4458 x 5893 px | 37,7 x 49,9 cm | 14,9 x 19,6 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
7 juillet 2023
Lieu:
Ulster Museum Belfast, Northern Ireland
Informations supplémentaires:
This incongruously elegant jewelled pendant was recovered from the wreck site of the Spanish galleass ‘Girona’, which sank off Lacada Point, on the north Antrim coast, in the autumn of 1588. ‘Girona’ was part of the largest invasion fleet yet assembled, the great armada of 130 ships that set sail from Lisbon on May 30th, 1588. Its aim, as part of Philip II’s crusade against Protestant “heretics”, was to take control of England, depose Elizabeth I and re-establish a Catholic monarchy. (Philip had been married to Elizabeth’s sister and predecessor, Mary.) Spain and England were already fighting a proxy war in the Low Countries; Philip was now intent on a comprehensive victory. On board the ships was a vast store of ordnance, including the massive siege guns intended to batter down the walls of London. The pendant embodies the imperial power and commercial reach of Spain. Its body is of gold from the Spanish colonies in the new world of America. The rubies that marked out its spine and tail – three of the original nine stones survive – probably came from southern Asia. The fine workmanship in the detail of the scales, claws and tail adds to the flair of an object that bespeaks the exuberance of a self-confident empire.