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Chalice from the Beth Misona Treasure

c. 500–700
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Medium
silver
Measurements
Overall: 17 x 14.7 cm (6 11/16 x 5 13/16 in.)
Weight: 331.15 g (11.68 oz.)
Public Domain
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Description

These four liturgical silver vessels—a paten and three chalices (1950.378–81)—form what is now called the Beth Misona Treasure, named for the village in northern Syria for which the objects were made. While nothing is known about the exact location and circumstances of the treasure's discovery, the people of the village of Beth Misona were, like other Christian communities in Syria and Palestine, probably forced to bury their church silver to hide it from the Persians or Arabs, who conquered their lands in the first half of the 600s. The paten, which held pieces of Eucharistic bread used during Mass, is decorated with an engraved Latin cross surrounded by a dedicatory inscription that names the paten's donor—Domnos—and its original location, the church of Saint Sergios in Beth Misona. The chalices, which contained the Eucharistic wine used during Mass, feature broad cups decorated with portrait busts of Saints Peter and Paul, Christ, and the Virgin. One chalice bears a dedicatory inscription naming its donor—Kyriakos, Domnos's son—and the priest of the church that received the pious gift—Zeno.
A silver goblet features a wide, rounded bowl atop a short stem with a woven, bulbous center. A band of circles and stylized leaves borders the rim. Centrally, a circular medallion depicts a haloed figure with long hair facing forward and holding a rectangular book. Mottled gray tarnish covers the vessel's surface, while the bowl's lower section tapers into the textured stem, which rests on a flared foot.

Chalice from the Beth Misona Treasure

c. 500–700

early Byzantium, Constantinople or Syria, Byzantine period, 6th-7th Century

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