Showcase 51. Thrones of the XVIth century

Throne. Western Europe, the XVIth century. Belonged to Tsar Ivan the Terrible
The earliest throne of the mid-XVIth century is represented in the showcase 51. This fine specimen of Renaissance culture was made of wood faced with plates of ivory and walrus tusk therefore it was called the "carved bone armchair". The carved ornament unites the various subjects and representations into a single composition. Decorative scenes include images from Greek mythology and the Old Testament. The depicted themes, the style of the carving and the motifs, which include grotesques and Cupids, enable researches to date most of the pieces to the XVIth century and attribute them to Western European Renaissance craftsmen. This bone throne has been renovated several times in Russia: worn pieces of bone were remade by local craftsmen; in 1856, on the occasion of the coronation of Emperor Alexander II, the throne was decorated with a gilded silver two-headed eagle.

Throne. Persia, before 1604. Presented by Shah Abbas I to Tsar Boris Godunov in 1604
In addition to the bone chair the showcase includes a throne of oriental workmanship executed in the late XVIth century. Having been presented by Shah Abbas I to Tsar Boris Godunov it was called a “Persian throne with stones”. The form of the throne with its low back flowing into sloping arm-rests, reveals features typical of Iranian furniture of the XVIth-XVIIth centuries. The makers have used ornament beloved in the East, i.e. strips of gold decorated with a foliate pattern and coloured stones - blue turquoises and red rubies, tourmalines. The back of the seat, the arms and the whole lower section of the throne were covered with gold Persian fabric, replaced by French velvet in 1742 for the coronation of Empress Elizabeth.