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

Late Byzantine Bowl with Harpy on Interior (DO BZ.1958.103)

By: Grace Toshach '23


The fascinating creature in the center of this ceramic bowl is known as a Harpy, a human-headed bird. Despite the Harpy on this bowl being made in Christian, Medieval Byzantium, it was likely influenced by Islamic imagery. The Byzantine area in which this bowl was made was significant to the beginnings of the crusades. Seljuk armies fought and conquered Byzantine controlled areas which inspired the Byzantines to call on their Christian neighbors in Europe which initiated the first crusade in 1096. The area this harpy bowl was made was not only opened to Seljuk Turks, but also Iranians and people from central Asia who were primarily Muslim. Soon Byzantine potters would take on Islamic motifs and designs and implement them in their own work as seen on this green bowl. The crusades facilitated the collision of very different cultures that visually influenced medieval European art and Design. This bowl serves as a reminder of the crusade’s role in merging the worlds of different cultures, like Byzantine and Islam.
 

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