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US_14: Heraldic Panel Thüring von Ringoltingen
(USA_LosAngeles_LACMA_US_14)

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Title

Heraldic Panel Thüring von Ringoltingen

Type of Object
Dimensions
46.5 x 33.8 cm (18 3/8 x 13 3/8 in.)
Artist / Producer
Noll, Hans · attributed
Dating
c. 1470
Location
Inventory Number
45.21.7
Research Project
Author and Date of Entry
Virginia C. Raguin 2024

Iconography

Description

Silhouetted against a blue background, a heraldic shield is turned to the right and surmounted by a tilting helm. Above the helm is the bust of a man. Damascene embellishes both red shield and background. The deeply saturated colors contribute to the vivid display.

Iconclass Code
46A122(RINGOLTINGEN VON) · armorial bearing, heraldry (RINGOLTINGEN VON)
Iconclass Keywords
Heraldry

Arms of von Ringoltingen: Gules a pale sable charged with three millstones argent; crest: on a tilting helm to sinister a demi-man garbled in the colors charged in the field, mantling gules and argent.

Inscription

none

Signature

none

Materials, Technique and State of Preservation

Technique

The panel is constructed of red and blue pot metal and uncolored glass with silver stain and vitreous paint.

State of Preservations and Restorations

The head is a later replacement. The sensitive drawing, very unlike efforts to match styles by a twentieth-century restorer, might argue that it was an earlier replacement, possibly from the seventeenth century. Later replacements include a most of the background in the lower right and some to the lower left. Compare the Ringoltingen arms in the Three Kings window in Bern, showing a similar style for the shield. In Bern cathedral, the lower left portion of Rudolf’s shield is restored but the figure and the helm are original (Kurmann-Schwarz, 1998, text fig. 24).

History

Research

The two coats of arms on damask ground face each other. They have both lost their original frames. The man's coat of arms belongs to the family of the Zigerli of Ringoltingen, that of the woman’s, to the Hunwil family. Rudolf von Ringoltigen, chief magistrate of the canton of Bern (1448, 1451, and 1454), and his second wife Paula von Hunwil are commemorated in the Three Kings window in the choir of the cathedral of Bern. The Los Angeles panels are closely related, but is not quite identical to this display. The shape of the shields suggests a slightly later date; they very probably belonged to the son of Rudolf, Thüring von Ringoltingen (c. 1415-after March 8, 1483), who also served as chief magistrate of Bern canton in 1458, 1461, 1464 and 1467, and his wife, Verena von Hunwil (c. 1428–before 1481). In 1456 he achieved lasting literary fame by translating the French romance, Melusine, compiled about 1382–1394 by Jean d’Arras, into German. Stone reliefs of the arms of Thüring von Ringoltingen and those of Verena Von Hunwil, dated 1458 from the church of Utzenstorf, are now in Schloss Landshut. Rudolf von Ringoltingen had acquired the castle and it remained in the family through the fifteenth century before being purchased by the city of Bern.

Hans Lehmann described the panels as “securely” by the hand of Hans Noll although he did not identify the owner of the shield (Lehmann, 1912, p. 294). Noll, one of the pioneers of Swiss glazing, was active in Bern from the 1470s until his death in 1493. His style was deeply indebted to the influence of Martin Schongauer. Probably the son of Peter Noll, a blacksmith, Noll served as a member of the Great Council in 1475. As a glass painter, he was active in Bern and Solothurn. He provided windows for the Premonstratensian Abbey of Gottstatt in the canton of Bern, and in the city of Bern he made windows for the Franciscan Abbey and cathedral. Brigitte Kurmann-Schwarz has documented his career and style (Kurmann-Schwarz, 1998, pp. 368–69, 407–414, 453–54, 470–71, esp. 495–97). She affirms the attribution of the Arms of the Association of Niedergerbern (a division of the city), dated 1471, to Noll, as he was the only securely documented glass painter in Bern in that year. Located in the cathedral’s Gerbern Association chapel (bay n XIII, 2b), the panel is part of the cathedral’s collection of single coats of arms. It shows precisely the same kind of foliate decorative work as that in the mantling surrounding the Los Angeles shields (Kurmann-Schwarz, 1998, fig. 310). The hound’s seemingly boneless structure is also analogous to the appearance of the rampant lions in the Niedergerbern shield. Several other panels in the cathedral show similarities, especially that of Claudius von Valangin executed shortly before 1491 (bay N V, 2c; Kurmann-Schwarz, 1998, pp. 407–415, Abb. 263). The mantling of the shields is similar, and the griffin heads in Bern are not unlike the hounds in the shield of Verena von Hunwil.

Christine Hediger suggests that the Los Angeles panels could have been in either the family chapel of the Ringoltingen in the cathedral of Bern or the church of Utzenstorf, where the family owned the ius patronatus (Hediger, 2012). Panels of similar formats were common in Switzerland, for example, the Arms of Dietrich I of Englisberg and Madeline of Praroman, about 1483–86, by an unidentified Fribourg glasspainter. The Fribourg panel shows the same damascene grounds and reciprocity between intense red and blue balanced by uncolored glass (Musée Ariana Geneva, CE 8612; GE_2109; Bergmann, 2014, fig. 123, p. 192).

Cited in:
Normile, 1946, pp. 43–44.
Hayward, 1989, p .67.
Hediger, 2012, pp. 333–43, fig. 409a.
Raguin, 2024, vol. 1, pp. 29–30, 105–108.

Dating
c. 1470
Period
1465 – 1475
Commissioner

von Ringoltingen, Thüring

Previous Location
Place of Manufacture
Previous Owner

The panel was in the collection of the antiquarian Aaron S. Drey whose art firm of A.S. Drey was founded in the 1860s in Munich. There, the eminent Swiss art historian Hans Lehmann saw the panel in 1911. On August 15, 1912, Hearst acquired the work from Drey, long before Nazi persecution of the Drey family members who had remained in Germany after 1935. Hearst donated the panel to the museum in 1943; it was accessioned in 1945.

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Hayward, J. (1989). Stained Glass before 1700 in American Collections: Midwestern and Western States. Corpus Vitrearum Checklist III, ed. and intro. Madeline H. Caviness and Jane Hayward (Studies in the History of Art, 28), Washington, 1989.

Hediger, C, (2012). “Die Berner Familie der Ringoltingen im Spiegel ihrer Stiftungen,” Österreichisches Zeitschrift für Kunst und Denkmalpflege LXVI.

Kurmann-Schwarz, B. (1998). Die Glasmalereien des 15. bis 18. Jahrhunderts im Berner Münster, Bern.

Lehmann, H. (1912). “Die Glasmalerei in Bern am Ende des 15. und Anfang des 16. Jahrhunderts,” Anzeiger für schweizerische Altertumskunde, vol. 14/4.

Normile, J. (1946). "The William Randolph Hearst Collection of Medieval and Renaissance Stained and Painted Glass," Stained Glass 41 (Summer): reprint of LACMA Quarterly (1945).

Raguin, V. (2024). Stained Glass before 1700 in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the J. Paul Getty Museum, (Corpus Vitrearum United States IX). 2 vols. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols.

Unpublished sources: Hearst Inventory 1943, no. 231; Christine Hediger, Switzerland, 2019, correspondence with author concerning the Ringoltingen family; Rolf Hasler CV Switzerland, 2020, correspondence with author.

Image Information

Name of Image
USA_LosAngeles_LACMA_US_14
Credits
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles CA, www.lacma.org
Copyright
Public Domain

Linked Objects and Images

Linked Objects
Heraldic Panel Verena von Hunwil

Citation suggestion

Raguin, V., C. (2024). Heraldic Panel Thüring von Ringoltingen. In Vitrosearch. Retrieved June 4, 2025 from https://test.vitrosearch.ch/objects/2721043.

Record Information

Reference Number
US_14