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Krus
View through Europeana Collections
The subject is shown in the base exhibition Uddevalla of all time, Bohusläns museum, Uddevalla.
The High Range Ceramics in the Gulf of Uddevallatrakt, German import goods, 1500s.
The diameter of the mouth is 5.7 cm, the bottom diameter is 8.0 cm.
A Krus with a handle made of brown salt-glazed stoneware. A figure scene in high lief with overlying tremor around life, a decorative band in similar relief around the neck. The figure scene is the year “1583.” Otherwise, different narrow and wide carved lines like decor.
* G: 17 in the 1869 printed museum catalog.
From Nationalencyclopedia, NE.se: RaerenstenUr or Rhenländer stoneware:
Rhineland stoneware, stoneware produced in the Middle Ages and Renaissance in Cologne with Frechen and Raeren, Siegburg and in the 1600s and 1700s Höhr and Grenzhausen in Westerwald. The Rhenish potters introduced the stone estate and the salt glaze in Europe. The production of jugs, cowls, bottles and beakers in brown (Cologne area), blue gray or white (Siegburg) had a strong national character and also included innovations such as the bartman’s jug and the characteristic schnelle for Siegburg. The crisp-cut relief decors reproduce portrait medallions of contemporary princes, biblical scenes, friezes with dancing pawns, arabees, etc., after models of Alskarver and other Kleinmeister. Significant exports took place to the Netherlands, Great Britain and Scandinavia. New manufacturing has existed since the 1800s, with beer restaurants as the main nominee.
Data from German Friends of Sister Hildegard, Uddevalla, 1990s: Raeren is an old town in the province of Liège in present-day Belgium near the border with Germany. The area belonged to Flanders in the 15th-16th centuries.
Jan Emens Mennicken was the most prominent pottery in a pottery family, operating around 1575, which counts as the highlight of the production of the Raerenstengoat. The genus is still there.
A collection of objects from the making is available at the castle Le Château-Musée.
White.J. Fleming and H. Honour, “Lexicon of Arts Crafts,” 1989. Bonniers.
Kjellberg, Sven T.The Stoneware from the Rhine from the Culture 1958, p. 102-118.
Kristiansson, Sten: The History of Uddevalla City I, p. 132.
From the Handwritten Catalogue 1957-1958:
A stone gravel year. 1583
Bottendiam: 8. H. 17.5. Rock-lasered stone gravel with figures and inscription. A handle. Something damaged.
Lappcatalog: 62
Bohuslän Museum
Title: Krus
Description:
The subject is shown in the base exhibition Uddevalla of all time, Bohusläns museum, Uddevalla.
The High Range Ceramics in the Gulf of Uddevallatrakt, German import goods, 1500s.
The diameter of the mouth is 5.
7 cm, the bottom diameter is 8.
0 cm.
A Krus with a handle made of brown salt-glazed stoneware.
A figure scene in high lief with overlying tremor around life, a decorative band in similar relief around the neck.
The figure scene is the year “1583.
” Otherwise, different narrow and wide carved lines like decor.
* G: 17 in the 1869 printed museum catalog.
From Nationalencyclopedia, NE.
se: RaerenstenUr or Rhenländer stoneware:
Rhineland stoneware, stoneware produced in the Middle Ages and Renaissance in Cologne with Frechen and Raeren, Siegburg and in the 1600s and 1700s Höhr and Grenzhausen in Westerwald.
The Rhenish potters introduced the stone estate and the salt glaze in Europe.
The production of jugs, cowls, bottles and beakers in brown (Cologne area), blue gray or white (Siegburg) had a strong national character and also included innovations such as the bartman’s jug and the characteristic schnelle for Siegburg.
The crisp-cut relief decors reproduce portrait medallions of contemporary princes, biblical scenes, friezes with dancing pawns, arabees, etc.
, after models of Alskarver and other Kleinmeister.
Significant exports took place to the Netherlands, Great Britain and Scandinavia.
New manufacturing has existed since the 1800s, with beer restaurants as the main nominee.
Data from German Friends of Sister Hildegard, Uddevalla, 1990s: Raeren is an old town in the province of Liège in present-day Belgium near the border with Germany.
The area belonged to Flanders in the 15th-16th centuries.
Jan Emens Mennicken was the most prominent pottery in a pottery family, operating around 1575, which counts as the highlight of the production of the Raerenstengoat.
The genus is still there.
A collection of objects from the making is available at the castle Le Château-Musée.
White.
J.
Fleming and H.
Honour, “Lexicon of Arts Crafts,” 1989.
Bonniers.
Kjellberg, Sven T.
The Stoneware from the Rhine from the Culture 1958, p.
102-118.
Kristiansson, Sten: The History of Uddevalla City I, p.
132.
From the Handwritten Catalogue 1957-1958:
A stone gravel year.
1583
Bottendiam: 8.
H.
17.
5.
Rock-lasered stone gravel with figures and inscription.
A handle.
Something damaged.
Lappcatalog: 62.

