Abstract

The bow jewel in the Rijksmuseum collection is one of the finest examples of its kind. The provenance of this piece of jewellery is unclear, as is generally also true of the other extant bow jewels. The strong resemblance to a number of ornament prints has often led to the suggestion that the Rijksmuseum’s bow brooch, and bow jewellery in general, was a French concept that came about in the late sixteen-fifties or early sixties, but seventeenth-century Dutch portraits and inventories indicate that in the Netherlands it was already a popular jewel by then. Bow jewels could be acquired from jewellers in the Low Countries in the early sixteen-thirties and at the end of the decade they were worn at court in The Hague. Princess Amalia of Solms-Braunfels owned several diamond bow jewels in 1640, and in a portrait made a few years earlier she wears a pearl bow on her dress. The aristocracy and the wealthy citizens in the Republic started following this example and the bows set with diamonds and pearls stayed in fashion throughout the rest of the century. The bow jewel was already in fashion in the Low Countries thirty years before it became in vogue in France.

Highlights

  • Very few seventeenth-century bow jewels survive anywhere in the world, and the Rijksmuseum holds one of the finest examples.[1]

  • There are portraits which show that in the second half of the sixteenth century bows that were on the borderline between costume and jewellery were already being worn in Europe

  • In the Portrait of Jane Dormer painted by Antonio Moro around 1558, for instance, the Duchess (1538-1612) has numerous small red ribbon bows attached to her bodice, with a gold orna­ ment set with a pearl or gemstone in the centre of each

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Summary

Introduction

Very few seventeenth-century bow jewels survive anywhere in the world, and the Rijksmuseum holds one of the finest examples (figs. 1a-b).[1]. In the Armada portraits of Elizabeth i (1533-1603), Queen of England and Ireland, painted around 1588, she likewise wears fabric bows secured with precious stones set in gold

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