-
1069
Description: Quasi-arched shape with forward-facing 'wings', which splay outwards towards the base where each has been pierced with a small hole as if to insert a rod from one side to the other; the 'wings' curve to follow the shape of the main panel but curl outwards at the top; central panel with stylised tree decoration surmounted with a crown between two inward-facing animals, possibly a lion and unicorn; beneath the tree, a partially illegible inscription in relief.
Notes: This unusual casting was probably formed in an open box mould. Only a very small number of such castings are known. Depth 200mm. A similar fireback, noted at Poynings in Sussex, was illustrated in The Connoisseur, vol 41 (April 1915), p. 221; it too had a crown supported by a lion and unicorn on the top, and a tree with an illegible inscription below.
Inscription: SYLVESTR..[illegible]
- Decoration tags:
- free-standing (shape)
- none (edging)
- whole carved pattern
- text
- plants
Manufactured: in the late-17th to early-18th century in England.
Current location: in private hands, Wigmore, Herefordshire, England.
- Attached to series:
- Free-standing firebacks