Subject: | | Re: Virgin with Trinity, plus a note |
From: | | [log in to unmask][log in to unmask] |
Reply-To: | | [log in to unmask][log in to unmask], 09 Mar 2000 20:18:17 -0500 (EST)594_us-ascii Someone mentioned that these figures have odd tonsures. Since the precise nature of the celtic tonsure seems still to be very much an issue in some circles, are any of the photos good enough to tell us what the tonsures look like? meg
> I can't think of any other flashing clerics, but there are a few male > Sheelas, or rather Sean-na-gigs: at Ballycloghduff in West Meath on > the gatepost of an old mill, at Grey Abbey in Co Down, and at Margam > in Wales. To my knowledge, the literature has largely ignored these > male figures. [...]44_09Mar200020:18:17-0500(EST)[log in to unmask] |
Date: | | Fri, 10 Mar 2000 07:45:04 EST |
Content-Type: | | text/plain |
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In a message dated 03/10/2000 5:18:56 AM Eastern Standard Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
<< Apart from the allusion to 'victorian reconstruction' you are coy, nay
silent as to date (I'll agree
to having heard the name of Maggie Beaufort, but it's not clear whether
you want to say she was the
originator of this glassware). I wonder if you can offer us an
approximate date for any conjectured
original presentation of this interesting depiction?
>>
Unless there is another famous Margaret Beaufort, I think she means Henry
VII's mother. Thus the end of the 15th/ beginning of the 16th cent.
mark
PS The above mentioned Margaret B. did have an aunt by the same name, but we
are still looking at mid 15th cent.
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