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Title

Textil fragment from the tomb of don Felipe at Villalcázar de Sirga (Palencia)

Generic classification
Textiles
Date
1275-1300
Century
Second half of the 13th c.
Cultural context / style
Medieval. Hispano Moresque
Dimensions
13 3/8 x 4 3/4 in.
Technique
Woven
Iconography / Theme
Motivos geométricos
Provenance
Church of Santa María la Blanca (Villalcázar de Sirga, Palencia, Spain)
Current location
The Art Institute of Chicago (Chicago, United States)
Inventory Number in Current Collection
1950.1150
Inscriptions / Marks

Kufic inscription: blessing (translated)

Object history

Fragment of the clothing with which the infante don Felipe (died in 1274) was buried in Villalcázar de Sirga (Palencia). This piece was in the hands of the antiquarian Dikran G. Kelekian, who in 1950 sold it to the Art Institute of Chicago. This piece would be part of the same garment, cloak or mantle of Don Felipe, of which testimonies are preserved in other institutions such as The Hispanic Society of America, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (46.156.8), Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, Museo Arqueológico Nacional, Madrid, Cooper Hewitt, New York, Koninklikjke Musea voor Kunst en Geschiedenis Brussels and Musée National du Moyen Age, Paris.

Fragments of the clothing from the tombs of Don Felipe de Castilla and his wife, Doña Inés de Guevara y Cisneros, in Villalcázar de Sirga (Palencia) are now distributed among various museum institutions. Most of the fragments of that collection are preserved in the Museo Arqueológico Nacional. In 1844 this textile treasure was transferred to Madrid by order of Queen Isabel II. But the truth is that, apart from the repertoire destined for the aforementioned public collection, many other pieces of the same origin were dispersed among different dealers and collectors. For this reason today there are testimonies of the same trousseau scattered in various places in the United States and Europe. Apart from the one in question, two other pieces are preserved in the Art Institute itself, other fragments are in the Instituto Valencia de Don Juan in Madrid, in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,at The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, at Cooper-Hewitt Museum in New York, at Koninklijke Musea voor Kunst en Geschiedenis Brussels, at The Hispanic Society of America, in New York, at the Musées de la Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie de Lyon, at the Centre de Documentació i Museu Tèxtil de Terrassa (Barcelona) (num. 2977, no. 300, no. 66, no. 6363), or at the Museu Episcopal de Vic (Barcelona) (num. 10545, no. 6390, no. 6391).

The tomb of the infante Don Felipe, and that of his second wife, Doña Inés de Guevara y Cisneros are located in Santa María la Blanca de Villalcázar de Sirga (Palencia). The prince married several times, the first time with Cristina de Noruega -who is buried in the collegiate church of Covarrubias (Burgos)-; although who accompanies him in his resting place in the church of the Templar order, is his second wife, Doña Inés de Guevara y Cisneros, as revealed by the coats of arms on the sarcophagus and the checkerboard of the mortuary cushion. Amador de los Ríos identified the Infanta with Doña Inés de Castro (Amador de los Ríos, 1878, pp. 109-126). Faustino Menéndez Pidal refuted this ascription, pointing to Doña Inés Cisneros Guevara, an identification endorsed by Franco Mata (Franco Mata, 2024, pp. 1605).

The clothing that both spouses wore in their tomb was exhumed in the 19th century and transferred to Madrid. Although there were two transfers to that institution, the first was in February 1845 by the political head of Palencia to the Ministry of the Interior, from where it went to the National Museum of Natural Sciences; then, in 1867, it went from there to the newly founded National Archaeological Museum. These were the pieces: "a piece of dress, another of the tonelete, another of the veil, another of the ruff, another of the cheeks, another of the shirt, another of the cord or girdle, a bag or ridicule, a piece of the armor of his cap, a shoe without sole, a small sole found in his tomb, a cap of tissue of the infante D. Felipe, husband of the infanta Daisy, the infanta of Palencia, and a piece of the armor of his cap. Felipe, husband of the Infanta Da. Ines de Castro, a piece of shirt (exp. 1868/103-B-XI) ("Inventory of objects deposited in the National Archaeological Museum from the Museum of Natural Sciences and the National Library"). Two years later, on October 20, 1869, other textiles from Villalcázar de Sirga, donated by the notary of Palencia, Don Juan Martinez Guerra, entered the same museum. In the book of donations of the museum it barely appears" piece of fabric taken from the tombs of Villasirga, belonging to...". Several blank lines follow the text without completing the references that one would expect.(Franco Mata, 2024, p. 1606).

The infant's cloak has been recomposed with the existing fabrics in the National Archaeological Museum (Inv. Nos. 50,549 and 51,016), during the process of which the existing fragments were documented in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Musées de la Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie in Lyon, The Art Institute of Chicago, the Musées Royaux d'Art et d'Histoire in Brussels, the Instituto Valencia de don Juan (Inv. No. 2,069) and the Cooper Union Museum. It was woven in a single piece and cut in a practically semicircular shape. It is woven in silk in shades of blue, ecru, red and yellow, and also in gold thread. At the ends it bears two wide stripes on which the word "baraka" (blessing) is repeated in kufic inscriptions.

Another fragment of fabric preserved in the National Archaeological Museum corresponds to half front or half back of the garments of the infant, or of his wife, perhaps the pellote (Inv. No. 51010). It is a brocade with a long taffeta weave and a lace pattern of eight in gold; the background is in ecru and blue tones. Pieces of this same fabric are conserved in the Instituto Valencia de Don Juan (Inv. No. 2079) and in The Hispanic Society of Art, New York -probably corresponding to the lower edge of the dress-. A band of quatrefoils appears after the lacquer drawing, between two rows of inscriptions in which the kufic references to "blessing" are repeated. Other similar fragments are also preserved in the National Archaeological Museum (1976/130/2 and 1976/130/3). As for the piece that is inventoried in the same museum with the number 51049, it is a silk brocade with parallel stripes of lively colors and different drawing, but where laceria and kufic motifs are still combined.

The hood of the Infante Felipe (National Archaeological Museum, Inv. No. 50869) came to the institution through the Natural History Cabinet. For its part, the cushion on which Doña Inés rested her head has a checkerboard motif, related to her lineage, in gold and black. The National Archaeological Museum also conserves the infanta's chapín (Museo Arqueológico Nacional, Inv. No. 51884), which came to the institution after passing through the Cabinet of Antiquities of the National Library (Franco Mata, 2024, pp. 1605-1610).

 

Bibliography
Citation:

María José Martínez Ruiz, "Textil fragment from the tomb of don Felipe at Villalcázar de Sirga (Palencia)" in Nostra et Mundi. Cultural Heritage from Castile and Leon around the world, Fundación Castilla y León, 2025. https://inventario.nostraetmundi.com/en/work/130