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A Merchant of Ivory in 16th-Century Paris: The Estate Inventory of Chicart Bailly
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While we sometimes think about the past as distant and dusty, portals that can shoot through centuries exist. The estate inventory of Chicart Bailly is one of those gateways, and through its many p...
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27 April 2023

While we sometimes think about the past as distant and dusty, portals that can shoot through centuries exist. The estate inventory of Chicart Bailly is one of those gateways, and through its many pages we are transported back into an entirely different material culture – Paris at the turn of the 16th century.
Chicart, whose death in June 1533 led to the creation of the document, was part of a legacy of working with ivory, bone, and precious woods as a tabletier. This transcription and annotated translation of the inventory provides a key for new insights into this previously understudied profession -- the objects made, the varied media used, and the world of the Paris’ tabletiers.
Chicart, whose death in June 1533 led to the creation of the document, was part of a legacy of working with ivory, bone, and precious woods as a tabletier. This transcription and annotated translation of the inventory provides a key for new insights into this previously understudied profession -- the objects made, the varied media used, and the world of the Paris’ tabletiers.
Price: $144.00
Pages: 362
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: AVISTA Studies in the History of Medieval Technology, Science, and Art
Publication Date:
27 April 2023
ISBN: 9789004534681
Format: Hardcover
"Baker’s book is a highly welcome contribution, and with its wealth of documentation will stimulate much discussion over a wide area. [...] Baker has performed a signal service by making available for the first time a primary documentary source that will fuel scholarship for years to come." – Paul Williamson, in: The Burlington Magazine (July 2024), p.752
Katherine Baker, Ph.D., 2013, University of Virginia, is Associate Professor at the Arkansas State University. Her interests focus on the intersection of text and objects, and how documents can help us understand the things made in the past.