Hanukkah Lamp, Cast lead and tin, c. 1885
Object Name:
Hanukkah Lamp
Place Made:
Stolin (Belarus)
Date:
c. 1885
Medium:
Cast lead and tin
Dimensions:
Arranged in a line: 2 7/16 × 11 × 1 1/16 in. (6.2 × 27.9 × 2.7 cm) Each: 2 7/16 × 1 1/16 × 1 1/16 in. (6.2 × 2.7 × 2.7 cm)
Credit Line:
Gift of the Chernick Family
Accession Number:
JM 102-73a-h

Not On View

The tradition of making cast lead or pewter objects for Hanukkah was centered in Germany, Bohemia, and eastern Europe. Children would create lead dreidls (special tops used for a Hanukkah game) from molds they often made themselves. These would be melted down at New Year's. Chair Hanukkah lamps were usually made of pewter, which has a higher melting point than lead and thus for the most part was not destroyed by the flames of the lights. The reason for choosing the chair form is unknown, and perhaps it is a whimsical interpretation of the bench lamp.
Other examples of pewter chair lamps in the collection, in different shapes, are the only published ones with known provenance and date. These came from Russia between 1868 and the end of the nineteenth century.

Information may change as a result of ongoing research.

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