Medieval Lead Pilgrims Walsingham Ampulla
Item Description
C, 13th-14th century
A nice lead pilgrims open pouched shaped ampulla with suspensory rings at the base of the neck. It is decorated with an open pouch to one side and a crown to the reverse.
During the twelfth through fourteenth centuries, pilgrims who visited the Holy Land were likely to purchase an ampulla, outside the shrines of a revered saint. These were a type of container filled with holy water from the same sites or oil used for lamps burning before important pilgrimage shrines. The lure of the ampulla as an object capable of bestowing holy miracles gave it the same appeal as a relic. Thus, when pilgrims were not wearing their ampulla around their necks, they were using the contents within them to try to administer cures.
Found Lincolnshire in the 1990’s.
Ref: Similar example in the Medieval Pilgrim & Secular Badges, page 141, no. 402.
Nice condition with suspensory rings intact with nice detail.
Size: 47mm height
£125.00
1 Available