The Middleham Jewel is a late 15th-century gold pendant, set with a large blue sapphire stone. Each side of the lozenge-shaped pendant is engraved with a religious scene. It was discovered by a metal detectorist in 1985 near Middleham Castle, the northern home of Richard III, and acquired by the Yorkshire Museum in York for £2.5 million.
Description
The pendant is a 68 grams (2.4 oz) gold pendant with a 10 carats (2.0 g) blue sapphire stone set on one face. It measures approximately 6.4 centimetres (2.5 in) across.
The back panel slides to reveal a hollow interior, which originally contained three and a half tiny discs of silk embroidered with gold thread.[4] The textile contents identify the jewel as a reliquary, containing a fragment of holy cloth. It would have been worn by a high-status lady as the centrepiece for a large necklace.[4] The sapphire may represent heaven[5] and could have been an aid to prayer.
Significance
A high-status item, it may have been owned by a relative of Richard III, possibly his wife, Anne Neville, his mother, Cecily Neville, or his mother-in-law, Anne Beauchamp (1426–92), widow of Warwick the Kingmaker. The blue colour of the sapphire (related to the Virgin Mary), the presence of several female saints and the depiction of the Nativity scene suggest that the jewel may have been intended to assist childbirth. The sapphire set above the Crucifixion may have been intended to have other magical or medicinal qualities as well, being able to cure ulcers, poor eyesight, headaches and stammers. The two words that follow the main Latin text - Tetragrammaton (the Latinised Hebrew name of God) and Ananizapta - may have been used as a charm against epilepsy.[1]
The jewel forms part of the permanent collection of the Yorkshire Museum and has been included in many public exhibitions since its discovery. It first went on public display at the Yorkshire Museum in March 1991, while the export ban was in place but before it was acquired by the museum.[9]
During the 2009–2010 closure of the Yorkshire Museum for a major refurbishment the pendant was displayed in the British Museum as part of the exhibition 'Treasures from Medieval York: England's other capital'.[10] When the museum reopened in August 2010 it was displayed in the Medieval gallery in the exhibition 'Medieval York: The Power and the Glory'.[11] From 2012 to 2013 it was displayed in the 'York 1212: The Making of a City' exhibition, celebrating 800 years since York had received a Royal charter.[12] From March 2015 to January 2016 it featured in the exhibition 'Richard III: Man & Myth'.[13] From 2017 it featured in the 'Medieval York: Capital of the North exhibition'.[14]