Showcase 33. Ambassadorial gifts. Sweden

Showcase 33. The Armoury Chamber
Relations between Russia and Sweden of the XVIIth century are illustrated by the museum's largest collection of Swedish ambassadorial gifts by the German makers from the renowned centers of gold- and silversmithing, i.e. Nuremberg, Augsburg, Hamburg. Group of the items by Swedish craftsmen occupies an important place of the collection and is worthy of particular attention. The showcase represents more than two hundred articles of tableware and interior decoration, lavish offerings from Queen Christina (1647), Charles X Gustav, Charles XI and Charles XII (1658, 1674, 1684 and 1699), including dozens of magnificent silver sweetmeat bowls, globes, hand-washing sets and candlesticks cast in the shape of figures of Venus, Juno and Minerva. A sizable assortment of gifts from Charles XII to Peter I was delivered to Moscow in 1699, shortly before the outbreak of the Northern War, which finally gave Russia access to the Baltic Sea.

Wash jug. Germany, Augsburg, between 1674-1680. Maker H. Mannlich
Toilet box. Sweden, Stockholm, the XVIIth century
Silver-making was not developed in Sweden as an independent all-sufficient branch of industry but under the influence of foreign makers, having been invited to the court. Nevertheless their mastery and experience helped the Swedish silversmiths to perfect a technique of metalworking so that goldsmithery of Sweden flourished in the late XVIIth century. In spite of the undoubted influence of German makers, Swedish silverware had features of its own both in the form of the articles and in the predominance of certain types of technique, such as filigree work.