Greybeards

Chambers's Encyclopaedia, Volume 5: Friday to Humanitarians, p. 421

Greybeards are big-bellied, narrow-necked stoneware jugs or bottles, made in Flanders about the beginning of the 17th century, and so called from generally having a grotesque head, with a large, square-cut beard, modelled on the short neck. The face was a Protestant burlesque of Cardinal Bellarmine's.

A detailed black and white illustration of a greybeard, a type of stoneware jug. It features a large, bulbous body with a wide, square-cut beard and a grotesque, bearded face on the neck. The surface is decorated with intricate, swirling patterns and floral motifs.
Greybeard.
Source scan(s): p. 0436