Bartmann Jug ca. 1600

Made in Frechen, Germany, saltglazed stoneware vessels
such as this jug were produced and exported in great
quantities to fulfill England's stoneware needs. England
succeeded in establishing her own stoneware industry in
the 1680s. The jugs are known as Bartmann or "bearded
man" for the bewhiskered face that adorns the neck.
Bartmann jugs are also identified in the literature as
"Bellarmines," a term popularly believed to be a satiric
reference to the much-despised Cardinal Robert Bellarmino
(1542-1621). In 1606 Bellarmino, who was an opponent of
Protestantism, publicly rebuked King James I for his
treatment of English Catholics. While the English and
Dutch may have made the association between the bulbous
grimacing jug and the Catholic prelate during the
tempestuous religious climate of the early 17th century,
it is unlikely that the form originated as a caricature.
The first
Bartmanner were produced around
1550 when Bellarmino was only eight years old!
This Bartmann jug was excavated from Pit 1, a ca. 1610
context within the palisaded walls of James Fort. It has
three medallions around its belly. The medallions consist
of a a coat-of-arms depicting a crowned shield that has
been divided into four quarters. The first and third
quarters each exhibit a single lion
passant, which
means that he is walking with his right paw raised. The
second and fourth quarters each have two lions
passant. In the first quarter, which is the upper
left-hand corner of the shield, there is a heraldic
device known as a
fess with a label on chief. This
is the band across the upper third of the escutcheon that
is carrying three stylized fleurs-de-lis. It is this
label that identifies the medallion as Italian and, more
specifically, as representing a member of the Tuscan
Anjou party of Guelfs who from medieval times were
staunch supporters of the Pope.
Guelf coats-of-arms have never before been recorded on
German stoneware. Further, there is no documented trade
of the ware in Italy, so the Bartmann jug from Pit 1 is
extremely rare. It must have been commissioned by an
individual, perhaps an Italian merchant, who had trade or
other contacts with northwest Europe.