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UID:news560@kunstgeschichte.philhist.unibas.ch
DTSTAMP;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260415T100803
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260511T181500
SUMMARY:NOMIS Lecture: Cups of Honor and Reward: The Value of Silver in the
  Thirty Years' War
DESCRIPTION:Cups of Honor and Reward: The Value of Silver in the Thirty Yea
 rs' War\\r\\nIn Northern Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
 \, honor and reward were often signified by a silver cup. Silver and gilt-
 silver vessels served to commemorate births\, deaths\, and marriages\; the
 y sealed diplomatic relationships and represented communal institutions li
 ke guilds\, charitable societies\, and civic governing bodies. They were p
 rizes in lotteries and shooting contests. Made of a precious metal directl
 y tied to contemporary currency\, the silver cup embodied monetary value t
 hat was recognizable and easily extracted by melting and minting. But\, as
  the product of innovating\, skilled craftsmen\, it could also hold aesthe
 tic as well as symbolic value\, which was tied to its ability to denote pe
 ople\, places\, and historical events. These entangled value systems were 
 brought into high relief in wartime\, when silver plate was taken as booty
 \, or confiscated to fund military defense\, or relinquished as ransom to 
 protect life and limb. \\r\\nThis talk tracks silver cups through the tum
 ultuous decades of the Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648)\, a period charac
 terized by dispossession and displacement. It analyzes the highly ambivale
 nt status the silver cup held as both financial asset and symbolic object.
  Primary evidence for this analysis includes eyewitness accounts of confis
 cation\, inventories recording the personal significance of silver cups\, 
 and surviving hoards of valuables concealed for protection under the threa
 t of siege. The talk’s conclusion turns towards the present day and the 
 competing values that still define early modern silver as both commodity a
 nd cultural artifact. \\r\\n\\r\\n\\r\\n\\r\\n commodity and cultural ar
 tifact. 
X-ALT-DESC:<p><strong>Cups of Honor and Reward: The Value of Silver in the 
 Thirty Years' War</strong></p>\n<p>In Northern Europe in the sixteenth and
  seventeenth centuries\, honor and reward were often signified by a silver
  cup. Silver and gilt-silver vessels served to commemorate births\, deaths
 \, and marriages\; they sealed diplomatic relationships and represented co
 mmunal institutions like guilds\, charitable societies\, and civic governi
 ng bodies. They were prizes in lotteries and shooting contests. Made of a 
 precious metal directly tied to contemporary currency\, the silver cup emb
 odied monetary value that was recognizable and easily extracted by melting
  and minting. But\, as the product of innovating\, skilled craftsmen\, it 
 could also hold aesthetic as well as symbolic value\, which was tied to it
 s ability to denote people\, places\, and historical events. These entangl
 ed value systems were brought into high relief in wartime\, when silver pl
 ate was taken as booty\, or confiscated to fund military defense\, or reli
 nquished as ransom to protect life and limb.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>This talk trac
 ks silver cups through the tumultuous decades of the Thirty Years’ War (
 1618–1648)\, a period characterized by dispossession and displacement. I
 t analyzes the highly ambivalent status the silver cup held as both financ
 ial asset and symbolic object. Primary evidence for this analysis includes
  eyewitness accounts of confiscation\, inventories recording the personal 
 significance of silver cups\, and surviving hoards of valuables concealed 
 for protection under the threat of siege. The talk’s conclusion turns to
 wards the present day and the competing values that still define early mod
 ern silver as both commodity and cultural artifact.&nbsp\;</p>\n\n\n\n<p>&
 nbsp\;commodity and cultural artifact.&nbsp\;</p>
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260511T194500
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