Time for another real medieval elephant! The comb above was made from elephant ivory around 875 AD. It shows two Zodiac symbols: Sagittarius the archer firing on Capricorn. (Western European artists often portrayed Capricorn as a half-goat/half-fish thing in this period.) Similar depictions of Capricorn have been found in other fine ivory works from this period, perhaps indicating that this comb's creator(s) were part of an imperial workshop, perhaps at Metz.
Ivory was a rare enough material, but this comb features colored glass and gold foil, too. Who needed such a fancy grooming tool?
The curators at the Victoria and Albert Museum have posited two main explanations. The first is that it was involved with the coronation ceremony of the West Frankish ruler Charles the Bald in Italy, after which the comb ended up in Pavia Cathedral. (Don't worry about Charles's nickname: the combing would just have been ceremonial, although some scholars argue that the nickname 'Charles the Bald' was ironic and that he was actually very hairy.)
Charles the Bald looking rather not-bald in a sacramentary made at his court (now Paris, BnF Latin 1141, f. 2v).
Alternatively, all priests needed to comb their hair before mass, to prevent any stray hairs falling in the Eucharist wine. High-ranking clerics therefore exchanged combs as presents. For example, in about 794 A.D, Alcuin of York, abbot of St Martin's in Tours, wrote to thank Archbishop Riculf of Mainz (d. 813) for sending him a comb:
"I have taken great pleasure in your loving present, giving thanks in proportion to the number of teeth I have counted in your gift. A wonderful animal with two heads and sixty teeth - not as large as an elephant, but made of beautiful ivory. I was not terrified by this beast, but was delighted by its appearance, and had no fear that it might bite me with its gnashing teeth, but I was amused by the charming servility with which it smoothed down the hair on my head."
~Alcuin of York/Tours to Archbishop Riculf of Mainz, edited and translated in Paul Sorrell, âAlcuin's âcombâ riddleâ, Neophilologus 80 (1996), p. 313.
Whether the comb above was fit for a king or coiffed a cleric, it shows that ivory-working skills endured in northern Europe throughout the early medieval period. Even then, global connections and access to distant materials endured at elite workshops, at least.
Object: Comb
Material: Ivory, colored glass, gold foil
Date: c. 875
Origin: Metz?
Now London, Victoria and Albert Museum A.544-1910