The Prince's death mask

Dublin Core

Title

The Prince's death mask

Subject

Jacobite

Description

Prince Charles Edward Stuart's (1720 - 1788) death mask. Thought to be a copy of an original made by Barnar dina Lucchesi, one of a family of modellers in Rome. brought this mask to Scotland in 1839. The mask had been handed down through his family. Lucchesi settled in Glasgow where he continued to work as a modeller until 1863. Lucchesi fell on hard times and some of his belongings, including the mask, were sold. Eventually the mask ended up being purchased by a sculptor named Ferguson. When it came into Ferguson's possession it was said to have hairs attached adhering to the eyebrows and eyelids! This bronze cast of the death mask was loaned to the museum in 1951 by the Scottish independence campaigner Wendy Wood.

Source

1745_rising,objects,jacobite

Contributor

vanessa

Type

Physical Object

Identifier

6

Date Modified

05/04/2021

Extent

L 250 mm x 160 mm

Medium

West Highland Museum

Spatial Coverage

find,55.85874347803429,-4.250679016113282;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

West Highlands Museum

Europeana Type

TEXT

Physical Object Item Type Metadata

Prim Media

464

Material

bronze

Object Number

749

Citation

“The Prince's death mask,” West Highalnds Museum, accessed January 23, 2025, https://whm100.org/omeka/items/show/15.

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