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art
MetropolitanMuseum
MMA
Cloisters
Uptown
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Gothic
Manhattan
NewYork
NY
NYC
medieval
effigy
museum
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2007
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Detail of the Effigy of Jean d'Alluye in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007

Detail of the Effigy of Jean d'Alluye in the Cloisters, Sept. 2007
Tomb Effigy of Jean d'Alluye
From the Cistercian abbey of La Clarte-Dieu, north of Tours, mid-13th century
French, Carved in Touraine, Loire Valley
Limestone

Accession # 25.120.201

Jean d'Alluye was a knight of Philip Augustus and one of the principal nobles of the Loire Valley. His career included a trip to the Holy Land, where he acquired a relic of the True Cross. In 1248 he was entombed at La Clarte-Dieu, the abbey near Tours that he had founded in 1239. This effigy, in an attitude of prayer, was turned upside down and used as a bridge over a nearby stream. Around 1900 it was purchased from a Paris dealer by George Grey Barnard, an American whose collection forms the core of the Cloisters.

Text from the Cloisters label.

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