Pill slab
Dateca. 1720
OriginEngland, London
MediumTin-glazed earthenware (delft)
DimensionsH: 10 5/8"; W: 9 3/4"; Thick: 11/16"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1965-205
DescriptionRectangular slab with canted corners and 2 pierced holes at top. Bluish tin glaze decorated in blue with the full arms of the Company of Apothecaries, including crest, supporters, motto, and mantling, and an oval shield with the arms of the City of London.Label TextAlthough pill slabs with the coat of arms of the Company of Apothecaries are recorded in several shapes, such as a shield and a heart, rectangular examples with canted corners like this appear to be the most common. Octagonal tiles like 1950-41 primarily date from the later eighteenth century. The arms of the City of London give this tile a definite London attribution.Inscription(s)Full arms of the Company of Apothecaries, including crest, supporters,motto, and mantling, and an oval shield with the arms of the City of
London.Mark(s)None.ProvenanceTilley & Co., London
ca. 1760
1700-1730
ca. 1775
1750 (dated)
ca. 1760
1740-1745
1676
ca. 1770
ca. 1755
1748 (dated)
