
all the oliphant groups.
The curledbodied dragon is also seen on the
Borradaile horn, looking rather Celtic in two roundels
in the top register of the horns outer curve, between
the roundels of birds at the fountain (Khnel nos
65c, d); it is seen all over the Blackburn horn (Khnel
no. 81), now in the Aga Khan Museum, Toronto. On
the magnificent oliphant in the National Museum in
Copenhagen, which is associated with the Byzantine
group, a pair of creatures in the upper border, depicted
rather differently with scaly bodies and wings, nevertheless shows the same way of looping the body.146
This provides another iconographic connection
between the Saracenic and Byzantine groups.
This way of depicting a fantastical snake, dragon or
sea monster becomes extremely widespread in Italy,
especially in the 12th century. It is seen in the Monte
Cassino illustration of Rabanus Maurus, copied in
1023. Extant architectural examples date from the
11th century.147 There are several elaborate examples
in the mosaic pavements of churches, including the
main apse of the Cappella Palatina in Palermo (1140s)
where two snakes curl on either side of the main altar,
perhaps intended as guardians.148 The wonderful
mosaic frieze of birds and animals which adorns the
architrave of the portico at the Cathedral of Terracina
in Lazio, probably dating to the late 12th century,
includes a curl-bodied dragon with wings, a scaly
body and a dog-like face very like the motif on the
upper band of the Copenhagen oliphant.149 Turning to
sculptural examples, this motif is depicted on either
side of the entrance to the Campanile (Leaning
Tower) at Pisa, above the foundation date of 1173 on
the right hand side (Fig. 26). It is winged and scaly, not
unlike the examples on the Copenhagen oliphant, but
fiercer, menacing a ram on one side and a cow on the
other, and being attacked by bears. This motif, paired
on either side of the belltowers entrance, probably has
apotropaic significance. The creature appears again
the oliphant
Figure 25
Capital with motif of birds at a fountain, Monreale Cloister, Monreale Cathedral, Sicily (Mariam Rosser-Owen)
Figure 26
Curl-bodied dragon above the entrance to the Campanile, Pisa (Mariam Rosser-Owen)
43
mariam rosser-owen
it with wine, and drank it in front of the altar on
bended knee.160 It is important to note that the horns
mentioned in such sources would only rarely have
been made of ivory.
These anecdotes lead us from the primary function
of the oliphant as a noble accoutrement for hunting
and feasting to its secondary function, which sheds
significant light on the cultural context in which these
horns were created and used. All oliphants for which
we know a provenance have come to us from the
treasuries of churches, primarily in northern Europe
(the so-called Latin West). The objects in Khnels
catalogue of the Saracenic group, as well as the references to horns in medieval treasury inventories listed
in his Appendix, all come from France, Germany and
the British Isles. Indeed, given the likelihood that
many oliphants were made in southern Italy, it is odd
that there are none in Italian collections apart from
that now in the Bargello and previously in the Medici
collection, which could thus have been acquired from
anywhere and Khnels list of inventories does not
include any sources from Italy.161 I will return below to
why this might be.
Many of the sources listed in Khnels Appendix
refer to horns as containers for relics.162 Such horns
were once suspended above the great altar at Canterbury Cathedral, for example; the ivory horn inventoried at Durham in 1383 held the relics of St Oswald
(d. 642 or 672), king of Northumbria; while the ivory
horn inventoried at Angers in 1255 improbably contained the relics of the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob and Sarah, as well as fragments of the Lords
supper and many other relics.163 Importantly, the
horns listed in these inventories are not just made from
ivory: there are several instances in Khnels Appendix of gold and silver horns. For example, the church
at Eller in the Mosel region was equipped with unam
argenteam et alteram auro et lapidibus paratam, while
among the treasures given to Durham by King Aethelstan (r. 92439) were three cornua auro et argento
fabricata.164 Somewhat later, Edmund Mortimer, earl
of March (d. 1381), bequeathed by will his great Horn
of gold; also his lesser Horn of gold, with the strings.165
The majority of the references indicate no material
at all, mentioning simply cornua, but if ivory is
intended they are described as cornua de ebore or
cornu eburneum. Very rarely is any further description given of these objects, the exception being the
1295 inventory of St Pauls Cathedral (London) which
lists an ivory horn engraved with beasts and birds,
large.166 More frequently, the only feature mentioned
is the mounts: for example, the list of royal treasures
seized from the castle of Edinburgh in 1296/7 includes
three ivory horns adorned (harnesiata) with silver and
with silk (Khnel, Anhang, no. 10); the Limoges
inventory (11261245) lists four cornua de ebore,
quaedam sunt cum argento (Khnel, Anhang,
no. 15).167 One horn not included in Khnels Appendix (which was not intended to be exhaustive) is listed
of style and iconography across media; shared artisanal skills might mean that the oliphants were carved
in Bari and Amalfi, and other centres besides. It is also
highly likely that some of the oliphants were made
in centres unconnected with the Mediterranean. We
will return to some of these issues in the concluding
discussion, but first we should turn to the cultural
context in which oliphants were used, and for that we
have to ask why they were produced what was the
function of the oliphant?
PART 3. SECULAR AND SACRED: THE LATIN
CONTEXT
Though they have taken on a rather mythical quality
as Ebitz said, the spirit [of the oliphant has] escaped
into the magic world of the romance oliphants
were originally essentially practical objects. They were
horns. The tip of the tusks is usually hollowed out,
allowing the horn to be blown. And they seem to have
been effective, as evinced by past attempts to actually
blow them.156 Oliphants were, therefore, eminently
suitable for hunting, which is how horns are seen being
used in hundreds of scenes in medieval art. Though
it is often said that oliphants are too heavy to be
practical, this varies, depending on the size of the tusk
and thickness of the ivory. Many of them have been
trimmed down from the outside so that the walls are
quite thin, allowing them to resonate sufficiently to
make a sound. They would certainly not have been too
heavy for a seasoned hunter, who would be strapping
on much heftier gear than this.157 The raised belts
that are integral to the decoration of the oliphants
are also fundamental to their use, as they allow
straps probably originally in leather or textile, later
made more permanent and decorative in metal to
be attached, to facilitate the horn being carried during
a hunt; or, if later repurposed, to be suspended, for
storage or display. Some of the particularly large
oliphants, which can be more than metre in length,
may have been more of a status symbol or ceremonial
rather than functional objects, or were presented
directly to churches as reliquaries, as seems to have
been the case with the plain St Servatius horn.
Their hollow tip could be stoppered so that the
signalling horn doubled up as a drinking horn, as
King Harold and his knights are depicted on the
Bayeux Tapestry, drinking during the feast at Bosham
in 1064.158 This use is also frequently mentioned in
the medieval sources: Ingulphus, abbot of Crowland
(Lincolnshire) at the time of William the Conqueror,
mentions in his history of the abbey the gift of Witlaf,
king of Mercia, of the horn used at his own table, for
the elder monks of the house to drink out of on
festivals and saints days.159 Likewise, in describing
the ceremonial presentation of his oliphant to York
Minster, William Camden describes how Ulf took the
horn, from which he was accustomed to drink, filled
44
the oliphant
in one of the inventories of Edward Is treasury in
Westminster Abbey: a horn with silver fittings that
belonged to St Thomas Cantilupe, Bishop of
Hereford (127582).168 So while these horns were
clearly valued for their materials or their saintly
contents or connections, it seems highly questionable
whether they were understood as objects from the
east, or had a recognizably Islamic association, as
Hoffman has argued.
Ebitz discussed the presentation of ivory horns to
churches as pious gifts.169 Discussing the oliphant in
the Muse de Cluny (Fig. 6), he believes it was recarved
with Christian themes to make this fundamentally
secular object more appropriate for its new role as a
container for sacred relics. The stylistic comparisons,
which we noted in Part 2, between the oliphants and
southern Italian church architecture actually makes
the decoration of the oliphants appear less overtly
secular, a point I will come back to below. But the
somewhat passive manner in which Ebitz talks of this
object passing [. . .] from the hands of its secular owner
into the treasure of a church underestimates the
importance of the presentation of the oliphant, horn
or other item as a symbolic object to use Michael
Clanchys phrase of some more meaningful and
substantive gift, usually land.170 Ulfs horn in York
Minster, for example, was a physical memorial of
his presentation of lands to the Church. This was
very common practice: as Clanchy has discussed, the
presentation of a symbolic object was an essential
aspect of what he calls pre-literate property law.
Before conveyances were made with documents,
witnesses heard a donor utter the words of the grant
and saw him make the transfer by a symbolic object.
This customarily involved the ceremonial laying of the
object on the altar, in the presence of many witnesses.
Such a gesture was intended to impress the event on
the memory of all those present. If there were dispute
subsequently, resort was had to the recollection of the
witnesses, or to the presentation of the object itself.
This actually happened with the Pusey horn (Fig. 27),
purportedly presented to William Pusey by King
Cnut, by which to hold the land.171 What John Cherry
described as the legal apotheosis of horn tenure
occurred in 1685 when a case before Lord Chancellor
Jefferies (164589) required the horn to be produced in
court and with universal admiration, [it] was received,
admitted and proved to be the identical horn by which,
as by a charter, Cnut had conveyed the manor of Pusey
seven hundred years before.172
Such horns are known as horns of tenure, and
there are many other examples, in ivory as well as
horns from domestic cattle, European bison, and
aurochs. These latter had become extinct in England
around 1500 BC but continued to survive in Germany
and Poland until the 17th century, and it is assumed
that their horns were imported raw to be turned into
drinking horns in England, or mounted in central
Figure 27
The Pusey horn (M.220-1938) ( Victoria and
Albert Museum, London)
mariam rosser-owen
commonly presented, as well as other non-oliphant
objects made of ivory. For example, the ivory handle
of a whip was found in the ruins of St Albans Abbey,
and appears to have been the testimony of a gift of
four mares to the monks from one Gilbert de Novo
Castello.185 However, ivory as a material was probably
exceptional, and most horns in medieval treasuries
were made from cattle. Sometimes these horns were
already prestigious for their age: the drinking horn
now in the collection of Corpus Christi College,
Cambridge, has been identified as coming from an
aur-bull (an aurochs male) of the Holocene period,
c. 3000 BC.186 Aurochs are probably the terrible beasts
of the Hercynian Wood, described in Julius Caesars
De Bello Gallico, hunted heroically by young men
of the Germani tribes; once killed they display the
horns in public, and these, eagerly sought for, they
surround with silver on the mouths and use as cups
in the grandest feasts.187 Their ancient and heroic
associations gradually led to the adoption of magical
properties: a mounted ox-horn in the Cabinet des
Mdailles in Paris, which came from Abbot Sugers
treasury at St Denis, was said to be a griffins claw.188
An ibex horn now in the British Museum is associated
with St Cuthbert, and according to the inscription on
its silver mount, added 15751625, was also thought to
have been a griffins claw.189 These attributions make
sense of some of the inventory sources included in
Khnels Appendix, including the gift to Winchester
cathedral from Bishop Henry of Blois (d. 1171) of nine
ivory horns et ungula grifonis (Anhang, no. 29).190
Aurochs horns became a supreme status symbol:
Edward III (r. 132777) had un corn de griffon pour
boir, garnished with gilt copper.191
Another magnificent creature that was becoming
extinct in central Europe in the medieval period was
the European elk. Regarded as noble game, the
Ottonians banned their hunting without permission.192
An entire antler from a mature bull elk is now in the
Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, with a provenance of the
funerary chapel of Louis the Pious in the abbey church
of Metz. Dated through radiocarbon analysis to the
period AD 9751020, the entire circumference of the
antler, including its tines, is carved with a vine scroll
inhabited by birds and lions. Though the recent publication of this object associates the carving style
with north-eastern France in the late 11th/early 12th
century, there are clear similarities especially in the
rendering of the grape bunches and birds bodies
with the Salerno ivories group. How an antler from a
central European animal came to southern Italy, or
how a carver from southern Italy might have come to
Metz, is not a question for this article to address. More
interesting is the possible identification of this carved
antler with the famous shield of Louis the Pious, and
the fact that it hung from the vault of his funerary
chapel alongside an oliphant (that now in the Muse
de Cluny, Fig. 6), as a combined relic of Carolingian
imperial power and authority.
the oliphant
These non-ivory horns and related objects provide
crucial cultural context for the oliphants, and they
should be discussed together, but because of the
hierarchies of materials within art history, the ivory
horns and above all, those ivory horns with decoration have been extracted from their wider context
and discussed in isolation. These other types of horn
have been almost totally neglected in art history, since
the attention of a few 18th-century antiquarians who
were fascinated by them from a legal history point of
view.193 These bovine horns present a host of problems
to the art historian: they are usually undecorated, have
mounts that are probably later, it is difficult to know
genuinely how old some of them are (none of them, to
my knowledge, has been radiocarbon dated). On the
other hand, they have in most cases emerged from
ecclesiastical, aristocratic and even royal collections, a
provenance that cannot be ignored. Methodologically, as art historians, how do we work with such
material, totally lacking in ars? What can be gained,
art-historically speaking, by considering ivory oliphants in the broader context of horns? What happens to
the role of ivory as a material in the appreciation and
function of oliphants when they are considered within
the wider group of horns? What happens to their ornamentation? Such questions should inform the way in
which research into this broader category is taken forward, a task which I am happy to defer to others.194
This expanded category of horns is the cultural
context into which the oliphants fit, which informs
us about their function and consumption, and within
which they should be discussed and understood. We
should be opening up the discussion of the oliphant,
not only to include the many which are not decorated
in an Islamic style, but also to attempt to understand
the reason for their creation in reference to the cultural
context in which they were used and valued.
CONCLUSIONS
This brings me to my final observations, about the
places of production and consumption of these intriguing objects, as well as some remarks on chronology.
Though it is an art historical truism that many uncategorizable objects have been dumped in southern
Italy, as a melting pot of Byzantine, Islamic and Latin
styles, nevertheless the southern Italian context remains
Figure 28
Porta dei Leoni at the church of San Nicola, Bari (Valentino Pace, with kind permission)
47
mariam rosser-owen
perilous to attempt to match extant objects with medieval inventories, especially when the texts provide no
further description of the objects concerned.198
The insistence on an early-11th-century date for the
oliphants has sustained the Fatimid connection: since
the Fatimids were in their heyday at the turn of the
10th and 11th centuries, and this is when we can trace
physical evidence of Fatimid works of art in Italy
the bacini in Pisa, or the lustreware tesserae that form
the sea monsters on the Ravello ambo then the
oliphants must date from this period too. But if, as
I am arguing here, we should downplay the Fatimid
connection and look instead to the local Italian context, then it makes more sense to assign the oliphants
to the late 11th century at the earliest, given the stylistic associations with the Salerno ivories and the plaster
panels from Santa Maria di Terreti, and predominantly to the 12th century, perhaps even quite late in
the century. Indeed, it is very likely that different
groups of artisans produced oliphants throughout
that century, probably working in different centres,
and responding to the availability of the raw material.
The possibility of travelling craftsmen, perhaps
working in both stone and ivory as well as other
materials such as wood and plaster has been mentioned, as a means by which such closely similar styles
and motifs transferred across media. This is not the
place for a full discussion of this question, but it is a
genuine possibility. As Sarah Gurin has pointed out,
the hardness of ivory (three on the Mohs scale) is
equivalent to that of limestone, and implies that a
carver skilled in one material could equally turn his
skill to the carving of the other.199 Ivory carvers in
Gothic Paris, for example, operated in guilds according to the types of images they produced, and were not
specialised by material; and as Rose Walker discusses
in her contribution to this volume, monks at Monte
Cassino in the late 11th century were trained not only
in laying mosaics, but also in metal and glass working,
as well as ivory, wood, alabaster and stone carving.200
Sculptors may have travelled to where their craft was
in demand, just as Bonanus travelled to where bronze
doors were required. It is worth pointing out that if a
consignment of tusks were to suddenly arrive, by
whatever means, at an Italian centre, it would be
necessary to find someone to carve them, and who
better to turn to than sculptors already working in
stone and stucco to adorn foundations such as Monte
Cassino or Salerno Cathedral?
This undermines the need for fixed places of production, and suggests that we should perhaps stop trying
to localize the oliphants place(s) of production in
specific southern Italian centres. Indeed, the availability of the raw material might have dictated when and
where ivory objects were produced. It is possible that
ivory was not constantly available in abundance, so
that craftsmen may have worked in other materials
during the down time.201 The seventy or so oliphants
the oliphant
that seem to have been made in southern Italy in the
hundred years from the late 11th to the late 12th
centuries given the visual connections we have
made with stucco and stone and perhaps in temporal clusters within that broad period, attest to the fact
that a lot of raw ivory was passing through the ports
of southern Italy at this time. It is now emerging as
a consensus that the source of this ivory was subSaharan reservoirs in West Africa, transported with
other luxury commodities along the Gold Route
to Mediterranean ports in North Africa, especially
Ifriqiya, and thence shipped to southern Italy.202
Conversely, the evidence for the availability of raw
ivory in medieval Egypt is slim and patchy, since the
Swahili ports of East Africa directed their trade to the
Indian Ocean, with limited penetration of the Red Sea.
Combined with the minimal evidence for the existence
of Fatimid ivories, it is illogical to attribute this level
of ivory availability and production to Egypt.203
Considering that African elephant tusks could reach
a length of 2 metres, sometimes more, and that the
pulp cavity the conical hollow that was used to
make an oliphant occupied up to a third of the
tusk, more than a metre of good quality dentine then
remained from which to make other ivory objects
(Fig. 3). In addition to the oliphants, a huge range
of objects has been associated with southern Italy (in
which I include Sicily) in the late 11th and 12th centuries, which seems to have been a region of intense ivory
production in this period: the Farfa casket, the Salerno
group and other ivories that can be associated with it,
large caskets decorated in the style of the Saracenic
oliphants (Fig. 19), a plethora of large chess pieces
both figurative and abstract, more than 300 surviving
Siculo-Arabic boxes associated with the Norman
court at Palermo, and no doubt other objects whose
origins have not yet been identified.204 Such objects are
not normally discussed together, but should be, given
what they cumulatively tell us about ivory trade and
production patterns across one region at a relatively
limited time multidisciplinarity in the future study
of this material is essential.205 Oliphants thus emerge
as an object type inspired by a wider ivory-carving
culture, as a way to use part of the tusk that would
otherwise be thrown away.
If it is true that the same craftsmen worked in ivory
and stone, particularly close stylistic comparisons
between objects and buildings might further elucidate
the chronological question. Apart from the broad
groups that coalesce from ivories that are stylistically
coherent and were probably therefore made by workshops, the misfit oliphants may have been made outside of this structure, at any point from the 10th to the
13th century or later, when their production perhaps
shifts to northern Europe, following the ivory supply.206
Turning finally to the question of consumption,
southern Italy is again the region for which we have
evidence in the form of the penbox made for Taurus
mariam rosser-owen
for the piece of tusk that could not be carved into
panels for the paliotto or to veneer caskets. Could the
intensity of ivory carving for both secular and religious purposes, sponsored by a Norman elite actively
engaged in consolidating their land and position in
southern Italy, have led the ivory craftsmen to turn
their hand to producing oliphants? These prestigious
horns, made of luxury materials and richly decorated,
would have become valued status symbols locally, but
could also have been used as gifts within the complex
network of Norman kinship ties across Europe.
Perhaps this stimulated further demand in northern
Europe for an object type which could only, at that
date, be made in southern Italy, thanks to the trade
with Ifriqiya, and fuelled an export trade in oliphant
production?214 It is also possible that raw tusks
were transported along Norman kinship networks,
allowing for the possibility that some of the misfit
oliphants those that do not conform to stylistic
comparanda locatable in southern Italy might have
been carved in production centres in the north and
west, far from the Mediterranean. If the demand for
luxury ivory horns was just as great within Italy, for
some reason the secondary process of conveying the
horn into a treasury collection, thus ensuring its preservation was not so prevalent there, which is why
no oliphants have apparently survived within Italian
ecclesiastical collections.
NOTES
1
A. Shalem, The Oliphant: Islamic Objects in Historical Context
(Leiden 2004), 106. Shalems long-awaited corpus was literally
hot-off-the-press when the final revisions to this article were due:
see A. Shalem assisted by M. Glaser, Die mittelalterlichen Olifante,
2 vols, Deutscher Verein fr Kunstwissenschaft (Berlin 2014).
I have not had the necessary time to go through this new volume in
detail and make a comparative study with the arguments proposed
in 2004. In general it seems that the theoretical framework and the
chronological/typological groupings presented in Shalems earlier
publication have not changed substantially, though they have been
refined somewhat and new sub-groupings proposed. As such, the
arguments I express here, based on the 2004 study, still apply.
2
Ibid. (as n. 1), 7679.
3
For example, Jonathan Blooms recent study of Fatimid art
followed Shalems attribution by captioning the British Museum
oliphant (OA +1302) after Shalems volume: both read Egypt,
50
the oliphant
17
c. 1000 (J. Bloom, The Arts of the City Victorious: Islamic Art and
Architecture in Fatimid North Africa and Egypt (Yale and London
2007), 4, fig. 4; Shalem, Oliphant (as n. 1), pl. VI, fig. 44), though
the oliphant question is not discussed in Blooms text. Shalems
theory was more explicitly reinforced by the inclusion of the Boston
oliphant (50.3425) in the exhibition Gifts of the Sultan: the Arts
of Giving at the Islamic Courts (in its Los Angeles and Houston
venues) and accompanying catalogue: see J. Bloom, Fatimid
Gifts in Gifts of the Sultan: the Arts of Giving at the Islamic Courts,
ed. L. Komaroff (New Haven and London 2011), 95109, fig. 88,
cat. no. 127.
4
For more detail, see the discussion in Shalem, Oliphant (as
n. 1), 3849.
5
D. Ebitz, The Oliphant: Function and Meaning in a Courtly
Society, in The Medieval Court in Europe, ed. E. E. Haymes
(Munich 1986), 12341; discussed in Shalem, Oliphant (as n. 1),
10104. The word oliphant was also used in the epic to refer to
other objects made from ivory.
6
D. Ebitz, Secular to Sacred: the Transformation of an
Oliphant in the Muse de Cluny, Gesta, XXV (1986), 3138.
7
See, for example, the recent articles by E. Hoffman, Pathways
of Portability: Islamic and Christian Interchange from the Tenth
to the Twelfth Century, Art History, 24 (2001), 1750 and 19;
Translation in Ivory: Interactions across Cultures and Media in
the Mediterranean during the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries, in
Siculo-Arabic Ivories and Islamic Painting 11001300. Proceedings
of the International Conference, Berlin, 68 July 2007. Rmisches
Jahrbuch der Bibliotheca Hertziana, vol. XXXVI, ed. D. Knipp
(Munich 2011), 10019.
8
E. Khnel, Die sarazenischen Olifanthrner, Jahrbuch der
Berliner Museen, 1 (1959), 3350; Shalem, Oliphant (as n. 1), 51.
9
See E. Bassani and W. Fagg ed., Africa and the Renaissance:
Art in Ivory (New York 1988); J. Levenson ed., Encompassing
the Globe: Portugal and the World in the 16th and 17th Centuries,
exhibition catalogue (Washington DC 2007); and E. Bassani,
Ivoires dAfrique dans les anciennes collections franaises (Paris
2008), 4244. My thanks to Sarah Gurin for bringing this last
book to my attention.
10
V&A: A.5641910, see <http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/
O312375/oliphant-unknown> [accessed 19 May 2013]. This is
attributed to Paris or Cologne, c. 1300 by P. Williamson and
G. Davies in their recent catalogue of the V&As Gothic ivories,
Medieval Ivory Carvings 12001550, 2 (London 2014), 73237 (cat.
250). Shalem includes it, and other Gothic ivories, in his new corpus
(E2): Shalem, Die mittelalterlichen Olifante (as n. 1). Various examples are also attributed to the 15th century, such as the Relikhoorn
of St Cornelius, now in SintJanshospitaal in Bruges, which is
faceted and decorated with gilding: see S. Vandenberghe, Ivoor in
Brugge: Schatten uit Musea, Kerken en Kloosters, Museum Bulletin
2 (Musea Brugge 2010).
11
O. von Falke, Elfenbeinhrner I: gypten und Italien,
Pantheon, 4 (1929), 51117; Elfenbeinhrner II: Byzanz, Pantheon,
5 (1930), 3944.
12
E. Khnel, Die islamischen Elfenbeinskulpturen VIIIXIII
Jahrhundert (Berlin 1971), prepared by his wife and assistants;
Shalem, Oliphant (as n. 1), 5253, describes the confusion that arose
between the 1959 and 1971 iterations of Khnels theories about the
Saracenic oliphants.
13
Shalem, Oliphant (as n. 1), 34.
14
Shalem, Die mittelalterlichen Olifante (as n. 1).
15
J. Caskey, Stuccoes from the Early Norman Period in Sicily:
Figuration, Fabrication and Integration, Medieval Encounters,
17 (2011), 80119.
16
For more information on these objects, see Clephane horn,
M&ME 1979, 71,1): <http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/
highlights/highlight_objects/pe_mla/t/the_clephane_horn.aspx>
(Borradaile horn, M&ME 1923,1215, 3): <http://www.british
museum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/pe_mla/t/the_
borradaile_oliphant.aspx> [both sites accessed 30 June 2013].
51
mariam rosser-owen
on paper that have survived in the dry conditions of Fustat (old
Cairo), and are generally datable to the late 10th to late 12th centuries (coinciding with Fatimid rule in Egypt). One example, now in
the Benaki Museum in Athens (inv. 16656), shows a roundel, linked
to other roundels now lost, containing a camel howdah flanked
by attendants. This scene appears several times on the Cappella
Palatina ceiling, and on the Saracenic group ivory casket in the
Metropolitan Museum. J. Johns, Strained Relationships: Carved
Ivories of the Amalfi Group, Siculo-Arabic Painted Ivories and
the Royal Art of Norman Sicily, paper presented at the conference
Ivory Trade and Exchange in Late Antiquity and Early Islam, The
Warburg Institute, London, 18 June 2013. It should be noted that
Jonathan Bloom is more sceptical about these fragments, which have
all been recovered from unscientific, unstratified excavations. In his
Paper before Print: The History and Impact of Paper in the Islamic
World (New Haven and London 2001), 165, he says, It seems best to
treat all these unauthenticated fragments with extreme caution
and not base an argument on them. The same might be said of the
thousands of ceramic fragments recovered from Fustat in the same
way, but these continue to provide a useful source of study for the
history of ceramic technology and trade.
30
Shalem, Oliphant (as n. 1), 79 (my italics).
31
On the Martorana woodwork, see Gabrieli and Scerrato,
Gli Arabi (as n. 22), figs 11416. They illustrate other examples of
Sicilian woodwork at figs 19698, and a 12th-century panel from
Monte Cassino at fig. 469.
32
British Museum: Palart.550, see <http://www.britishmuseum.
org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/pe_prb/s/swimming_
reindeer.aspx> [accessed 19 May 2013], also J. Cook, The Swimming
Reindeer: Objects in Focus Series (London 2010); and by the same
author Ice Age Art: Arrival of the Modern Mind (London 2013),
26769, figs 2021.
33
Cutler, Hand of the Master (as n. 21), 11011 (my italics).
34
Cutlers second and third cuts are true undercutting and the
straight stroke, which cuts back at a right angle to the plane of the
ground: Hand of the Master (as n. 21), 111, 119.
35
Inv. 1956.562; Shalem, Oliphant (as n. 1), pl. XI, figs 5 and
40. I examined this object on 1 June 2012. My sincere thanks to
Friederike Voigt, Godfrey Evans and Sarah Worden of National
Museums Scotland for arranging for me to study this object.
36
Hoffman, Translation (as n. 7), 106, following Shalems
argument on these objects, calls this combination surprising.
37
J. Kingsley, Reconsidering the Medieval Oliphant: The Ivory
Horn in the Walters Art Museum, in A New Look at Old Things
[= Journal of the Walters Art Museum, 68/69], ed. K. B. Gerry and
R. A. Leson (201011), 8798, esp. 9194.
38
Kingsley, Reconsidering (as n. 37), 94.
39
Ebitz, Secular to Sacred (as n. 6). This object came to
hold the relics of St Arnoul, at his abbey church in Metz. If the
object had been recarved at the time of its repurposing, one might
reasonably expect this to have happened in Metz itself, which does
not explain the stylistic connections to the Ulf group of oliphants,
discussed below. See J. de Hond and F. Scholten, The elk antler
from the funerary chapel of Louis the Pious in Metz, The Burlington
Magazine, no. 1323, vol. 155 (June 2013), 37280, esp. 373, 380.
40
D. Gaborit-Chopin, Ivoires mdivaux VeXVe sicle (Paris
2003), 206 is not convinced either: Cette [. . .] hypothse nest
toutefois pas convaincante, puisque la partie centrale de lolifant,
si elle t retaille, serait beaucoup plus en contrebas quelle ne lest
aujourdhui [. . .] Il semble raisonnable de revenir [. . .] lopinion de
Khnel, ou du moins lide de deux interventions contemporaines,
dans la seconde moiti du XIe sicle.
41
Ebitz, Secular to Sacred (as n. 6), 37.
42
Eastmond, Byzantine oliphants? (as n. 17). I would like to
thank Bla Zsolt Szakcs of the Central European University in
Budapest for sending me images and information about Hungarian
publications on Lehels horn, which tend to associate it with Kiev,
far from the Mediterranean.
43
Shalem, Oliphant (as n. 1), 5460 (my italics).
44
Khnel, Elfenbeinskulpturen (as n. 12), 15, fig. 31. He had
written about this piece in an earlier publication: E. Khnel, Die
52
the oliphant
56
53
mariam rosser-owen
84
101
54
the oliphant
131
55
mariam rosser-owen
146
158
147
159
56
the oliphant
grifonis ex ebore. The association with the griffin derives from a
story told of Pope Cornelius (elected in 251) who cured a griffin
of falling sickness (epilepsy). By way of thanks, the griffin shook
off one of his claws and left it with St Cornelius [. . .] [who] then
used it for a drinking vessel, and is painted with it: Rackham, The
Great Horn (as n. 186), 39. St Cornelius is usually depicted with a
reliquary-horn as his attribute: see, for example, the wall-painting
from c. 1459 in the cathedral of Roskilde, Denmark, in Etting,
Story of the Drinking Horn (as n. 70), 90, or the polychrome wooden
sculpture from the 14th century now in the Sint-Janshospitaal in
Bruges. Ironically, some griffins claws were made of ivory, including a 15th- and a 16th-century example also in SintJanshospitaal:
see Vandenberghe, Ivoor in Brugge (as n. 10).
191
Rackham, The Great Horn (as n. 186), 44. He lists six medieval aurochs horns in England, which can only be dated by the
age of their mounts, or the date of their presentation, if known.
The Corpus Christi horn is first mentioned in a college inventory
datable c. 1385, though its silver finial which may actually represent
St Cornelius wearing his papal crown probably dates from the
late 13th century. There seems to have been a trend for horns in
the 15th century, when the Egglesfield, Pusey and Christs Hospital
horns all seem to have been (re)mounted.
192
De Hond and Scholten, Elk antler (as n. 39).
193
See Cherry, Symbolism and Survival (as n. 172), 11516.
Though now see Etting, Story of the Drinking Horn (as n. 70).
194
These questions were asked to me by two colleagues who read
the first draft of this article, Sarah Gurin and Isabelle Dolezalek.
Since they are so pertinent, I quote them directly and with gratitude.
In a museological context, it is interesting to note that in the V&A,
for example, the ivory oliphants are held in the Sculpture section,
and are thus validated as artistic objects, while the drinking horns
are held in Metalwork, valued only for their mounts.
195
Eastmond, Diversity (as n. 17), 106.
196
Ebitz, Sacred to Secular (as n. 6), 37.
197
The earliest listing in Khnel, Elfenbeinskulpturen (as n. 12),
Anhang, which specifically mentions ivory is no. 28: the gift of two
cornua eburnea with their relics from Henry II (r. 100224) to the
church of St Vincent, Verdun, after 1014.
198
Khnel, Elfenbeinskulpturen (as n. 12) Anhang, no. 25; Pace,
Fra lIslam e lOccidente (as n. 96), 617.
199
My thanks to Sarah Gurin for sharing with me the introduction to her doctoral dissertation, where this issue is discussed.
I eagerly await the publication of her observations on this issue.
200
Gurin, Introduction to Gothic Ivories (as n. 83); Leo of
Ostia, The Chronicle of Monte Cassino, in A Documentary History
of Art: The Middle Ages and the Renaissance, ed. E. Gilmore Holt,
trans. H. Bloch (Garden City 1957), vol. 1, 12, 27 (with thanks to
Sarah Gurin for the reference). Unfortunately the text does not
state if the monks specialised or worked across media.
201
Lawrence Nees has made a similar argument in connection with Carolingian ivory carving, in Charlemagnes elephant,
Quintana: Revista de Estudos do Departamento de Historia da Arte,
5 (2006), 1349.
202
Gurin, Forgotten Routes? (as n. 82). The papers and
discussion at the recent conference, Ivory Trade and Exchange (as
n. 29), served to reinforce the view that the eastern Mediterranean
bias for medieval ivory production has been unfounded.
203
Pace, Fra lIslam e lOccidente (as n. 96), 620, no. 28, points
out that significantly no oliphant is represented in the paintings of
the Cappella Palatina ceiling, which might be expected if this was a
contemporary Fatimid tradition in the process of being adopted by
the Normans.
204
It is surely significant that the construction method of several
of these caskets is the same as the two Fatimid ivories made in
al-Mansuriyya in the 960s. This discovery was first shared by Silvia
Armando in her paper Separated at Birth or Distant Relations?
The Al-Muizz and Mantua Caskets between Decoration and
Construction, at the conference Beyond the Western Mediterranean
(as n. 81). Could it be that ivory carvers or casket-makers came
from Tunisia to southern Italy along with the ivory supply?
205
On the Siculo-Arabic group, see the recent PhD thesis by
Silvia Armando, Avori arabo-siculi nel Mediterraneo Medievale,
57
mariam rosser-owen
Etting, Story of the Drinking Horn (as n. 70), esp. 1738, gives other
examples of surviving bovine horns that can be associated with Iron
Age and Viking Scandinavia, though the author notes that if the
horns are buried they completely disintegrate, so frequently their
metal mounts are the only archaeological trace.
210
Seven ox horns were found in the 6th/7th-century burial at
Sutton Hoo, and three in the 6th-century princely burial at Taplow:
see Rackham, The Great Horn (as n. 186), 42, citing Victoria
County History, Buckinghamshire, 1 (1905), 200. The Taplow horns,
found with other rich grave-goods in 1883, were ornamented with
intricately embossed and gilded silver triangles around the mouth
and with long silver finials. All these horns are now in the British
Museum (M&ME 1883,1214,1920). It is interesting that on the
Bayeux Tapestry, it is the English not the Normans who
are depicted drinking from horns, which seem to be a visual device
signalling their AngloSaxon identity. See Etting, Story of the
Drinking Horn (as n. 70), 3839, citing two works by Carol Neuman
de Vegvar which I have not had the opportunity to consult: A Feast
to the Lord: Drinking Horns, the Church, and the Liturgy, in
Objects, Images, and the Word: Art in the service of the Liturgy, ed.
C. Hourihane (Princeton 2003), 23156; Dining with Distinction:
drinking vessels and difference in the Bayeux Tapestry feast scenes,
in The Bayeux Tapestry: New Approaches. Proceedings of a conference at the British Museum, ed. M. J. Lewis, G. R. Owen-Crocker
and D. Terkla (Oxford 2010), 11220. How that fits with the idea
of oliphants as something indicative of Norman identity is an
important avenue for further investigation.
211
Rackham, The Great Horn (as n. 186), 42.
212
Pegge, Horn as charter (as n. 159), 4.
213
Etting, Story of the Drinking Horn (as n. 70), 47.
214
Pace and Eastmond have both recently made a similar point:
Pace, Fra lIslam e lOccidente (as n. 96), 620: Dal vaglio delle
fonti la localizzazione resta invece non solo irrisolta, ma sembra
addirittura divenire ancor pi problematica [. . .] la loro strada fosse
sin dallorigine segnata da un immediato futuro di esportazione
[. . .]; Eastmond, Byzantine oliphants? (as n. 17), 21: The market
for oliphants seems predominantly to have lain outside the region in
which they originated. All the evidence indicates that they were
valued above all in Northern Europe.
58