THE men's and women's singles finals at Wimbledon are two of the biggest events of the year on the tennis calendar.
A giant platter has been given to the womens champ for the past 130 years – but begs the question why they get a giant round ornament, and men get a gold trophy?
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When was the Venus Rosewater dish made?
It was made by Birmingham silversmiths Elkington and Co in 1864.
And although it looks unique, it’s actually a replica of a plate by German metalworker Caspar Enderlein, which itself is a model of a 16th century pewter made by French carver Francois Briot.
So despite it's interesting appearance, it is the third incarnation of the significant prize.
What is the Venus Rosewater dish's significance?
The dish has a female figure – the representation of temperance as a virtual – seated in the middle of the plate, with a lamp in one hand and a jug in the other.
She is surrounded by the four elements (earth, water, air, fire) while on the rim are the seven liberal arts: grammar, rhetoric, logic, geometry, arithmetic, music and astrology.
When it was made, it was the height of modernity as it was made using a novel process called electroforming, due to the pewter industry’s slow decline.
Why a dish, rather than a trophy?
A pretty retrograde reason, really – as the role of women in much of the 19th century was primarily to oversee the domestic duties in the house.
Given this was where they had the most power, the dish is often speculated to be a symbol of this – not the most equal of reasons and sometimes seen as a relic of sexism.