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Pendant Pope John Paul II - 1982

Pendant Pope John Paul II
    Pendant Pope John Paul II

This pendant is part of the so-called 'Papal Collection', which was produced by the Wedgwood and Wedgwood Group factories in 1982 to commemorate the visit of His Holiness Pope John Paul II to the United Kingdom on 28th May 1982. This visit was the first visit to Britain by a reigning pope. He has been invited by the Bishops of England, Scotland, and Wales. The pendant features the Papal Tiara in a round white relief on blue jasper, which is mounted in a decorated setting of gold plated metal. It comes with a necklace of the same material.

This pendant is part of the so-called 'Papal Collection', which was produced by the Wedgwood and Wedgwood Group factories in 1982 to commemorate the visit of His Holiness Pope John Paul II to the United Kingdom on 28th May 1982. This visit was the first visit to Britain by a reigning pope. He has been invited by the Bishops of England, Scotland, and Wales. The pendant features the Papal Tiara in a round white relief on blue jasper, which is mounted in a decorated setting of gold plated metal. It comes with a necklace of the same material.

  • Type of object: Ornamental ware/jewellery and accessories
  • Mark: unmarked
  • Year first produced: 1982
  • Body: Jasper
  • Glaze: Unglazed
  • Material: Ceramic, gold and gold plated metals
  • Decoration: Gilded, ornamented
  • Accession number: .
  • Dimensions: 25 mm (diameter of setting), 19 mm (diameter of jasper medallion), 470 mm (length of necklace)

Related people

  • Pope John Paul II

    Pope John Paul II

    Pope John Paul II reigned as Pope of the Catholic church and sovereign of Vatican City from 16th October 1978 until his death on 2nd April 2005. With its 26 years and 168 days his pontificate was the second-longest documented in history. Only Pope Pius IX reigned longer. John Paul II was born in 1920 as Karol Jozef Wojtyla in the Polish town Wadowice. He was beatified by his successor Pope Benedict XVI on 1st May 2011. It is widely said that John Paul II significantly improved the Catholic Church's relations with Judaism, Islam, the Eastern Orthodox Church, and the Anglican Communion and was most instrumental in ending communism in Poland and eventually the whole of Europe.

Glossary

  • Jasper

    Jasper

    A fine-grained stoneware body developed by Josiah Wedgwood I in the mid 1770s, and the ceramic ware most associated with the name. The most famous colour combination known today is the traditional blue and white, which is usually decorated with classical bas reliefs.

    With changes in architectural styles and the rise in popularity of neo-classical styles of interior decoration Josiah Wedgwood began a series of experiments to create a new ceramic material that would complement the new fashions. Thousands of meticulously recorded experiments were carried out to make a stoneware body that was capable of taking a mineral oxide stain throughout. The search for the jasper body absorbed much of Wedgwood's energy and time, the result being his most important contribution to ceramic history.

    The majority of the actual trials were carried out between December 1772 and December 1774, Josiah writing on the 17 March of the latter year: ‘have for some time past been reviewing my experiments, & I find such Roots, such Seeds as would open & branch out wonderfully if I could nail myself down to the cultivation of them for a year or two'.

    By January 1775 he was ‘absolute' in the production of jasper with coloured grounds. He was also in a position to advertise that he could manufacture bas reliefs, ranging from large plaques to small cameos for mounting as jewellery. The range of colours steadily increased, and by March 1776 Josiah was sending his first specimens of yellow to London. By September experiments were in hand for black jasper. Certainly by Spring of 1777 he was carrying out further experiments to perfect a surface ‘dip' to provide deeper coloured grounds for his cameos; and by the middle of December 1777, he was able to offer Bentley a choice of ‘Green - yellow - lalock [lilac] etc. to the colour of the rooms', referring to the tones favoured by their mutual acquaintance the architect Robert Adam.