Agate Bowl

The Agate Bowl (German: Achatschale) is a bowl cut out of a single piece of agate in the fourth century at the court of Constantine, and now displayed in the Imperial Treasury at the Hofburg Palace in Vienna, Austria. For centuries it was widely regarded as the "greatest masterpiece" and the "best and most important piece" in the collection. In 1564, Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian II and his brothers declared it by deed to be an "inalienable heirloom of the house of Austria". They valued this ancient precious stone carving, not just for its craftsmanship, but for a "natural miracle" in the stone itself that reveals a mysterious inscription—the name XRISTO (Christ) at the bottom of the bowl within the grain of the stone. It is now generally believed that the inscription inspired the legend that the bowl was the Holy Grail. The Agate Bowl is the largest carved stone bowl in the world.

Read more about Agate Bowl:  Description, History

Famous quotes containing the words agate and/or bowl:

    Don’t pity me now,
    Don’t pity me never;
    I’m going to do nothing
    For ever and ever.
    —James Agate (1877–1947)

    One bowl is quiet; two bowls will clang together.
    Chinese proverb.