Luttrell Table Carpet 1520–38 BurrellCollection GlasgowMuseum

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Luttrell Table Carpet 1520–38 BurrellCollection GlasgowMuseum

description

Summary

"Luttrell Table Carpet", Flanders, c.1520–38. Burrell Collection of Glasgow Museum. wool, silk, silver metal-wrapped threads (wefts), wool (warps), 18 warps to the inch. 1.930m x 5.510m[1]
History: Probably made for Dunster Castle in Somerset, or East Quantoxhead Hall, Somerset, seats of the Luttrell family, feudal barons of Dunster. Showing in its centre the arms of Luttrell impaling Wyndham with other earlier matches of the Luttrells in the border, was probably made to celebrate his wedding of Sir Andrew Luttrell (1484–1538) to Margaret Wyndham (d.1580).
Text of Somerset Heraldry Society, Newsletter Summer 2003
[1]: "The Luttrell table carpet must have been one of the prize possessions of Dame Margaret Luttrell, for when she died in 1580, widow of Sir Andrew Luttrell of Dunster and East Quantoxhead, she left “her best and largest carpet”, a magnificent example of heraldic tapestry, to her eldest daughter, Margaret. Sir Andrew Luttrell had been a servitor at the coronation of Anne Boleyn; Margaret was maid of honour to Queen Elizabeth. She married Peter Edgcumbe of Mount Edgcumbe in Devonshire in 1555. The carpet passed into the possession of Lord Mount Edgcumbe of Cotehele House, Cornwall. After two centuries, it was acquired from there by Howard Carter, the famous Egyptologist. It was offered for sale at Christies on 13th July 1922 but was not sold. It was exhibited in 1927/8 in America in both the Pittsburgh and Chicago art galleries and was bought by Sir William Burrell on 18th December 1928. It was used as a table carpet at Dunster Castle or East Quantoxhead and measures 18' 3" by 6'7". It is either of English or Flemish origin from the period 1520-30, but might possibly be after the death of Sir Andrew Luttrell in 1538. It is a mixture of wool, silk and metal and must have been woven to commemorate his marriage in 1514 with Margaret, daughter of Sir Thomas Wyndham of Felbrigg, Norfolk, there being no later arms included. The Luttrell carpet is possibly the earliest known surviving example of an English table carpet".

See detailed description in Maxwell Lyte, Sir Henry, A History of Dunster and of the Families of Mohun and Luttrell, Part I, London, 1909

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Date

1500 - 1600
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Source

Wikimedia Commons
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public domain

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