vendredi 6 septembre 2013

Scary but sooooooo wondeful!!!

Incredible skeletal remains of 'Catholic saints' that are still dripping in gems and jewellery and have now been dug up by 'Indiana Bones' explorer

  • Art historian Paul Koudounaris hunted them down in secret Catholic vaults
  • Said to be remains of Catholic martyrs dug up from Roman catacombs
  • They were sent to churches to replace relics destroyed in Reformation
  • Some took up to five years to decorate in gold, silver and gemstones
  • But none were actually canonised, so many have been stripped of honours.


    • A relic hunter dubbed 'Indiana Bones' has lifted the lid on a macabre collection of 400-year-old jewel-encrusted skeletons unearthed in churches across Europe.
      Art historian Paul Koudounaris hunted down and photographed dozens of gruesome skeletons in some of the world's most secretive religious establishments.
      Incredibly, some of the skeletons, said to be the remains of early Christian martyrs, were even found hidden away in lock-ups and containers.
      St Valerius in Weyarn: Art historian Paul Koudounaris hunted down and photographed dozens of gruesome skeletons in some of the world's most secretive religious establishments
      St Valerius in Weyarn: Art historian Paul Koudounaris hunted down and photographed dozens of gruesome skeletons in some of the world's most secretive religious establishments

      St Albertus: Laid to rest in the church of St George in Burgrain, Germany, St Albertus was a German philosopher and theologian of the Middle Ages who died in 1280.
      St Felix, at Sursee, Switzerland.
      St Albertus and St Felix: Incredibly, some of the skeletons, said to be the remains of early Christian martyrs, were even found hidden away in lock-ups and containers


      They are now the subject of a new book, which sheds light on the forgotten ornamented relics for the first time.
      Thousands of skeletons were dug up from Roman catacombs in the 16th century and installed in towns around Germany, Austria and Switzerland on the orders of the Vatican.
       
      They were sent to Catholic churches and religious houses to replace the relics destroyed in the wake of the Protestant Reformation in the 1500s.
      St Benedictus: Thousands of skeletons were dug up from Roman catacombs in the 16th century and installed in towns around Germany, Austria and Switzerland on the orders of the Vatican
      St Benedictus: Thousands of skeletons were dug up from Roman catacombs in the 16th century and installed in towns around Germany, Austria and Switzerland on the orders of the Vatican

      St Deodatus in Rheinau, Switzerland
      St Valentinus in Waldsassen
      Spooky: St Deodatus in Rheinau, Switzerland (left) and St Valentinus in Waldsassen (right). The skeletons were sent to Catholic churches and religious houses to replace the relics destroyed in the wake of the Protestant Reformation in the 1500s

      St Getreu in Ursberg, Germany: Mistaken for the remains of early Christian martyrs, the morbid relics, known as the Catacomb Saints, became shrines reminding of the spiritual treasures of the afterlife
      St Getreu in Ursberg, Germany: Mistaken for the remains of early Christian martyrs, the morbid relics, known as the Catacomb Saints, became shrines reminding of the spiritual treasures of the afterlife

      Mistaken for the remains of early Christian martyrs, the morbid relics, known as the Catacomb Saints, became shrines reminding of the spiritual treasures of the afterlife.
      They were also symbols of the Catholic Church's newly found strength in previously Protestant areas.
      Each one was painstakingly decorated in thousands of pounds worth of gold, silver and gems by devoted followers before being displayed in church niches.
      Some took up to five years to decorate.
      St Friedrich at the Benedictine abbey in Melk, Austria: They were also symbols of the Catholic Church's newly found strength in previously Protestant areas
      St Friedrich at the Benedictine abbey in Melk, Austria: They were also symbols of the Catholic Church's newly found strength in previously Protestant areas

      The hand of St Valentin in Bad Schussenreid, Germany
      St Munditia, in the church of St Peter in Munich
      Long dead: The hand of St Valentin in Bad Schussenreid, Germany (left) and St Munditia, in the church of St Peter in Munich (right). By the 19th century they had become morbid reminders of an embarrassing past and many were stripped of their honours and discarded

      They were renamed as saints, although none of them qualified for the title under the strict rules of the Catholic church which require saints to have been canonised.
      But by the 19th century they had become morbid reminders of an embarrassing past and many were stripped of their honours and discarded.
      Mr Koudounaris' new book, Heavenly Bodies: Cult Treasures and Spectacular Saints from the Catacombs, is the first time the skeletons have appeared in print.

      Mr Koudounaris, from Los Angeles, said: 'I was working on another book looking into charnel houses when I came across the existence of these skeletons.
      'As I discovered more about them I had this feeling that it was my duty to tell their fascinating story.
      Lounging louche: aSt Vincentus' ribs are exposed beneath a web of golden leaves In Stams, Austria.
      Lounging louche: aSt Vincentus' ribs are exposed beneath a web of golden leaves In Stams, Austria. Mr Koudounaris' new book, Heavenly Bodies: Cult Treasures and Spectacular Saints from the Catacombs, is the first time the skeletons have appeared in print

      This skull relic was given the generic name of Deodatus as its identity was unknown
      Adorned: St Luciana arrived at the convent in Heiligkreuztal, Germany and was prepared for display by the nuns in Ennetach
      Adorned: St Luciana (right) arrived at the convent in Heiligkreuztal, Germany and was prepared for display by the nuns in Ennetach. The identity of the skull on the left is unknown

      'After they were found in the Roman catacombs the Vatican authorities would sign certificates identifying them as martyrs then they put the bones in boxes and sent them northwards.
      'The skeletons would then be dressed and decorated in jewels, gold and silver, mostly by nuns.
      'They had to be handled by those who had taken a sacred vow to the church - these were believed to be martyrs and they couldn't have just anyone handling them.
      'They were symbols of the faith triamphant and were made saints in the municipalities.
      'One of the reasons they were so important was not for their spiritual merit, which was pretty dubious, but for their social importance.
      'They were thought to be miraculous and really solidified people's bond with a town. This reaffirmed the prestige of the town itself.'
      He added: 'It's impossible to put a modern-day value on the skeletons.'
      Heavenly Bodies: Cult Treasures and Spectacular Saints from the Catacombs is published by Thames and Hudson and costs 18.95 pounds.



      Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2413688/Incredible-skeletal-remains-Catholic-saints-dripping-gems-jewellery-dug-Indiana-Bones-explorer.html#ixzz2e7ZAjRLH
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      mercredi 4 septembre 2013

      Violettes de Nice.......

      I found this petite silk confection today tucked away in the boxes of chateau couture................







      ........a tiny book from Paris filled with papers perfumed with " Violettes de Nice".






      I SO love truffling!!

      A demain mes belles

      xxxxx

      mardi 3 septembre 2013

      Merci Grandmere!!



      Our local village brocante leaves me truffleless year after year but I still get up early and arrive there as everyone unpacks....I suppose it is just a dirty habit!

      Last Sunday at 6am as we drove to the square we passed a sign outside a house that said VIDE MAISON. I know that the house has recently been sold and wondered if it was too early to knock the door to see the goods for sale.

      As I walked up the path Madam came out onto the lawn carrying a chair. She explained that she has sold and is moving this week so she had decided to use the opportunity of the village brocante to sell the items she didn`t want to take with her.

      She told me to follow her into the house and took me to a room filled with bric a brac and boxes. It always seems a little rude rummaging in someone`s house especially at 6am too!

      The room was filled with some hideous vases and such like, but, I always believe there is a little "sleeper" somewhere to be found. A quiet little item that has sat somewhere for so long that the owners almost do not see it any more.

      Then I looked at a corner of the mantelpiece, a hidden shelf tucked at the back and there they were!



      The most divine pair of heavyweight 19th century candelsticks with a Verdi gris green finish to die for!!

      "Oh Not those old things" Madame said "
      Grandmere left them in the garden for years and someone brought them inside when we had a power cut".

      Merci to Grandmere I say......those years outdoors have given them the most divine colour!!!



      I am listing them today...

      a la prochaine mes belles

      xxxx

      lundi 2 septembre 2013

      Just a tiny tipple................




      I found this at the weekend at a very small brocante close to home.
      In the late 1800s champagne taps really became the order of the day as it was believed that a little tipple of fine champagne was good for a pregnant lady. By using the champagne tap the cork could be pierced and a little daily tipple administered without losing the fizz.

      I am not sure that if I had lived in those days I would have been able to exercise such will power to just take a tiny tipple once a day.

      I would be that " up the duff with a croissant in the oven" madam found in a ditch, bonnet askew, bustle in a tree who had fallen from her carriage just a little worse for wear!!!

      I am starting to prise myself away from the chateau attic treasures and I am listing a "Belle Jardiniaire" hatbox this evening.


      and a gorgeous boudoir advertising piece....

      ...A demain mes belles

      xxxx

      samedi 31 août 2013

      A petite person trying to get out.............



      One weekend eight weeks ago, to celebrate my birthday, we went off for an evening with some good friends of ours -  Trevor and Carol -  who run a fabulous chambre d`hote/gite here in Normandie. Not only is the accommodation superb; they have even built a 1940s style bar, aptly named "The Spitfire". Just look at their website here:

      http://www.lesperroquets.net/the-spitfire

      Back to the party............and as the evening progressed with Glen Miller blasting out it became a little raucous ( to say the list) .........and, being a novice, Trevor decided to try and teach me to do a very lively jive, much to everyone's amusement ( as I was doing it wearing a WW2 German tin helmet!!).

       A wonderful evening was had by all and I arrived home, I confess, a little worse for wear!

      On the Monday I had  a pain in the left hand side under my ribs at the back. and then at the front - but just shrugged it off with painkillers. Over the next few days the pain increased, continued to alternate between back and front and, in the middle of the Thursday night, it was so intense that Mark insisted we went off to A & E. Numerous tests were done at the hospital - but  nothing untoward was found and I was sent home filled with stronger painkillers.

      So .............. here I am; eight weeks later and still in a great deal of pain........  so  yesterday my doctor sent me off to a specialist clinic to have a "scintigraphy" bone scan - apparently a "nuclear medicine technique!! I was filled with a radioactive substance - and then scanned!

      The good news is that the scan has shown no problems at all -  and the conclusion is that the pain must be coming from badly torn muscles. The downside is that I can now glow in the dark;  Mark has threatened to buy a Geiger counter and I will click like a dolphin!!

      So..........rest is the order of the day to allow the muscle to repair - but not much chance of that happening, but I'll try. There are two brocantes this weekend and a host of 1920s treasures to work through!!


      But the most amusing part of all this is the scan pictures I have been sent home with. I have quite a tiny little skeleton in here so my excuse about being "big boned" is never going to work again after a chocolate binge!!!
      Around the small skeleton is the fine outline of my actual shape..............Oh please....my derriere looks enormous and somewhat like a lightbulb on the scan!!!

      I shall fight my corner by saying I do not  have a good outline but I also do not have many wrinkles....... as you don`t get wrinkles on a balloon!!

      And the moral of this story is...never dance the Jive with Trevor again!

      A la prochaine mes belles

      xxxxx


      jeudi 29 août 2013

      1920s heaven.............

      Well this was some chic mademoiselle who was "A la mode" with all the latest Paris fashions!
      A few of the first things unpacked...........

       
       
       




       



      These are just the first few boxes unpacked......there are some wonderful monogrammed silk stockings amongst the other treasures that I shall photograph over the next few days too.

      Truffling heaven here!!
      xx

      dimanche 25 août 2013

      Truffling in the dark...............



      I don`t think I have ever bought a whole truffle load of treasures without seeing them first.... but today was an exception!

      A dealer friend, Stephan, who I have known for years telephoned to say he was driving home through the south of France and had stumbled upon a house clearer who had unloaded the attic of a Bordeaux chateau. The chateau-owner had been a judge - and the attics had not been touched since the late 1800s.

      I got this telephone call. " I`ve just found a pile of that girly stuff you sell" Stephan said.

      He told me there were boxes and boxes of costumes, hats, silk shoes, veils, corsage flowers, dresses, texiles ,ostrich feathers and lace, all in their original Paris boxes. They had just that minute been unloaded from the man`s van - and Stephan had been the lucky person to truffle through them first.

      So, it had to be done! My poor friend (who is  more "decorative furniture")  tried his best to describe each of the " girly items" as he calls them, whilst I interrogated him.

      I know he has a very good eye; his shop was totally divine and I was always truffling there. I have known him for years and I trust him to know good from bad!

      The phone call went a little like this as he worked his way through the pile:-

      " It`s a round flowery box with "Bon Marche" written on the side. It has a lid and three old hats covered in flowers inside. Do you want it?"

      " Yes?

       Well in that case there are more of those; do you want those as well?"

      and


      " There are a pile of dresses in silk all very heavy with beady stuff. Do you want them?"

      And then.....

      " There is some of that black toiley stuff - is it any good?"

      and

      " It`s a shoe box with Au Printemps Paris on the lid and inside are pale silk shoes with embroidery on the sides and the insides are purple silk"

      "What are the heels like?" I asked.

      " Sort of splayed at the top, thinner on the way down and splayed at the bottom"

      " Yes !! yes!! yes!!" I shouted!

      "Oh well......in that case there are boxes of soft kid shoes with the same shaped heels in their Paris boxes too"

      And then..........

      " There is also a box with  tissue paper and what looks like a beaded swimming cap like a 1920s flapper thing all covered in pearls.Do you want it?"

      And so the conversation went on.

      He will be coming back up country in the next few days and I cannot wait to see what I have bought " blind".


      My imagination is running wild to say the least. As soon as I receive my purchases I will photograph them for you.


      Yours 'trying to wait patiently at Le Petit Chateau'  !
      xx

      samedi 24 août 2013

      Ssshhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!

      All quiet at the chateau as we have family visiting!




      Shhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!

      A huge brocante tomorrow morning....family visit or not I shall be gone at first light!!

      A demain mes belles
      xx

      mardi 20 août 2013

      An angel at the chateau...............



      I had to do it!! I HAD to!! I simply couldn`t leave him behind!!



      This delicieux 19th century ( huge!) angel came from the private chapel of a small chateau.


      He came home to our chateau wrapped to within an inch of his life in quilts on the back seat of the car whilst wearing a seat belt!


      He will live on the fireplace for a while so I can gaze at him and decide where he will sit eventually!




      Sometimes a girl is allowed a treat!!

      So......what shall I call him?

      A la prochaine mes belles
      xx

      jeudi 15 août 2013

      Pulling out the stops!!





      I love these quirky porcelain boutons. They came from the stock of a 19th century Piano tuner and I think they would originally have been attached to the ends of organ stoppers.



      I found them in a large batch and they were even with a medal awarded to the piano tuner dated 1861 for his services to industry.



      Perfect for any period projects, to add to kitchen drawers or any decorative jewellery!

      A demain mes belles
      xx