● On view now — Gallery 236
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This altar cross, richly ornamented with colorful precious and semi-precious stones of amethyst, carnelian, chalcedony, labradorite, blue sapphire, and topaz, was part of the Guelph treasure maintained in the collegiate church of Saint Blaise, Braunschweig, under the patronage of the dukes of Braunschweig-Lüneberg. It was made, not for the ducal family, but for another noble family of Lower Saxony, the Veltheims, whose coat of arms executed in enamel decorates the base of the cross. The cross also served as a reliquary, since it contains the relics of several saints. It may have commissioned to celebrate the founding of the Convent of Saint Anna in Braunschweig by the Veltheim family in 1326; how it entered the group of treasury objects kept together in the church of Saint Blaise is unclear.
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Artist unknown — Cross
Spanish or Spanish Colonial — Pendant Cross
anonymous — Processiekruis van hout met zilver waarin gedrev
German, probably Brunswick (Braunschweig) — Altar Cross
anonymous — Hanger in de vorm van een kruis
Mosan; Meuse River Valley or German; Rhineland — Crucifix
Master of Santa Chiara (Italian) — Processional Cross
Western European
Probably Spanish — Pendant Cross
Spanish — Pendant Cross
Robert Dieu — Cruciform Watch
German or Austrian — Double-Sided Pendant Reliquary Cross
Giovanni Antonio da Pesaro — Crucifix