Ciborium
18th century
Object PlaceProbably Mexico
Medium/TechniqueSilver gilt bowl; copper or bronze baluster bowl with lid, stem, and foot
DimensionsHeight: 7 7/8 in. (20 cm), diameter of foot: 5 7/16 (13.8 cm), weight: 23 oz 28 dwt 5 gr (743.7 gm)
Credit LineGift in memory of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Keith
Accession number28.464
On View
Not on viewClassificationsSilver hollowware
ProvenanceBy 1878, unearthed from property on Oneida Street, St. Augustine, Florida, by property owners William H. Keith (b. 1803 - d. 1885) and Harriet Lovett Keith (b. 1837 - d. 1917), St. Augustine and exhibited at Bigelow, Kennard and Co., Boston; 1880, placed on loan to the MFA; passed by descent and in 1928, given to the MFA. (Accession Date: August 21, 1928)NOTE: It is not known when this object, along with six other pieces of ecclesiastical silver (MFA accession nos. 28.464 – 28.470) was buried. The cross (28.468) is inscribed with the date 1721 and the name of the Spanish governor and captain general of Florida, Antonio de Benavides (1718 – 1734). It has been suggested that the silver was buried after Spain ceded Florida to the United States in 1821, in response to fears that the U.S. government might seize church property. See Jeannine Falino, Silver in the Americas, 1600-2000. American Silver in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA, Boston, 2008), pp. 465-466, cat. no. 370, and pp. 524-525, Appendix I.
18th century
Serizawa Ryumin
mid to late 19th century (before 1889)
second half of 14th–first third of 15th century
Ikedo Akikuni
mid to late 19th century (before 1889)
Uchikoshi Hirochika
mid to late 19th century (before 1889)
mid-19th century
Kagawa Katsuhiro
mid to late 19th century (before 1889)