The shrine was made in Tournai or its immediate vicinity, once part of a prolific production that is now all but lost; it has been attributed[5] to the workshop that was founded by Nicholas of Verdun, the leading goldsmith of Mosan art, who completed the reliquary of Our Lady[6] in 1205. It is conserved in the Treasury of the cathedral of Tournai, housed in the former chapterhouse.
Two years following the completion of this reliquary, a separate one was made for the head of Saint Eleutherius, now lost with its contents.[7]
Gallery
Details of the reliquary
Face A - left.
Face A - right.
Face B - left.
Face B - right.
Notes
^"Doubtless the most sumptuous of all midthirteenth century reliquaries now remaining to us" was the opinion of Marvin Chauncey Ross ("The Reliquary of Saint Amandus", The Art Bulletin18.2 [June 1936: 187–197] p. 187).
^Otto von Falke and H. Frauberger, Die Deutsche Schmeltzarbeiten des Mittlealters, (Frankfort) 1904:105, gives the date of completion.
^The reliquary shrine was fully described and discussed by J. Warichez, La cathédrale de Tournai et son chapître (Wettern) 1934, vol. I illus. pls. XVIII and XIX.
^By Max Creutz, in P. Clemen, ed. Belgischer Kunstdenkmäler (Munich) 1923:147.