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Niello is a black mixture, usually of , , , and ,Ingredients vary; see below used as an on engraved or etched metal, especially silver. It is added as a powder or paste, then fired until it melts or at least softens, and flows or is pushed into engraved lines in the metal. It hardens and blackens when cool, and the niello on the flat surface is polished off to show the filled lines in black, contrasting with the polished metal around it.Levinson, 528; Craddock It may also be used with other techniques to cover larger areas, as seen in the sky in the illustrated here. The metal where niello is to be placed is often roughened to provide a . In many cases, especially in objects that have been buried underground, where the niello is now lost, the roughened surface indicates that it was once there.

Niello was used on a variety of objects including sword hilts, chalices, plates, horns, adornment for horses, jewellery such as bracelets, rings, pendants, and small fittings such as strap-ends, purse-bars, buttons, belt buckles and the like.Levinson, 528; Osborne, 595 It was also used to fill in the letters in inscriptions engraved on metal. Periods when engraving filled in with niello has been used to make full images with figures have been relatively few, but the practice has produced some significant achievements. In ornament, niello came to have competition from , with far wider colour possibilities, which eventually displaced it in most of Europe.

The name derives from the nigellum for the substance,Levinson, 528 or from nigello or neelo, the word for "black".Osborne, 594 Though historically most common in Europe, niello has also been produced in many parts of Asia and the .Osborne, 595


History

Bronze Age
There are a number of claimed uses of niello from the Mediterranean , all of which have been the subjects of disputes as to the actual composition of the materials used, that have not been conclusively settled, despite some decades of debate. The earliest claimed use of niello appears in late Bronze Age in Syria, around 1800 BC, in inscriptions in on .Smith and Stevenson, 114 In it appears a little later, in the tomb of Queen , who lived about 1550 BC, on a dagger decorated with a lion chasing a calf in a rocky landscape in a style that shows Greek influence, or at least similarity to the roughly contemporary daggers from , and perhaps other objects in the tomb.Smith and Stevenson, 114 (the identity of the queen in this burial has undergone revision in recent decades); Lucas and Harris, 250–251 for a more sceptical account.

At about the same time of c.1550 BC it appears on several daggers from royal tombs at (in Grave Circle A and Grave Circle B), especially in long thin scenes running along the centre of the blade. These show the violence typical of the art of , as well as a sophistication in both technique and figurative imagery that is startlingly original in a Greek context. There are a number of scenes of lions hunting and being hunted, attacking men and being attacked; most are now in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens.Thomas, 178–182; Dickinson, 99–100

These are in a mixed-media technique often called metalmalerei (German: "painting in metal"), which involves using gold and silver inlays or applied foils with black niello and the bronze, which would originally have been brightly polished. As well as providing a black colour, the niello was also used as the adhesive to hold the thin gold and silver foils in place.Thomas, 179–182; Dickinson, 99–100

Byblos in Syria, where niello first appears, was something of an Egyptian outpost on the , and many scholars think that it was highly-skilled metalworkers from Syria who introduced the technique to both Egypt and Mycenaean Greece. The can most easily be explained by some combination of influence from the broader traditions of Mesopotamian art where somewhat comparable imagery had been produced for over a thousand years in and the like, and some (such as the physique of the figures) from , although no early niello has been found on .Thomas, 171–182, 193; Dickinson, 99–100

A decorated metal cup, the " Cup" from has also been claimed to use niello decoration. However, controversy has continued since the 1960s as to whether the material used on all these pieces actually is niello, and a succession of increasingly sophisticated scientific tests have failed to provide evidence of the presence of the sulphurous compounds which define niello.Maryon, 161; Craddock; Enkomi Bowl It has been suggested that these artefacts, or at least the daggers, use in fact a technique of patinated metal that may be the same as the Corinthian bronze known from ancient literature, and is similar to the Japanese Shakudō.Craddock and Giumlia-Mair, 109–120


Persia
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Sasanian niello is a decorative technique used in metalworking during the Sasanian Empire (224-651 AD). This technique was particularly popular in Sasanian silverwork, adorning objects such as plates, bowls, ewers, and jewelry. The designs often featured scenes of hunting, courtly life, animals, and mythical creatures.Oudbashi, Omid, Layah Ziaii-Bigdeli, and Federico Carò. 2024. “Sasanian Niello Inlay: Microanalytical Investigation of a Silver Oval Bowl with Tigers and Grapevines.” Studies in Conservation (20240520): 1-9:1–9.

Sasanian niello is notable for its fine craftsmanship and the skillful use of negative space to create detailed imagery. But in general, Niello was rarely used in Sasanian metalwork, which could use it inventively. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has Sasanian shallow bowls or dishes where in one case it forms the stripes on a tiger,In a way similar to the Roman "Hoxne Tiger" of the and in another the horns and hoofs of goats in relief, as well as parts of the king's weapons. This relief use of niello seems to be paralleled from this period in only one piece of Byzantine silver.Prudence Oliver Harper, Silver Vessels of the Sasanian Period: Royal imagery, 64–65 (see note 128 in particular), 1981, Metropolitan Museum of Art, , 9780870992483, google books

A silver oval bowl decorated with tigers and grapevines, attributed to the Sasanian period of Iran (3rd-7th centuries CE) and held in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art, was examined using non-invasive analytical techniques to identify the composition of the and the niello inlay used in its decoration. The study revealed that the bowl is made of a silver-copper alloy containing approximately 3 wt.% copper. The niello inlays were found to consist solely of silver sulfide (). This composition closely resembles that of early Roman niello inlays, suggesting a possible technological link between Roman and Sasanian metalworkers during this period.Oudbashi, Omid, Layah Ziaii-Bigdeli, and Federico Carò. 2024. “Sasanian Niello Inlay: Microanalytical Investigation of a Silver Oval Bowl with Tigers and Grapevines.” Studies in Conservation (20240520): 1-9:1–9.


Roman, Byzantine and medieval
Niello is then hardly found until the Roman period; or perhaps it first appears around this point.Craddock; Maryon, 161 Pliny the Elder (AD 23–79) describes the technique as Egyptian, and remarks the oddness of decorating silver in this way.Lucas and Harris, 249–250 Some of the earliest uses, from 1–300 AD, seem to be small statuettes and of big cats, where niello is used for the stripes of and the spots on ; these were very common in Roman art, as creatures of . The animal repertoire of was somewhat different, and provides brooches with niello stripes on a and a cat.Johns, 175–177 From about the 4th century, it was used for ornamental details such as borders and for inscriptions in late Roman silver, such as a dish and bowl in the Mildenhall Treasure and pieces in the , including Christian church plate. It was often used on spoons, which were often inscribed with the owner's name, or later crosses. This type of use continued in Byzantine metalwork, from where it passed to Russia.

It is very common in metalwork, with examples including the , Strickland Brooch, and the , generally forming the background for motifs carried in the metal, but also used for rather crude geometric decoration of spots, triangles and stripes on small relatively everyday fittings such as strap-ends in base metal. There is similar use in , Viking, and other types of Early Medieval jewellery and metalwork, especially in northern Europe.Solberg, S., (2003) Jernalderen I Norge, page 158. Oslo, Norway: J.W. Cappelens Forlag Similar uses continued in the traditional styles of jewellery of the Middle East until at least the 20th century. The Late Roman buckle from Gaul illustrated here shows a relatively high quality early example of this sort of decoration.

In colourful champlevé enamel largely replaced it, although it continued to be used for small highlights of ornament, and some high quality began to use it for small figurative images as part of large pieces, very often applied as plaques. These began to exploit the possibilities of niello for carrying a precise graphic style. The back of the (1020s) has outline engravings of figures filled with niello, the black lines forming the figures on a gold background. Later Romanesque pieces began to use a more densely engraved style, where the figures are mostly carried by the polished metal, against a black background. Romanesque champlevé enamel was applied to a cheap copper or copper alloy form, which was a great advantage, but for some pieces the prestige of precious metal was desired, and a small number of nielloed silver pieces from c. 1175–1200 adopt the ornamental vocabulary developed in .Zarnecki, 287, 283, 285

A group of high-quality pieces apparently originating in the , which use both niello and enamel, include what may be the earliest with scenes of the murder and burial of , probably from a few years after his death in 1170 (). Eight large nielloed plaques decorate the sides and roof, six with figures seen close-up at less than half-length, in a very different style from the cruder full-length figures in the many Limoges enamel equivalent reliquaries.Zarnecki, 302

from the 13th century continued to develop this pictorial use of niello, which reached its high point in the Renaissance. Niello continued to be widely used for simple ornament on small pieces, though at the top end goldsmiths were more likely to use black enamel to fill inscriptions on rings and the like. Niello was also used on , in this case over steel, as well as weapons.

File:Brooch in the Form of a Panther MET sf47-100-18s3.jpg|Roman brooch in the form of a panther, copper alloy inlaid with silver and niello, 100-300 File:Spoon with a Panther MET sf17-192-254s1.jpg|Silver-plated fancy bronze spoon with a panther, Roman, 3rd-4th century, found in France File:Mount for Spear Shaft MET DP30251.jpg|Mount for Spear Shaft, Late Roman, c. 400 File:Byzantine - Marriage Ring with Scenes from the Life of Christ - Walters 4515 - Right.jpg|Gold Byzantine wedding ring with scenes from the Life of Christ, 6th century File:Liturgical colander MNMA Cl23248.jpg|Niello ornamentation and inscription on a silver 6th-century liturgical strainer, France File:Plate with Monogram MET sf52-25-2d2.jpg|Monogram in the centre of an otherwise plain Byzantine dish, 610-613 File:Brit Mus Fuller Brooch.jpg|The , Anglo-Saxon, 9th century File:Early medieval silver strap end (FindID 538973).jpg|Anglo-Saxon silver strap end in the , now only with traces of niello left. 9th century File:Weltliche Schatzkammer Wien (185).JPG|Niello-filled lettering on the side of the , c. 1024-25 File:Niello-filled paten from Trzemeszno, Poland, fourth quarter of the 12th century.png|Niello-filled paten from Trzemeszno, Poland, fourth quarter of the 12th century


Renaissance niello
Some Renaissance goldsmiths in Europe, such as and Antonio del Pollaiuolo in Florence, decorated their works, usually in silver, by the metal with a burin, after which they filled up the hollows produced by the burin with a black enamel-like compound made of silver, lead and sulphur. The resulting design, called a niello, was of much higher contrast and thus much more visible. Sometimes niello decoration was incidental to the objects, but some pieces such as paxes were effectively pictures in niello. A range of religious objects such as and might be decorated in this way, as well as secular objects such as knife handles, rings and other jewellery, and fittings such as buckles. It appears that niello-work was probably a specialist activity of some goldsmiths, not practiced by others, and most work came from Florence or .Levinson, 528–529; Landau, 98–99; Osborne, 595

Niellists were important in the history of art because they had developed skills and techniques that transferred easily to engraving plates for on paper, and nearly all the earliest engravers were trained as goldsmiths, enabling the new art medium to develop very quickly. At least in Italy, some of the very earliest engraved prints were in fact made by treating a silver object intended for niello as a printing plate with ink, before the niello was added. These are known as "niello prints", or in the cautious words of modern curators, "printed from a plate engraved in the niello manner"; in later centuries, after a collector's market grew up, many were forgeries. The genuine Renaissance prints were probably made mainly as a record of his work by the goldsmith, and perhaps as independent art objects.Levinson, 528–529; Landau, 26, 67–68

By the late 16th century relatively little use was made of niello, especially to create pictures, and a different type of mastic that could be used in much the same way for contrasts in decoration was devised, so European pictorial use was largely restricted to Russia, except for some watches, guns, instruments and the like. Niello has continued to be used sometimes by Western jewellers.

File:Maso finiguerra, crocifissione, 1460-64 ca. (bargello).JPG|Florentine pax, early 1460s, probably by File:Pax Amerbach Cabinet HMB 1878-42 c7586 (cropped).jpg|German pax, c. 1490, circle of the engraver Martin Schongauer, showing a close relationship to the printed engraving style. File:Orpheus seated and playing his lyre, charming the animals MET DP860466.jpg|Niello print, 2 inches high, 1500-1520. Orpheus seated and playing his lyre, by Peregrino da Cesena File:Watch MET DP-12675-003.jpg|Watch case, London around 1700


Kievan Rus and Russia
During the 10th to 13th century AD, craftsmen possessed a high degree of skill in jewellery making. , a 12th-century Byzantine writer, praised the work of Kievan Rus artisans and likened their work to the creations of , the highly skilled craftsman of .

The Kievan Rus technique for niello application was first shaping silver or gold by repoussé work, embossing, and casting. They would raise objects in and fill the background with niello using a mixture of red copper, lead, silver, potash, borax, sulphur which was liquefied and poured into concave surfaces before being fired in a furnace. The heat of the furnace would blacken the niello and make the other ornamentation stand out more vividly.

Nielloed items were mass-produced using moulds that still survive today and were traded with , the , and other peoples that traded along the trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks.

During the invasion from 1237 to 1240 AD, nearly all of Kievan Rus was overrun. Settlements and workshops were burned and razed and most of the craftsmen and artisans were killed. Afterwards, skill in niello and cloisonné enamel diminished greatly. The Ukrainian Museum of Historic Treasures, located in , has a large collection of nielloed items mostly recovered from tombs found throughout .Ganina

Later, in North Russia, Tula and Moscow produced high quality pictorial niello pieces such as in contemporary styles such as and in the late 18th and early 19th centuries; by then Russia was virtually the only part of Europe regularly using niello in fashionable styles.

File:Sacrament box MET SF2002 617 3 img1.jpg|Russian sacrament box; early 18th century File:Table snuffbox MET ES5506.jpg| table snuff-box with shell body. Probably , c. 1745–50 File:Snuffbox MET SF1992 174.jpg|Snuffbox with distance-finder, Veliky Ustyug, 1823 File:Tumbler MET ES3191.jpg|Russian tumbler, 1854


Islamic world
In the early Islamic world silver, though continuing in use for vessels at the courts of princes, was much less widely used by the merely wealthy. Instead, vessels of the copper alloys bronze and included inlays of silver and gold in their often elaborate decoration, leaving less of a place for niello. Other black fillings were also used, and museum descriptions are often vague about the actual substances involved.

The famous "Baptistère de Saint Louis", c. 1300, a basin of engraved brass with gold, silver and niello inlay, which has been in France since at least 1440 ( and perhaps other kings were baptized in it; now ), is one example where niello is used. Here niello is the background to the figures and the ornament around them, and used to fill the lines in both.

It is used on the locking bars of some ivory boxes and caskets, and perhaps continued more widely in use on weapons, where it is certainly found in later centuries from which more material survives. It is common in the decoration of the and hilts of the large daggers called and traditionally carried by all males in the region (whether Muslim or Christian). It was also used to decorate handguns when they came into use. Until modern times relatively simple niello was common on the jewellery of the Levant, used in much the same way as in medieval Europe.

File:BoteZamora01-1-.JPG|Niello accents on the lock of the ivory "Box of Zamora", 900-964, File:Tripod dish, Iran, Seljuk period, late 12th or early 13th century AD, silver with gilt, engraving, and niello - Cincinnati Art Museum - DSC04010.JPG| dish, c. 1200 File:Box with cover MET DP137825 (cropped).jpg|15th century box, brass with silver and niello, perhaps from Egypt File:Ottoman cavalvry shield-on display 2-IMG 9628-black.jpg|16-17th century Ottoman cavalvry shield with niello on central boss File:Helmet MET DP153240.jpg| Ntello ihe top zonarea a helmet from or South Russia, 1818–19 File:Dagger (Kindjal) with Scabbard MET sfsb26.35.8a(5-15-07)s2d1.jpeg|, perhaps Kubachi, , 1800–1850 File:Flintlock Rifle MET DP166297.jpg| gun, Kubachi, , 1800–1850, also with silver and gold


Thai jewellery
Nielloware jewellery and related items from were popular gifts from American soldiers taking "R&R" in Thailand to their girlfriends/wives back home from the 1930s to the 1970s. Most of it was completely handmade jewellery.

The technique is as follows: the artisan would carve a design into the silver, leaving the figure raised by carving out the "background". He would then use the niello inlay to fill in the "background". After being baked in an open fire, the alloy would harden. It would then be sanded smooth and buffed. Finally, a silver artisan would add minute details by hand. was often used for additional ornamentation. Nielloware is classified as only being black and silver coloured. Other coloured jewellery originating during this time uses a different technique and is not considered niello.

Many of the characters shown in nielloware are characters originally found in the legend . The Thai version is called Ramakien. Important Thai cultural symbols were also frequently used.


Ingredients and technique
Various slightly different recipes are found by modern scientific analysis, and historic accounts. In early periods, niello seems to have been made with a single sulphide, that of the main metal of the piece, even if it was gold (which would be difficult to handle). Copper sulphide niello has only been found on Roman pieces, and is used on silver.Maryon, 161–162; Craddock Later a mixture of metals was used; Pliny gives a mixed sulphide recipe with silver and copper, but seems to have been some centuries ahead of his time, as such mixtures have not been identified by analysis on pre-medieval pieces. Most Byzantine and early medieval pieces analysed are silver-copper, while silver-copper-lead pieces appear from about the 11th century onwards.Craddock; Newman

The of about the 9th century, Theophilus Presbyter (1070–1125) and Benvenuto Cellini (1500–1571) give detailed accounts, using silver-copper-lead mixtures with slightly different ratios of ingredients, Cellini using more lead.Maryon, 162–164; Newman; Craddock Typical ingredients have been described as: "sulfur with several metallic ingredients and "; "copper, silver, and lead, to which had been added sulphur while the metal was in fluid form ... the was then brushed over with a solution of borax..."Osborne, 595 (following Theophilus Presbyter)

While some recipes talk of using furnaces and to melt the niello, others just seem to use an open fire. The necessary temperatures vary with the mixture; overall silver-copper-lead mixtures are easier to use. All mixtures have the same black appearance after work is completed.Craddock


See also
  • Yemenite silversmithing (carries a full description on how niello was applied to jewellery in Yemen)


Notes
  • Craddock, P. T., "Metal" V. 4, Grove Art Online, Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 1 Oct. 2017, Subscription required
  • Craddock, Paul and Giumlia-Mair, Allessandra, "Hsmn-Km, Corinthian bronze, Shakudo: black patinated bronze in the ancient world", Chapter 9 in Metal Plating and Patination: Cultural, technical and historical developments, Ed. Susan La-Niece and Craddock, P. T., 2013, Elsevier, , 9781483292069, google books
  • Dickinson, Oliver et al., The Aegean Bronze Age, 1994, Cambridge University Press, , 9780521456647, The Aegean Bronze Age
  • Ganina, O. (1974), The Kiev museum of historic treasures (A. Bilenko, Trans.). Kiev, Ukraine: Mistetstvo Publishers
  • Johns, Catherine, The Jewellery of Roman Britain: Celtic and Classical Traditions, 1996, Psychology Press, , 9781857285666, google books
  • Landau, David, and Parshall, Peter. The Renaissance Print, Yale, 1996,
  • Levinson Jay A. (ed.), Early Italian Engravings from the National Gallery of Art, National Gallery of Art, Washington (Catalogue), 1973, LOC 7379624
  • , Metalwork and Enamelling, 1971 (5th ed.). Dover, New York, , google books
  • Lucas A and Harris J. Ancient Egyptian Materials and Industries, 2012 (reprint, 1st edn 1926), Courier Corporation, , 9780486144948, google books
  • "Newman": R. Newman, J. R. Dennis, & E. Farrell, "a Technical Note on Niello", Journal of the American Institute for Conservation, 1982, Volume 21, Number 2, Article 6 (pp. 80 to 85), online text
  • Osborne, Harold (ed), "Niello", in The Oxford Companion to the Decorative Arts, 1975, OUP,
  • Smith, W. Stevenson, and Simpson, William Kelly. The Art and Architecture of Ancient Egypt, 3rd edn. 1998, Yale University Press (Penguin/Yale History of Art),
  • Thomas, Nancy R., "The Early Mycenaean Lion up to Date", pp. 189–191, in Charis: Essays in Honor of Sara A. Immerwahr, Hesperia (Princeton, N.J.) 33, 2004, ASCSA, , 9780876615331, google books
  • Zarnecki, George and others; English Romanesque Art, 1066–1200, 1984, Arts Council of Great Britain,


Further reading
  • Dittell, C. (2012), Overview of Siam Sterling Nielloware, Tampa, FL (or Survey of Siam Sterling Nielloware, (E-Book), Bookbaby Publishers)
  • Giumlia-Mair, A. 2012. "The Enkomi Cup: Niello versus Kuwano", in V. Kassianidou & G. Papasavvas (eds.) Eastern Mediterranean Metallurgy and Metalwork in the Second Millennium BC. A Conference in Honour of James D. Muhly, Nicosia, 10–11 October 2009, 107–116. Oxford & Oakville: Oxbow Books.
  • Northover P. and La Niece S., "New Thoughts on Niello", in From Mine to Microscope: Advances in the Study of Ancient Technology, eds. Ian Freestone, Thilo Rehren, Shortland, Andrew J., 2009, Oxbow Books, , 9781782972778, google books
  • Oddy, W., Bimson, M., & La Niece, S. (1983). "The Composition of Niello Decoration on Gold, Silver and Bronze in the Antique and Mediaeval Periods". Studies in Conservation, 28(1), 29–35. doi:10.2307/1506104, JSTOR


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