- A
zibellino, flea-fur or fur
tippet is a women's
fashion accessory po****r in the
later 15th and 16th centuries. A
zibellino, from the
Italian word for...
- any scarf-like wrap,
usually made of fur, such as the sixteenth-century
zibellino or the fur-lined
capelets worn in the mid-18th century.
Edward VI of England's...
-
Portuguese zibelina and
Medieval Latin zibellina derive from the
Italian form (
zibellino). The
English and
Medieval Latin word
sabellum comes from the Old French...
- etymology,
debated that the word
could have
begun as a
corruption of the word
zibellino (a
sable pelt accessory),
noting the
similarity in
colour and the po****rity...
- and
Albert Museum. The
Countess of
Pembroke had
owned a gold
mounted zibellino described as a "sabelles heade" set with 21
diamonds and a ruby in its...
- band of gold
embroidery at the neckline. She
holds a
jewelled fur or
zibellino suspended from her
waist by a gold chain,
Lombardy (Northern Italy), 1557...
-
refused and was
imprisoned in
Blackness Castle. This fur may have been a
zibellino, as
several were
recorded in Mary's inventories. In
October 1573, Robert...
-
generations of artists. Her
portrait of
Queen Elisabeth of
Valois with a
zibellino (the pelt of a
marten set with a head and feet of
jewelled gold) was widely...
-
replaced by the
purse in the late 1800s. A
fashionable accessory was the
zibellino, the pelt of a
sable or
marten worn
draped at the neck or
hanging at the...
- chain,
bracelets with diamonds,
rubies and pearls,
pearl earrings, a
zibellino with a gold marten's head, and yet
another belt with a
miniature portrait...