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Hospitallers' Seal from N. P. Likhachev's Collection : a Study of Metal Composition and Manufacturing Methods. / Loboda, A. Yu; Nosova, E.; Retivov, V. M.; Chernobakhtova, E.; Veber, D.; Tereschenko, E. Yu; Yatsishina, E. B.

In: Stratum Plus, No. 6, 2019, p. 249-259.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Loboda, AY, Nosova, E, Retivov, VM, Chernobakhtova, E, Veber, D, Tereschenko, EY & Yatsishina, EB 2019, 'Hospitallers' Seal from N. P. Likhachev's Collection: a Study of Metal Composition and Manufacturing Methods', Stratum Plus, no. 6, pp. 249-259.

APA

Loboda, A. Y., Nosova, E., Retivov, V. M., Chernobakhtova, E., Veber, D., Tereschenko, E. Y., & Yatsishina, E. B. (2019). Hospitallers' Seal from N. P. Likhachev's Collection: a Study of Metal Composition and Manufacturing Methods. Stratum Plus, (6), 249-259.

Vancouver

Loboda AY, Nosova E, Retivov VM, Chernobakhtova E, Veber D, Tereschenko EY et al. Hospitallers' Seal from N. P. Likhachev's Collection: a Study of Metal Composition and Manufacturing Methods. Stratum Plus. 2019;(6):249-259.

Author

Loboda, A. Yu ; Nosova, E. ; Retivov, V. M. ; Chernobakhtova, E. ; Veber, D. ; Tereschenko, E. Yu ; Yatsishina, E. B. / Hospitallers' Seal from N. P. Likhachev's Collection : a Study of Metal Composition and Manufacturing Methods. In: Stratum Plus. 2019 ; No. 6. pp. 249-259.

BibTeX

@article{c5956e30026c4e4d8ee6e0969c47cc4a,
title = "Hospitallers' Seal from N. P. Likhachev's Collection: a Study of Metal Composition and Manufacturing Methods",
abstract = "The article addresses the seal of the Order of Knights of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem, held in the Archives of the St. Petersburg Institute of History of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The artifact comes from N. P. Likhachev's collection, and its earlier history is unknown. On its surface, there are clearly visible traces of remaking, which indicates the deliberate transformation of the matrix into a decorative element or amulet. The seal is made of copper-base alloy containing zinc (27.3%), lead (1.3 %) and nickel (0.2 %). A trasological analysis revealed a number of technological features of the matrix. There are markers suggesting that the whole image, including the letters in the legend, was first produced as a wax model, which was then used for the lost wax casting. No traces of post-casting refinement on the matrix surface were found. Most of the legend letters were probably made with the help of a set of stamps consisting of small modules and whole letters.",
keywords = "Western Europe, Middle Ages, Hospitallers, sigillography, XRF, ICP-MS, Copper Alloys, analysis of trace",
author = "Loboda, {A. Yu} and E. Nosova and Retivov, {V. M.} and E. Chernobakhtova and D. Veber and Tereschenko, {E. Yu} and Yatsishina, {E. B.}",
year = "2019",
language = "русский",
pages = "249--259",
journal = "Stratum Plus",
issn = "1608-9057",
publisher = "High Anthropological School University",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Hospitallers' Seal from N. P. Likhachev's Collection

T2 - a Study of Metal Composition and Manufacturing Methods

AU - Loboda, A. Yu

AU - Nosova, E.

AU - Retivov, V. M.

AU - Chernobakhtova, E.

AU - Veber, D.

AU - Tereschenko, E. Yu

AU - Yatsishina, E. B.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - The article addresses the seal of the Order of Knights of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem, held in the Archives of the St. Petersburg Institute of History of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The artifact comes from N. P. Likhachev's collection, and its earlier history is unknown. On its surface, there are clearly visible traces of remaking, which indicates the deliberate transformation of the matrix into a decorative element or amulet. The seal is made of copper-base alloy containing zinc (27.3%), lead (1.3 %) and nickel (0.2 %). A trasological analysis revealed a number of technological features of the matrix. There are markers suggesting that the whole image, including the letters in the legend, was first produced as a wax model, which was then used for the lost wax casting. No traces of post-casting refinement on the matrix surface were found. Most of the legend letters were probably made with the help of a set of stamps consisting of small modules and whole letters.

AB - The article addresses the seal of the Order of Knights of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem, held in the Archives of the St. Petersburg Institute of History of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The artifact comes from N. P. Likhachev's collection, and its earlier history is unknown. On its surface, there are clearly visible traces of remaking, which indicates the deliberate transformation of the matrix into a decorative element or amulet. The seal is made of copper-base alloy containing zinc (27.3%), lead (1.3 %) and nickel (0.2 %). A trasological analysis revealed a number of technological features of the matrix. There are markers suggesting that the whole image, including the letters in the legend, was first produced as a wax model, which was then used for the lost wax casting. No traces of post-casting refinement on the matrix surface were found. Most of the legend letters were probably made with the help of a set of stamps consisting of small modules and whole letters.

KW - Western Europe

KW - Middle Ages

KW - Hospitallers

KW - sigillography

KW - XRF

KW - ICP-MS

KW - Copper Alloys

KW - analysis of trace

M3 - статья

SP - 249

EP - 259

JO - Stratum Plus

JF - Stratum Plus

SN - 1608-9057

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 52331712