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About this object

  • ID:

    80.82/13

  • Production date:

    Late Medieval; 15th century

  • Location:

    In Store

  • Part of a pilgrim badge, probably of the Rood of Grace, Boxley Abbey. This fragment depicts Christ’s head and upper body on the cross. He wears a beaded crown and has a forked beard. There would have been trefoil shoots sprouting from the edges of the cross but most of the trefoils have broken off. A rood is a large crucifix usually displayed in a church. Boxley Abbey in Kent was a popular stopping-off point for pilgrims on their way to St Thomas Becket’s shrine in Canterbury. The rood at Boxley Abbey had a life-sized figure of Christ, which was famous for shedding tears. Sometimes the face would also move. The complete pilgrim badges show the rood with the figure of Christ, an altar at the base with various offerings on it (such as candlesticks, money and goblets) and sometimes a man, the keeper of the rood, standing to the side of the altar. In 1538, during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the rood was taken down and a mechanical device was found inside the head, revealing that the miraculous moving face was in fact complex trickery.

  • Measurements

    H 18 mm; W 34 mm

  • Materials

    lead alloy

  • Last Updated

    2024-03-14

FURTHER INFORMATION
  • NUMBER OF ITEMS

    1

  • STATUS

    permanent collection

  • COPYRIGHT HOLDER

    digital image copyright Museum of London

  • Related Group

    Medieval pilgrim souvenirs

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