[In principio erat verbum] et verbum erat apud deum et deus erat verbum ...
Dublin Core
Title
[In principio erat verbum] et verbum erat apud deum et deus erat verbum ...
Subject
Books of hours.
Illumination of books and manuscripts -- 15th century -- Specimens.
Description
Judgment Day. A death scene, full of symbolic figures: a young man stands in a gaping mouth, a common image of hell. One figure holds a stake (not the typical sickle that represents the cutting off of life), another a scroll upon which the evil deeds of the young man are written (the words peccata tua , “your sins” are legible). Frequently an angel fights with the scroll-bearing demon over the dead man, yet no angel intercedes here. Christ as judge hovers above the man for whom there is little hope. Although thematically related to the Office of the Dead , this illumination is found in the Accessory Texts (see the following section ).
Creator
Possibly the work of Jean Bourdichon
Source
Book of hours.
Date
circa 1450
Rights
Notification of Intent to Quote from or Publish Manuscript Materials form. All publication not covered by fair use is restricted to those who have permission of the copyright holder.
Relation
George N. Meissner Collection #8
Format
Vellum printing
Type
Illumination
Identifier
devotion_1450_08_0006.jpg
BX2080 .C25 1450
George N. Meissner Collection #8
devotion_1450_08_0006
spc:devotion2014-08-01T10_18_38
Coverage
France 15th century
Collection
Citation
Possibly the work of Jean Bourdichon, “[In principio erat verbum] et verbum erat apud deum et deus erat verbum ...,” WUSTL Digital Gateway Image Collections & Exhibitions, accessed July 15, 2024, http://omeka.wulib.wustl.edu/omeka/items/show/8444.
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