Bringing the Holy Land Home: The Crusades, Chertsey Abbey, and the Reconstruction of a Medieval Masterpiece

How was this made?

Ivory, which comes from the tusk of an elephant, was easy to carve, making it possible to create detailed designs for an ornate piece like this pen box.  Ivory was one of the most precious materials of medieval times, as craftsmen across the Mediterranean also valued it for its attractive color and its smooth, translucent appearance. For many cultures, the exotic origin of ivory made it a prestigious material with symbolic and spiritual associations.

Similar to an ivory oliphant and an ivory casket(shown here) this pen box was created out of the tusk of an elephant. The tusk of an African elephant can reach up to three meters in length and almost twenty centimeters in diameter at the base. The tusk has a hollow, known as the pulp cavity, which becomes gradually narrower. Only a minuscule canal runs up to the distal end.

To create Taurus's pen box, the tusk was hollowed out, cut into two pieces, finished with ornate designs, and attached with bronze handles. Its detailed animal iconography was carved easily due to the soft nature of ivory.
 

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