Saturday, October 12, 2013

The Hours of Catherine of Cleves (15th Century)

Souls Tormented in Purgatory - "..the place to which the dying man hopes to go. There his soul, like those depicted, will be cleansed of sin in expiating, if painful, fire.


Catherine of Cleves (1417–1476) married Arnold of Egmond (1410 –1473), becoming duchess of Guelders. Although she bore her husband six children, the marriage was not happy.

War between husband and wife was sparked by Arnold's disinheriting his only living son, Adolf (1438–1477; rumor had it that Adolf accused his father of homosexuality). Catherine's siding with her son in the conflict led to anarchy. The cities of Nijmegen, Zutphen, and Arnhem supported Catherine and her son; Roermond sided with the duke. In 1465 mother and son imprisoned Arnold, forcing him to abdicate. Adolf, as duke, spent six years in ceaseless struggles with his father's supporters.

In 1471 Catherine watched in horror as Arnold secured his freedom and regained his title while Adolf was imprisoned. Arnold died in 1473, disinheriting both wife and son. Catherine's death in 1476 robbed her seeing the release of her son. Adolf's liberty was short-lived; he died the next year.


Ten Thousand Martyrs and St. Acacius


The artist made a playful parallel between Lawrence's method of martyrdom and the way fish are cooked

Tree growing from Adam’s Grave

Monday, October 7, 2013

Traité de Fauconnerie (19th C), the Art of Falconry



Titlepage of 'Traité de Fauconnerie', 1844-1853
(Facsimile of this treatise is available at amazon, collectible edition starting on 65 USD direct link provided here) AbeBooks has another facsimil edition, link here


Falconry is the art of using a trained raptor to hunt other birds or small mammals. The practice dates to -at least- 2000 BC and birds used for falconry include buzzards, eagles, Harris hawk, Peregrine falcons, Lanner falcons, Gyrfalcons, etc. For a better approach to this discipline I do recommend the complete wikipedia article.

The Traité de Fauconnerie by Hermann Schlegel and Abraham H Verster is online available (direct link provided) at Heinrich Heine University, Dusseldorf. Even a pdf version can be downloaded at a reasonable resolution (176 pages, 26 Mb). 

This is a real rare book: less than one hundred copies were originally issued in the first edition between 1844 and 1853, of which only about fifty copies are known to have survived. The Abu Dhabi National Library paid more than £95,000 for a first edition copy last year to outfit their falconry collection