Enamel and Limousin goldsmithery
Throughout the Middle-Ages, Limousin witnessed a goldsmithery activity which would take the region to the forefront of a production distributed all over 13th century Europe.
Enjoying a strategic location at the trading crossroads of Europe and for the sponsorship of prestigious patrons, the workshops of Limousin will promote their know-how and their skills through enamel craft with more than 120 000 pieces spread far and wide . Today more than 12 000 of these pieces are on display in the world’s largest museums and in Limousin.


This production of goldsmithery is unparalleled in the entire history of medieval Europe. In fact, the Work of Limoges, together with Hispanic great projects, produced ten times more pieces than the combined products of Meuse, Rhineland, Saxony, England and Scandinavia’s workshops.
The production is unique due to the quantity of articles created and also to the nature of the pieces.
The Work comprises of Reliquary caskets, Christian liturgical pieces (crosses, candle holders, cruets, enamelled basins….), plates for liturgical garments (pinafore gown panels fastened with a large brooch, decorated with mitre, gloves, crosier…) as well as plates for objects of secular and heraldic use (small receptacles, candlesticks, ceremonial chairs, cups, bottles, fibulae, sword pommels, chamfrons, bridles, harnesses, stirrups, hunting breastplates, ointment pots, fibulae for perfume…)

OPUS LEMOVICENSE
The first text to mention the Works of Limoges, written in 1167-69, relates to a “book cover” from Saint-Victor Abbey in Paris, mentioned by a cleric from Thomas Becket’s entourage. This text was soon followed by others: book covers are further mentioned, this time in the South of Italy, in Santa-Maria de Veglia, in 1197, “Limoges Crosses” turned up next to much different goods, in the Bapaume Tariff of Tolls in 1202, some “Limoges Basilicas” are offered around 1215 to Saints-Sergius-and-Bacchus of Rome by Pope Innocent III, the very Pope who authorized the Works of Limoges.
Some “coffros Lemovinceres” are bequeathed to the church of the Chapelle en Brie by the Bishop of Paris Peter of Nemours. In 1295, the pontifical inventories listed candlesticks and chests from Limoges.


WHERE WERE THE WORKSHOPS SITUATED ?
The exact location and organization of the Limousin enamellers workshops remain unknowned. The great consistency for most of the productionsuggests a very concentrated activity, in the same town or even same district of it.
But pieces of works, outstanding through their technical virtuosity, like the Poitiers Crosier or furthermore, were the Bible of Souvigny’s medallions manufactured in Limoges itself or in other centres?
In some cases, a strong stylistic uniqueness questions the location of one workshop’s activity, evidently of Limousin schooling: did the artists who executed the Mozac Reliquary Casket work in the Aquitaine city or did they move to Auvergne? The question is even more pertinent for the authors of Orense Works or for the creations meant for Italy.
Some similarities enable the identification of the artist beyond any doubt, but should one envision a few rigorously well organized or even specialized large establishments or rather small one-master studios? The complexity of the correlation between Works favours the second scenario.
(Source - Elisabeth TABURET-DELAHAYE / Birth and Evolution of the Work of Limoges)
Assuming then, that the enamellers worshops would have multiplied in Limoges and that a few others would have established themselves in other parts of Limousin, mostly in order to meet local demand, manifestation of a piety originating more specifically from monastic or canonical environments, is not just a bold assumption.
The consequently acquired and granted technical and artistic mastery which atracted a larger demand well beyond the mere local environment and allowed diversification, appears as a logical outcome of this specialization. The cost was significantly cheaper than that of pure goldsmithery while the end product could be most stunning. Besides, Limoges location, notably through Saint-Martial and other Limousin religious establishement such as Uzerche, Tulle or Grandmont, was excellent within Southern Europe communication networks.
Limoges merchants undoubtly understood the full potential of a partnership with Saint-Martial Abbey and of that of an efficient operation of the workshops as well as how such a “niche” would help meeting the most diverse demands.
(Source – Mediéval Limousin, Temps des créations / Bernadette BARRIERE)


Tabernacles de Cherves
THE LAST BLOOM END OF XIII AND XIV CENTURY
An important turning point in the evolution of the Work of Limoges occurs around 1240-1250. As in the beginning of the century, the impetus appears to arise essentially from contacts with the art of North of the Loire regions; it was supported by orders from these very regions.
The renewal is apparent in the style but also in the shapes and the natures of manufactured works. Although some objects such as book cover plates appear to be scarcely produced, others like gemellions are newly favoured. Predominantly, funerary art gains momentum, of which the earliest positively dated example is provided by the tombs of Saint Louis’s children, John (1248) and Blanche (1243).
The appetite for half-relief medallions in a very plastic style decorating large reliquary caskets and altars, is not without connection with recumbent effigies embossed in copper. The evolution towards a more formidable and simultaneously more robust and more sober processing, captures the stylistic changes seen on the Ile de France worksites around 1240.
The renewal translates into enmalled decoration. The plant themes live on but distinctly deplete throughout the second half of the XIII century, while heraldic scenery, conceivably initiated by funerary orders, spreads to boxes, gemellions or candlesticks.
But as per the previous period, the Work of Limoges seems subjected to diverse trends in the second half of XIII century whereas demonstrating a strong commitment to traditions and Modus Operanti favoured in the previous decades.
Lastly non-enamelled sculptural works, like figurines or head reliquaries, appear to achieve lasting success. The later indeed comprises the latest models of the Work of Limoges handed down: the Head Reliquary of Saint Ferreol, preserved in Nexon and manufactured in 1346 by Aymeric Chretien “goldsmith of Limoges Castle”.
The extinction of Limoges workshops is historically imputed to the ransack of the city by the Black Prince troops in 1370, yet it seems to have progressively evolved throughout the previous decades.
(Source - Elisabeth TABURET-DELAHAYE / Birth and Evolution of the Work of Limoges)
