Italian Walnut Table Tabernacle or Reliquary Cabinet
Likely Northern Italy
Circa 17th–18th Century
A deeply evocative small devotional cabinet, hand crafted in solid walnut and fitted with hand forged iron and brass hardware. This form is consistent with table tabernacles or reliquary cupboards used in private chapels or domestic devotional settings across Italy.
The architectural shape, with its domed top and plinth base, echoes church tabernacles on a miniature scale. The door is framed in brass with a working lock and key, opening to a simple interior cavity once intended to house sacred objects, relics, or Eucharistic elements depending on its original use.
The wood shows extensive age and character, with visible tool marks, worming, and surface wear that strongly support early construction. The hardware appears largely period or very early, including hand cut hinges and a shaped key escutcheon typical of 17th to early 18th century work.
Pieces like this were not decorative in origin. They were functional objects tied to daily devotion, often placed on a home altar or within a private prayer space.
Origin Note
While Italian attribution is most likely based on form, materials, and construction, similar examples were also produced in parts of Spain and Southern France. The craftsmanship and hardware lean strongly Southern European.
Condition
Good antique condition with significant age wear
Surface wear, worming, and patina throughout
Interior untouched and original
Lock and key present and functioning
Structurally sound
This is the kind of piece that carries presence. Not polished. Not refined. But deeply authentic and full of quiet history.
Italian Walnut Table Tabernacle or Reliquary Cabinet
Likely Northern Italy
Circa 17th–18th Century
A deeply evocative small devotional cabinet, hand crafted in solid walnut and fitted with hand forged iron and brass hardware. This form is consistent with table tabernacles or reliquary cupboards used in private chapels or domestic devotional settings across Italy.
The architectural shape, with its domed top and plinth base, echoes church tabernacles on a miniature scale. The door is framed in brass with a working lock and key, opening to a simple interior cavity once intended to house sacred objects, relics, or Eucharistic elements depending on its original use.
The wood shows extensive age and character, with visible tool marks, worming, and surface wear that strongly support early construction. The hardware appears largely period or very early, including hand cut hinges and a shaped key escutcheon typical of 17th to early 18th century work.
Pieces like this were not decorative in origin. They were functional objects tied to daily devotion, often placed on a home altar or within a private prayer space.
Origin Note
While Italian attribution is most likely based on form, materials, and construction, similar examples were also produced in parts of Spain and Southern France. The craftsmanship and hardware lean strongly Southern European.
Condition
Good antique condition with significant age wear
Surface wear, worming, and patina throughout
Interior untouched and original
Lock and key present and functioning
Structurally sound
This is the kind of piece that carries presence. Not polished. Not refined. But deeply authentic and full of quiet history.