Showing 4 items matching "mandrake"
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Queen's College
Faience mould, New Kingdom, 18th Dynasty, 1550-1295 BCE
This item is part of the Dodgson Collection, which was bequeathed to Queen's College in 1892 by the Rev. James Dodgson. The collection was created by Aquila Dodgson, brother of James. Aquila Dodgson was a friend of the English Egyptologist Flinders Petrie, and it was through this friendship the Aquila was able to acquire ancient Egyptian artefacts. A detailed study of the collection was made by Christine Elias "Discovering Egypt: Egyptian Antiquities at the University of Melbourne", M.A. thesis 2010.Faience mould for a mandrake.james dodgson, aquila dodgson, flinders petrie, faience -
Hymettus Cottage & Garden Ballarat
Work on paper - Book, Keeping it Dark
non-fictionmandrake, private press, publishing, satire, dyson -
Geoffrey Kaye Museum of Anaesthetic History
Decorative object - Decorative mace
A silver-gilded mace in the shape of a lily head. The base has a silver fern and a silver gilt wattle, representing New Zealand and Australia respectively. The College shield on the stem is cast in relief with Argyle diamonds representing the Southern Cross. The charges in the four quadrants are proportionately larger representing the plants which anaesthetic drugs were traditionally derived from: opium poppy, curare vine, mandrake root, and cocaine plant. At the top of the mace is the "torch of life" with representations that link the College with the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons. The affronté helmet with closed visor signifies the role of the anaesthetist always being ready for action, and the hand of the carer holds the ankh entwined with the snake of Asclepius. commemorative, decorative, mace -
Hymettus Cottage & Garden Ballarat
Work on paper - Catalogue, The Art of the Book
Cover of 2011 catalogue from Ballarat City Library of small exhibition by local book collector Michael Taffe. Private presses included, Mandrake, Fanfrolico, Windsor, Ancora, Gregynog and Kelmscott and Escutcheon.non-fictionCover of 2011 catalogue from Ballarat City Library of small exhibition by local book collector Michael Taffe. Private presses included, Mandrake, Fanfrolico, Windsor, Ancora, Gregynog and Kelmscott and Escutcheon.book collectors, private libraries