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Commemorative and portrait medals gained popularity during the Renaissance and medal making spread out beyond the Italian peninsula. In the Netherlands, the period of intense economic change and new prosperity of the 17th century coincided with a new interest in medals as a portable, reproducible art form suitable for depicting a wide range of subjects. Some medals depict important people, like rulers, elected officials, naval and military heroes; some show events, such as significant battles, treaties signed, marriages; and others show buildings or institutions that spoke of the United Provinces’ prosperity and commerce, like the town hall and the stock exchange in Amsterdam. The two sides of this medal show the goddesses Venus, for love, and Juno, for marriage.
Requires Photography
Marriage Medal with Love (Venus) and Marriage (Juno)
Pieter van Abeele (Dutch, 1608–1684)
about 1655
Credit Line
The Maida and George Abrams Collection
Accession Number2021.202
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsEurope
ClassificationsNumismatics – Coins
Commemorative and portrait medals gained popularity during the Renaissance and medal making spread out beyond the Italian peninsula. In the Netherlands, the period of intense economic change and new prosperity of the 17th century coincided with a new interest in medals as a portable, reproducible art form suitable for depicting a wide range of subjects. Some medals depict important people, like rulers, elected officials, naval and military heroes; some show events, such as significant battles, treaties signed, marriages; and others show buildings or institutions that spoke of the United Provinces’ prosperity and commerce, like the town hall and the stock exchange in Amsterdam. The two sides of this medal show the goddesses Venus, for love, and Juno, for marriage.
Inscriptionsrecto, around edge: Een Haert Dat Reine Liefde Draagt is Doffrhant Die My Behaagt
verso, around edge: Ik Kroon oprechte Liefde Altoos Met Trouring Eindeloos
Verso, lower edge: PVA
verso, around edge: Ik Kroon oprechte Liefde Altoos Met Trouring Eindeloos
Verso, lower edge: PVA
ProvenanceOctober 3, 1995, purchased at auction by George S. and Maida Abrams, Newton, MA [see note]; 2021, gift of George S. Abrams to the MFA. (Accession Date: April 14, 2021)
NOTE: According to a handwritten bid list by George S. Abrams dated October 3, 1995.
NOTE: According to a handwritten bid list by George S. Abrams dated October 3, 1995.