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Ethiopia

Crown or cap nineteenth century

Silver, gold | 22.0 x 19.3 x 21.0 cm (whole object) | RCIN 62936

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  • An Abyssinian crown composed of eight silver, shaped-rectangular linking sections, each overlaid with gold filigree and inset with silver studs, with a circular finial from which hang 24 chains ending in cone-shaped finials.
    Provenance

    Belonged to Tewodros II, Emperor of Abyssinia. Taken after Tewodros' defeat at the 1868 Battle of Magdala and sent by General Sir Robert Napier to Queen Victoria with Tewodros' robes, seal and slippers (RCIN 62108). These items were presented to the queen at Windsor Castle by Lieutenant Colonel T.W. Milward on 18 June 1868. They were subsequently sent for inclusion in a display of 'Royal Treasures from Abyssinia' at the South Kensington Museum, where this crown was described as a 'TARBOOSH' or close-fitting cap, mounted in silver filigree' (Spottiswoode, A Guide to the Art Collections of the South Kensington Museum, 1872, p.20).

    Illustrated in Edwin Arnold, 'Theodore The King', The Gentleman's Magazine, Vol. 225, 1868, p.381.

    Loaned to the South Staffordshire Industrial & Fine Arts Exhibition, Molineux House, Wolverhampton, in 1869.

    Displayed in the North Corridor at Windsor Castle (no.2083), where it was incorrectly described as the crown which 'belonged to The Queen of Shoa... presented at Buckingham Palace in 1843 by Sir William (then Captain) Harris'.

  • Medium and techniques

    Silver, gold

    Measurements

    22.0 x 19.3 x 21.0 cm (whole object)

  • Alternative title(s)

    Tarboosh

  • Place of Production

    Ethiopia