RUNNER SQUARE OF THE BANNER
OF JULIUS II: THE ANNUNCIATION
Upper Rhine, 1513 Basle, Historiches Museum (1882-1892)
Height: 129 cm. Height of the detail: 43 cm.
Italian white silk damask. Relief embroidery, or nue',
needle painting. Abundant use of pearls, silver-gilt
sequins gold thread. Faces covered with silk and embroidered.
The banner was an honorific gift from Pope Julius II
to his faithful allies of Basle as a sign of his gratitude
for their assistance in the capture of Pavia. On 2nd
July 1512, the Council of Basle commissioned the banner
in Milan and a year later ordered a copy for use from
a foreign embroiderer and from the Basle Goldsmith Jorg
Schweiger. His design for the silver-gilt sceptre of
the angel was preserved in the Amberbach Collection
and is now in the Hostorisches Museum at Basle.
Lit,: W.
Schneewind, Die Waffensammlung, Schriften des Historischen
Museums III, Basle 1958, p. 74 - A.B. Bruckner, Schweizer
Fahnenbuch, p. 171-175, pl. 38.Source:
Schuette, Marie and Sigrid Muller-Christensen: Pictorial
History of Embroidery ; NY: Frederick Praeger, 1964.
Griz's note : SEQUINS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It's COVERED in it!
Show this to people who say they are not period - Sequins
ARE beads BTW, more or less.