Present with Boucher in Karakorum were his wife, “a daughter of Lorraine, but born in Hungary”,[4] and an adopted son “who was a most excellent interpreter”.[5] Boucher had been living in either present day
Belgrade,
Serbia or
Alba Iulia,
Romania when he was captured by Möngke's half-brother Böchek during a
Mongol invasion in 1241 or 1242.[6] According to a woman from Metz William of Rubruck met at the Great Khan's winter camp, Boucher's brother Roger still lived on the
Grand Pont in Paris.[7][8]
18th-century drawing of Silver Tree fountain in front of Tumen Amugulang palace
In addition to crafting jewelry for Mongolian women and altars for
Nestorian Christians, Boucher's works included the Silver Tree, a towering tree-shaped mechanical drinking fountain sculpture outside the Great Khan's palace.[9][10]
The structure included a trumpet-blowing angel, four silver lions “all belching the forth white milk of mares,” and gilded serpents pouring wine, clarified mare's milk, bal (a honey drink), and rice mead into silver receiving bowls.[11][12]
While remains of the fountain are as of yet undiscovered,[13] German-Italian Medieval and Renaissance scholar Leonardo Olschki believed some of Boucher's works may still exist in the
Erdene Zuu Monastery, which was constructed from the ruins of Karakorum in the sixteenth century.[14]
References
^Leonardo Olschki [
fr], Guillaume Boucher A French Artist At The Court Of The Khans (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1946) p. 2
^William Woodville Rockhill, ed. & trans., The Journey of William of Rubruck to the Eastern Parts of the World, 1253-1255 (London: Hakluyt Society, 1900) p. 211