Bream (tomb art)
A bream is a special form of English tomb art. Bream are engraved brass plates used as grave tablets that were introduced from Holland at the end of the 13th century . The oldest preserved bream from 1231 is in Germany in the St. Andreas Church in Verden . The oldest preserved bream in England is in Stoke d'Abernon . It dates from 1277 and is the grave slab for Sir John d'Abernon. The largest number of bream in England contains the church of St Mary Magdalene in Chatham . There are 18 breams that were worked between 1320 and 1529.
literature
- James Mann: Monumental Brasses . Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, Middlesex, MCMLVII ( K 75 )
- Peter Sager : South England - from Kent to Cornwall , 5th edition, DuMont Buchverlag, Cologne 1977, ISBN 3770107446
- Herbert Macklin: Monumental Brasses . George Allen & Unwin, London, 1966, 7th revised edition (rev.Charles Oman, 1953), 196 pages
Web links
Commons : Monumental brasses - Collection of images, videos and audio files