Coptic textile fragment, unknown maker from Egypt

Artwork Overview

Coptic textile fragment
Coptic period (300 CE–700 CE)
Coptic textile fragment , Coptic period (300 CE–700 CE)
Where object was made: Egypt
Credit line: William Bridges Thayer Memorial
Accession number: 1928.0115
Not on display

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Images

Label texts

Exhibition Label: Dec-2010 Since the first century, the Coptic Church, which is said to have been founded by Saint Mark, has been the major Christian community in Egypt. During controversies that arose in the fifth century, the Catholic Church condemned the Coptic Church as a heretical sect, leaving it to develop independently. These textile fragments demonstrate the lively mix of classical, Near Eastern, and Christian motifs that characterized early Coptic art. Furthermore, their ornate designs may indicate that they served as adornments for the wool and linen garments that were widely used by Coptic communities.

Exhibitions

Tashia Dare, curator
2012

Citations

Stokstad, Marilyn, ed. The Handbook of the Museum of Art. Lawrence, Kansas: The University of Kansas, 1962.

The Medieval Collections of the Museum of Art. Lawrence, Kansas: The University of Kansas Museum of Art, 1963.