On view
Haskell Education Center
Decorative panel,
12th century
Information
12th century
Europe, Germany, Rhineland
Karl Ferdinand Friedrich von Nagler, Berlin (1770-1846); sold in 1835 to the Prussian state, integrated into the Brandenburg-Prussian Kunstkammer (until its liquidation in 1875); transferred to the Kunstgewerbemuseum (Applied Art Museum]) Berlin, inv. K 4213e [1]; exchanged with 13 other enamels for a monstrance with a relic of St. Blaise from the Guelph Treasure (inv. W 44) via J. Rosenbaum Antiquitäten, Frankfurt am Main, May 14, 1937; sold to S. & R. Rosenberg, Ltd., London by May 18, 1937; sold to Rosenberg & Stiebel, Inc., New York, May 27, 1941; sold to Joseph Brummer Galleries, New York, September 4, 1941; Joseph Brummer Estate Sale [Part II], Parke-Bernet Galleries, New York, May 14, 1949, Lot 726 [set of three enamels]; Purchase by Princeton University Art Museum
[1] From 1921 the Kunstgewerbemuseum was housed in the Stadtschloss [City Palace] and known as the Schlossmuseum