Pilgrim badge showing the Annunciation, 14th century. Artist: Unknown

Pilgrim badge showing the Annunciation, 14th century. Artist: Unknown

1-192-547 - © London Museum/Heritage-Images

Pilgrim badge from Walsingham showing the Annunciation, 14th century. Walsingham in Norfolk, England, is the site of a shrine to the Virgin Mary. The badges signified that the pilgrim had completed the journey. Some were brooches with pins, others could be worn around the neck, or pinned to cloth. It was believed that the very touch of such a badge could heal the sick and dying. Cheaper versions were mass produced and sold to the hundreds of thousands of travellers who visited shrines and pilgrimage sites each year, some for the completion of a penitential journey, others just went for a trip to the country. Many pewter pilgrim badges have been found in the River Thames in London by modern 'mudlarks', licensed metal-detectorists searching the foreshore. They may have been thrown into the river by returning pilgrims as thanks for a successful journey.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. Unknown, attributed to: :
Subject
  1. Virgin Mary: (Judean?): Saint

Category Hierarchy

Religion & Belief Christianity

History & Politics Artefacts


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 3887x4853
File Size : 55,265kb


Aliases

  1. 21013
  1. 0330001286
  1. 1-192-547
  1. 1192547
  1. 1286
  1. 21013

Restrictions
  1. Strictly for Editorial use only.


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