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Jerusalem Transposed: A Fifteenth-Century Panel for the Bruges Market

Jerusalem Transposed: A Fifteenth-Century Panel for the Bruges Market

http://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/437202

A fifteenth-century Christ Bearing the Cross has been attributed to the Utrecht painter known as the Master of Evert Zoudenbalch. However, scholars have noted details that link the panel to the city of Bruges and its Procession of the Holy Blood. This essay provides new evidence in support of these Bruges connections and links the painting to Passion plays staged in Bruges’s Procession. Known as the “City of Jerusalem,” and seen alongside the relic of the Holy Blood, these plays would have served as a focus for devotions, helping explain why an Utrecht painter might make such allusions to Bruges.

DOI: 10.5092/jhna.2009.7.1.4

Acknowledgements

This essay develops a paper originally presented at the 2005 College Art Association conference, in a session chaired by Carol Purtle. That occasion was the first time I had the pleasure of meeting Carol, and this essay is dedicated to her memory. Research was funded by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Christ Bearing the Cross,  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 1 North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter, Christ Bearing the Cross, ca. 1470, oil on panel, 107.6 x 82.2 cm. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (inv. no. 43.95) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Circle of Jan van Eyck,  Christ Carrying the Cross,  Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna
Fig. 2 Circle of Jan van Eyck, Christ Carrying the Cross, late 15th century, pen and ink on paper, 20.4 x 27.7 cm. Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna (inv. no. 3025) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Circle of Jan van Eyck,  Figures from Christ Carrying the Cross,  Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum, Braunschweig
Fig. 3 Circle of Jan van Eyck, Figures from Christ Carrying the Cross, late 15th century, ink on paper, 13.5 x 11.5 cm. Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum, Braunschweig (inv. no. 216) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Copy after the circle of Jan van Eyck,  Road to Calvary,  Szépmüvészti Múzeum, Budapest
Fig. 4 Copy after the circle of Jan van Eyck, Road to Calvary, ca. 1530, oil on panel, 130.6 x 97.5 cm. Szépmüvészti Múzeum, Budapest (inv. no. 2531) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Gerard David,  Crucifixion (detail),  Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
Fig. 5 Gerard David, Crucifixion (detail), ca. 1475, oil on panel, 88 x 56 cm. Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid (inv. no. 1928.3) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Hand K,  Way to Calvary, formerly f. 31v from the Turin-M,
Fig. 6 Hand K, Way to Calvary, formerly f. 31v from the Turin-Milan Hours, ca. 1440s-50s, approx. 28 x 19 cm. (destroyed) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Hand G,  Arrest of Christ, formerly f. 24r from the Turin,
Fig. 7 Hand G, Arrest of Christ, formerly f. 24r from the Turin-Milan Hours, ca.1420s or 1440s, approx. 28 x 19 cm. (destroyed) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1),  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 8 Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1) [side-by-side viewer]
North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1),  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 9 Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1) [side-by-side viewer]
Design for wood ornaments displaying the arms of ,  Archives of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Register 16, Bruges
Fig. 10 Design for wood ornaments displaying the arms of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood in Bruges, f. 103r, Parure Boeck, ca. 16th century, ink and watercolor on paper, (dimensions not available). Archives of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Register 16, Bruges (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1),  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 11 Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1),  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 12 Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Tabard for Jacob Gheerolf, provost of the Confrat,  Archives of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Register 16, Bruges
Fig. 13 Tabard for Jacob Gheerolf, provost of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood in Bruges in 1480, f. 26r, Parure Boeck, ca. 16th century, ink and watercolor on paper, (dimensions not available). Archives of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Register 16, Bruges (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Hans Memling,  Scenes from the Passion of Christ,  Galleria Sabauda, Turin (inv. no. 8)
Fig. 14 Hans Memling, Scenes from the Passion of Christ, ca. 1470, oil on panel, 56.7 x 92.2 cm. Galleria Sabauda, Turin (inv. no. 8) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
  1. 1. Carol Krinsky, “Representations of the Temple of Jerusalem before 1500,” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 33 (1970): 1-19.

  2. 2. Previous owners had posited attributions to Dirk Bouts and Gerard David; see Diane Scillia, “Gerard David and Manuscript Illumination in the Low Countries, 1480-1509” (PhD diss., Case Western Reserve University, 1975), 81, and note 17.

  3. 3. Maryan Ainsworth and Keith Christiansen, eds., From Van Eyck to Bruegel: Early Netherlandish Painting in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art/Abrams, 1998), 107-9.

  4. 4. Scillia “David,” 79-110.

  5. 5. Ainsworth and Christiansen, Van Eyck to Bruegel, 107. 

  6. 6. Scillia and Ainsworth suggested that David’s panel was painted during his North Netherlandish tenure. Scillia, “David,” 94; and Maryan Ainsworth, Gerard David: Purity of Vision in an Age of Transition (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998), 93.

  7. 7. Thomas Kren and Scot McKendrick, eds., Illuminating the Renaissance: The Triumph of Flemish Manuscript Painting in Europe (Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2003), 88-89.

  8. 8. Kren and McKendrick, Illuminating the Renaissance, 83-84.

  9. 9. Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, ms. lat. 10548, f. 34r; illustrated in Bert Cardon, “The Portfolio of a Bruges Miniaturist in the Mid-Fifteenth Century,” in ‘Als ich can’: Liber Amicorum in Memory of Professor Dr. Maurits Smeyers, ed. Bert Cardon, Jan vander Stock, and Dominique van Wijnsberghe (Louvain: Peeters, 2002), 1:319.

  10. 10. Brussels, Bibliothèque royale Albert I, ms. II 7619, f. 55v, and f. 67v; illustrated in Henri Defoer, Anne Korteweg, and Wilhelmina W¸stefeld, The Golden Age of Dutch Manuscript Painting (New York: Braziller, 1990), 173, 205.   

  11. 11. Maurits Smeyers and Bert Cardon, “Utrecht and Bruges–South and North: ‘Boundless’ Relations in the Fifteenth Century,” in Masters and Miniatures: Proceedings of the Congress of Medieval Manuscript Illumination in the Northern Netherlands (Utrecht, December 10-13, 1989), ed. K. van der Horst and Johann-Christian Klamt (Ghent: Snoeck, 1991), 89. For more on the socio-political background of these relations, see Richard Vaughan, Philip the Good: The Apogee of Burgundy (Woodbridge: Boydell, 2002), 227-30.

  12. 12. Ainsworth and Christiansen, Van Eyck to Bruegel, 107

  13. 13. The word ommegang took many alternative spellings in medieval Dutch; see J. Verdam, Middelnederlandsh handwoordenboek (The Hague: Nijhoff, 2002), 391-92.

  14. 14. Ainsworth and Christiansen, Van Eyck to Bruegel, 107.

  15. 15. etsvernieuwingen Brugge 1397-1421 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 114, no. 17), f. 64r. The expansion is noted in the Rekeningenen van het Heilig Bloed (Archief van de Broederschap van het Heilig Bloed, Brugge, register 5), f. 9r.  

  16. 16. arure Boeck (Archief van de Broederschap van het Heilig Bloed, Brugge, register 16), f. 103r. My thanks to the previous archivist of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Dr. Guy van Reyninghe de Voxvrie, for allowing me access to these documents.  

  17. 17. “Betaelt den zelven Jooris [de Satelare] over tvermaken van eenen stocke met eenen pellicaen”: Confrerie du Saint-Sang, Comptes 1518-1697 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 456, portfolio 5), f. 21r, item 5. Unless otherwise noted, all translations are mine. (The records on ff. 1r-23r are for payments made between 1512 and 1518.)

  18. 18. ekeningenen van het Heilig Bloed, f. 10r, items 11-12 (for 1471-72); f. 15r, item 10 (for 1472-73).

  19. 19. Ainsworth and Christiansen, Van Eyck to Bruegel, 107.

  20. 20. Another small inscription appears along the hem of the staff-bearer’s garment, beneath the left forearm. It appears to read ACV [ ]. Unfortunately, this is insufficient to support any further guesswork regarding its possible meaning.

  21. 21. arure Boeck, f. 26r.

  22. 22. “Item betaelt van drie roosen hoeden, deene om den nieuwen proost ende die twee and[eren] om[m]e de twee neiuwe zorghers,” Rekeningenen van het Heilig Bloed, f. 59v, item 4 (for 1482-83). Such a payment was repeated other years.

  23. 23. The payments for the hood often accompany payments for colored fabric, presumably that used for the provost’s tabard; interestingly the payment for the fabric went to the confraternity’s roedragher; Rekeningenen van het Heilig Bloed, f. 59r, item 18; f. 59v, item 4.

  24. 24. Abrown tabard was worn by the confraternity’s provost in 1480, 1483, 1484, and 1494, as well as in the sixteenth century; diagonal embroideries running from left to right can be found on the robes from 1458 (a green robe), 1460 (blue), 1465 (blue), 1467 (green), 1469 (blue), 1471 (green), 1474 or 1475 (blue), and 1478 (green); Parure Boeck.

  25. 25. tadsrekeningen Brugge 1395-96 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 84r, item 5. A process from 1270 states that the procession was held at least fourteen years earlier; Antoon Viaene, “Zweren ten Heleghen Bloede: Oudste getuigenis van verering der reliek in de St.-Basiliskerk te Brugge,” Biekorf 64 (1963): 176.

  26. 26. “Het Beeldt Christi, draghende het Kruys na den Bergh van Calvarien, hem volghende een hoop van Joden, Vrouwen, &c., Den Evangelist Lucas, in’t 23. Capittel”: Joost de Damhouder, Van de Grootdadigheyt Der Breedt-vermaerde Regeringhe Van de Stadt Brugge: Met de Plaets-beschryvinghe der selver stede; Beneffens eene Loflyke Uytsprake ter eere van ‘t Grootdadigh Magistraet (Amsterdam: Schipper, 1684), 564-68.

  27. 27. tadsrekeningen Brugge 1445-46 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 52v, item 7.

  28. 28. Antoon Viaene, “Het ‘Spel van den Hovekin’,” Biekorf 42 (1936): 113-18.

  29. 29. “en[de] die spelen van thovekin, va[n] taventmael, en[de] meer andere sticke[n] der Passie ons heren aengende, warende ghetoocht”: Dits die excellente cronike va[n] vlaendere[n] beghinnende va[n] Liederick Buc den eersten forestier tot de[n] latest[n], die door haer vrome feyte, namaels Grave[n] va[n] Vlaendre[n] ghemaect worde[n], actervolghende die rechte afcomste der voors[eiden] grave[n]), tot desen onsen door luchtichste hooch ghebore[n]) Keyser Karolo, altijt v[er]meederde des rijcx ghebore[n] te Ghendt (Antwerp: Willem Vorsterman, 1531), f. 203r; Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1477-78 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 153v, item 1.

  30. 30. Wat daer was ghetoocht de[n] boom van Yesse, en[de] taventmael, en[de] thovekin, tvanghe[n], thgheeselen, en[de] als Annas, Cayphas, Herodes, en[de] andere seere chierlic toe ghemaect va[n] schilderye”: Excellente Cronike van Vlaendren, f. 213v; Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1478-79 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 171r, item 4.

  31. 31. tadsrekeningen Brugge 1398-99 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 92v, item 2.

  32. 32. “al te stoffeirne van schilderyen, van allen den houte ende yserwercke, van canevetse, van de dachu[er]en vand[en] the[m]merlieden, vande mont costen van lxxij p[er]soonen, alle bezich upden dach vanden o[m]meghanghe anden voors[eider] boom ende Jh[erusa]lem”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1462-63 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 53r, item 5. This item provided funds for both the “City of Jerusalem” and a “Tree of Jesse,” probably introduced in 1401 (Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1400-01 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 105r, item 7, however the records for 1400 are lost).

  33. 33. Most master craftsmen earned ten to twelve deniers per day; see Etienne Scholliers, “Lonen te Brugge en in het Brugse Vrije (XVe-XVIIe eeuw),” in Dokumenten voor de gheschiedenis van prijzen en lonen in Vlaanderen en Brabant (XIVe-XIXe eeuw), ed. Charles Verlinden et al. (Bruges: De Tempel, 1965), 2:87-160.

  34. 34. The connection between Bruges’s “City of Jerusalem” and Memling’s panorama will be discussed further in my forthcoming book on art and theater in fifteenth-century Bruges.

  35. 35. tadsrekeningen Aalst, 1431-32 (Brussels, Archives generales du royaume, 31432), f. 69r, item 6. Elsewhere I have discussed the relationship between the plays in Aalst and Bruges in greater depth; “Processional Plays in Aalst: A View from the Archives,” Mediaevalia 28, 1 (2007): 95-117.

  36. 36. “up den dach vand[en] processie vand[en] heleghen bloede vanden hovekinne en[de] een deel vand[en]passie ons hee[re]n ghespeilt hebbene”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1507-08 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 87v, item 2.

  37. 37. “zekere p[er]sonnaige[n] vand[er] passie ons liefs heeren te spelene”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1509-10 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 72r, item 5.

  38. 38. int spelen van diverssche p[er]sonnaigen upden dach vand[en] heleghen bloede, nopende der passie ons liefs heeren ende anders”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1510-11 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 80r, item 2.

  39. 39. int spelen van diverssche p[er]sonaigen up den dach vand[er] waereden heleghen bloede, nopende der passie ons he[er]en, en[de] andere veil meer”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1511-12 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 109v, item 5.

  40. 40. tadsrekeningen Brugge 1396-97 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 92v, item 1.

  41. 41. This point will also be discussed in greater detail in my forthcoming book. Suffice to say here that the painters had not always been the principal caretakers of all the plays but rather seem to have been given greater responsibility gradually though the 1410s and 1420s, before receiving sole responsibility after 1445.

  42. 42. Susan Urbach, “Research Report on Examinations of Underdrawings in Some Early Netherlandish and German Panels in the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts II,” in Dessin sous-jacent et copies, Colloque VIII pour l’etude du dessin sous-jacent dans le peinture, 8-10 septembre 1989, ed. Hélène Verougstraete-Marcq and Roger van Shoute (Louvain-la-Neuve: …rasme, 1991), 85. Thanks go to Maximiliaan Martens and Thérèse de Hemptinne, both from the Rijksuniversiteit Gent, and Noël Geirnaert, city archivist of Bruges, for their assistance with my new transcriptions.

  43. 43. Verdam, Handwoordenboek, 73 

  44. 44. Verdam, Handwoordenboek, 93, 196.

  45. 45. Kathryn M. Rudy, “Northern European Visual Responses to Holy Land Pilgrimage, 1453-1550” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 2001), 116.

  46. 46. Kathryn M. Rudy, “A Guide to Mental Pilgrimage: Paris, Bibliothèque de l’Arsenal, Ms. 212,” Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 63 (2000): 494. 

  47. 47. Rudy, “Mental Pilgrimage,” 494-97. Stations along the route numbered anywhere from six to twenty-five; see Jan van Herwaarden, “Geloof en geloofsuitingen in de late middeleeuwen: Jeruzalembedevaarten, lijdensdevotie, en kruiswegverering,” Bijdragen en mededelingen betreffende de geschiedenis der Nederlanden 98 (1983): 421, 423 n102.

  48. 48. Rudy, “Visual Responses,” 180. On Bruges pilgrims to Jerusalem, see Antoon Viaene, “Jeruzalemvaarders uit Vlaanderen in de Bourgondische eeuw,” Biekorf 65 (1964): 5-16; Karel M. de Lille, “Jeruzalemvaarders uit Vlaanderen in de Bourgondische tijd. Aanvullingen,” Biekorf 65 (1964): 119-22; and Antoon Viaene, “Jeruzalemvaarders uit Vlaanderen in de Bourgondische tijd. Aanvullingen,” Biekorf 65 (1964): 336-37. On pilgrimages by the Adornes family, see Jacques Heers and Goergette de Groer, eds., Itineraire d’Anselme Adorno en terre sainte (1470-71) (Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1978); and Noël Geirnaert and André Vandewalle, Adornes en Jeruzalem: Internationaal leven in het 15de- en 16de-eeuwse Brugge (Bruges: Gemeentebestuur, 1983).

  49. 49. See the various publications by Kathryn M. Rudy cited here. The “spiritual pilgrimage” guidebooks were also catalogued in Ben A. J. Wasser, “Die peregrenatie van Iherusalem: Pelgrimsverslagen van Nederlandse Jerusalemgangers in de 15e, 16e, en 17e eeuw: ontstaan en ontwikkeling,” De gulden passer: Bulletin van de ‘Vereening der Antwerpsche Bibliophilen’ 69 (1991): 5-72.

  50. 50. Heer Bethlem, Dit is een devote meditatie op die passie ons Heeren ende van plaetse die mate ghestelt daer onse lieven Heere voor ons gheleden heeft, met die figueren ende schoone oratien daer op dienende (Antwerp, 1515), f. 5v. This text seems to have been available earlier than its printing; see Kathryn M. Rudy, “‘Den aflaet der heiliger stat Jherusalem ende des berchs van Calvarien’: Indulgenced Prayers for the Mental Holy Land Pilgrimage in Manuscripts from the St. Agnes Convent in Maaseik,” Ons geestelijk erf 74 (2000): 219.

  51. 51. Jan Pascha, Een devote maniere om ghesstelyck Pelgrimagie te trecken, tot den heylighen lande, als te Jherusalem, Bethleem, ter Jordanen, etc. (Louvain: Hieronymus Welle, 1568), f. 108v.

  52. 52. Translations by Rudy, “Visual Responses,” 116-19, 342-47.

  53. 53. Rudy, “Indulgenced Prayers,” 219.

  54. 54. Henri Rommel, “De Processiën ter vereering van het H. Bloed,” Biekorf 11 (1900): 113.

  55. 55. Joseph Cuvelier “Inventaire analytique des archives de la chapelle du St-Sang à Bruges, précédé d’une notice historique sur la chapelle,” Annales de la Société d’Émulation pour l’étude de l’histoire et des antiquités de la Flandre 50 (1900): 18, 20, 57.

  56. 56. Walter Cahn, “Margaret of York’s Guide to Pilgrimage Churches of Rome,” in Margaret of York, Simon Marmion, and the Visions of Tondal, ed. Thomas Kren (Malibu: J. Paul Getty Museum, 1992), 89-98; Kathryn M. Rudy, “A Pilgrim’s Book of Hours: Stockholm Royal Library A.233,” Studies in Iconography 21 (2000): 237-79.

  57. 57. The seven local churches in Bruges were: the cathedral of Sint Donaas and the churches of Onse Lieve Vrouw, Sint Salvator, Sint Jakob, Sint Gillis, Sinte Walburga, and Sint Kruis outside the city walls; see F. Rémy, Les grandes indulgences pontificales aux Pays-Bas à la fin du Moyen-Age, 1300-1531: Essai sur leur histoire et leur importance financière (Louvain: Librairie Universitaire, 1928), 102.

Ainsworth, Maryan. Gerard David: Purity of Vision in an Age of Transition. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998.

Ainsworth, Maryan, and Keith Christiansen, eds. From Van Eyck to Bruegel: Early Netherlandish Painting in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art / Abrams, 1998.

Heer Bethlem. Dit is een devote meditatie op die passie ons Heeren ende van plaetse die mate ghestelt daer onse lieven Heere voor ons gheleden heeft, met die figueren ende schoone oratien daer op dienende. Antwerp, 1515.

Cahn, Walter. “Margaret of York’s Guide to Pilgrimage Churches of Rome,” in Margaret of York, Simon Marmion, and the Visions of Tondal, 89-98. Edited by Thomas Kren,. Malibu: J. Paul Getty Museum, 1992.

Cardon, Bert. “The Portfolio of a Bruges Miniaturist in the Mid-Fifteenth Century,” in ‘Als ich can’: Liber Amicorum in Memory of Professor Dr. Maurits Smeyers, 1:317-55. Edited by Bert Cardon, Jan vander Stock, and Dominique van Wijnsberghe. 2 vols. Louvain: Peeters, 2002.

Cuvelier, Joseph. “Inventaire analytique des archives de la chapelle du St-Sang à Bruges, précédé d’une notice historique sur la chapelle.” Annales de la Société d’Émulation pour l’étude de l’histoire et des antiquités de la Flandre 50 (1900): 1-152.

De Damhouder, Joost. Van de Grootdadigheyt Der Breedt-vermaerde Regeringhe Van de Stadt Brugge: Met de Plaets-beschryvinghe der selver stede; Beneffens eene Loflyke Uytsprake ter eere van ët Grootdadigh Magistraet. Amsterdam: Schipper, 1684.

Defoer, Henri, Anne Korteweg, and Wilhelmina Wüstefeld. The Golden Age of Dutch Manuscript Painting. New York: Braziller, 1990.

Dits die excellente cronike va(n) vlaendere(n) beghinnende va(n) Liederick Buc den eersten forestier tot de(n) laetste(n), die door haer vrome feyte, namaels Grave(n) va(n) Vlaendre(n) ghemaect worde(n), actervolghende die rechte afcomste der voors(eiden) grave(n), tot desen onsen door luchtichste hooch ghebore(n) Keyser Karolo, altijt v(er)meederde des rijcx ghebore(n) te Ghendt. Antwerp: Willem Vorsterman, 1531.

Geirnaert, Noël, and André Vandewalle. Adornes en Jeruzalem: Internationaal leven in het 15de- en 16de-eeuwse Brugge. Bruges: Gemeentebestuur, 1983.

Heers, Jacques, and Goergette de Groer, eds. Itineraire d’Anselme Adorno en terre sainte (147071). Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1978.

Herwaarden, Jan van. “Geloof en geloofsuitingen in de late middeleeuwen. Jeruzalembedevaarten, lijdensdevotie, en kruiswegverering.” Bijdragen en mededelingen betreffende de geschiedenis der Nederlanden 98 (1983): 400-429.

Kren, Thomas, and Scot McKendrick, eds., Illuminating the Renaissance: The Triumph of Flemish Manuscript Painting in Europe. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2003.

Lille, Karel M. de “Jeruzalemvaarders uit Vlaanderen in de Bourgondische tijd. Aanvullingen.” Biekorf 65 (1964): 119-22.

Krinsky, Carol. “Representations of the Temple of Jerusalem before 1500.” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 33 (1970): 1-19. doi:10.2307/750887

Pascha, Jan. Een devote maniere om ghesstelyck Pelgrimagie te trecken, tot den heylighen lande, als te Jherusalem, Bethleem, ter Jordanen, etc. Louvain: Hieronymum Welle, 1568.

Rémy, F. Les grandes indulgences pontificales aux Pays-Bas à la fin du Moyen-Age, 1300-1531: Essai sur leur histoire et leur importance financière. Louvain: Librairie Universitaire, 1928.

Rommel, Henri. “De Processiën ter vereering van het H. Bloed.” Biekorf 11 (1900): 113-211.

Rudy, Kathryn M. “‘Den aflaet der heiliger stat Jherusalem ende des berchs van Calvarien.’ Indulgenced Prayers for the Mental Holy Land Pilgrimage in Manuscripts from the St. Agnes Convent in Maaseik.” Ons geestelijk erf 74 (2000): 211-54. doi:10.2143/OGE.74.3.616453

Rudy, Kathryn M. “A Guide to Mental Pilgrimage: Paris, Bibliothèque de l’Arsenal Ms.212.” Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 63 (2000): 494-515. doi:10.2307/1594960

Rudy, Kathryn M. “A Pilgrim’s Book of Hours: Stockholm Royal Library A.233.” Studies in Iconography 21 (2000): 237-79.

Rudy, Kathryn M. “Northern European Visual Responses to Holy Land Pilgrimage, 1453-1550.” PhD diss., Columbia University, 2001.

Scholliers, Etienne. “Lonen te Brugge en in het Brugse Vrije (XVe – XVIIe eeuw),” in Dokumenten voor de gheschiedenis van prijzen en lonen in Vlaanderen en Brabant (XIVe – XIXe eeuw), 2:87-160. Edited by Charles Verlinden, et al. 2 vols. Bruges: De Tempel, 1965.

Scillia, Diane. “Gerard David and Manuscript Illumination in the Low Countries, 1480-1509.” PhD diss., Case Western Reserve University, 1975.

Smeyers, Maurits, and Bert Cardon, “Utrecht and Bruges–South and North. ‘Boundless’ Relations in the Fifteenth Century,” in Masters and Miniatures: Proceedings of the Congress of Medieval Manuscript Illumination in the Northern Netherlands (Utrecht, December 10-13, 1989), 89-108. Edited by Koert van der Horst and Johann-Christian Klamt. Ghent: Snoeck, 1991.

Trowbridge, Mark. “Processional Plays in Aalst: A View from the Archives.” Mediaevalia 28, no. 1 (2007): 95-117.

Urbach, Susan. “Research Report on Examinations of Underdrawings in Some Early Netherlandish and German Panels in the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts II,” in Dessin sous-jacent et copies, Colloque VIII pour l’etude du dessin sous-jacent dans le peinture, 810 septembre 1989, 77-93. Edited by Hélène Verougstraete-Marcq and Roger van Shoute. Louvain-la-Neuve: …rasme, 1991.

Vaughan, Richard. Philip the Good: The Apogee of Burgundy. Woodbridge: Boydell, 2002.

Verdam, J. Middelnederlandsh handwoordenboek. The Hague: Nijhoff, 2002.

Viaene, Antoon. “Het ëSpel van den Hovekin’.” Biekorf 42 (1936): 113-18.

Viaene, Antoon. “Zweren ten Heleghen Bloede. Oudste getuigenis van verering der reliek in de St.-Basiliskerk te Brugge.” Biekorf 64 (1963): 176-80.

Viaene, Antoon. “Jeruzalemvaarders uit Vlaanderen in de Bourgondische eeuw.” Biekorf 65 (1964): 5-16.

Viaene, Antoon. “Jeruzalemvaarders uit Vlaanderen in de Bourgondische tijd. Aanvullingen.” Biekorf 65 (1964): 336-37.

Wasser, Ben A. J. “Die peregrenatie van Iherusalem: Pelgrimsverslagen van Nederlandse Jerusalemgangers in de 15e, 16e, en 17e eeuw: ontstaan en ontwikkeling.” De gulden passer:Bulletin van de ‘Vereening der Antwerpsche Bibliophilen’ 69 (1991): 5-72.

Archival Sources

Confrerie du Saint-Sang, Comptes 1518-1697. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 456, portfolio 5.

Parure Boeck. Archief van de Broederschap van het Heilig Bloed, Brugge, register 16.

Rekeningenen van het Heilig Bloed. Archief van de Broederschap van het Heilig Bloed, Brugge, register 5.

Stadsrekeningen Aalst, 143132. Brussels, Archives Générales du Royaume, 31432.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 139596. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 139697. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 139899. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 140001. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 144546. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 146263. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 147778. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 147879. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 150708. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 150910. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 151011. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Stadsrekeningen Brugge 151112. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216.

Wetsvernieuwingen Brugge 1397-1421. Stadsarchief Brugge, series 114,number 17.

List of Illustrations

North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Christ Bearing the Cross,  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 1 North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter, Christ Bearing the Cross, ca. 1470, oil on panel, 107.6 x 82.2 cm. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (inv. no. 43.95) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Circle of Jan van Eyck,  Christ Carrying the Cross,  Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna
Fig. 2 Circle of Jan van Eyck, Christ Carrying the Cross, late 15th century, pen and ink on paper, 20.4 x 27.7 cm. Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna (inv. no. 3025) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Circle of Jan van Eyck,  Figures from Christ Carrying the Cross,  Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum, Braunschweig
Fig. 3 Circle of Jan van Eyck, Figures from Christ Carrying the Cross, late 15th century, ink on paper, 13.5 x 11.5 cm. Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum, Braunschweig (inv. no. 216) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Copy after the circle of Jan van Eyck,  Road to Calvary,  Szépmüvészti Múzeum, Budapest
Fig. 4 Copy after the circle of Jan van Eyck, Road to Calvary, ca. 1530, oil on panel, 130.6 x 97.5 cm. Szépmüvészti Múzeum, Budapest (inv. no. 2531) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Gerard David,  Crucifixion (detail),  Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
Fig. 5 Gerard David, Crucifixion (detail), ca. 1475, oil on panel, 88 x 56 cm. Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid (inv. no. 1928.3) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Hand K,  Way to Calvary, formerly f. 31v from the Turin-M,
Fig. 6 Hand K, Way to Calvary, formerly f. 31v from the Turin-Milan Hours, ca. 1440s-50s, approx. 28 x 19 cm. (destroyed) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Hand G,  Arrest of Christ, formerly f. 24r from the Turin,
Fig. 7 Hand G, Arrest of Christ, formerly f. 24r from the Turin-Milan Hours, ca.1420s or 1440s, approx. 28 x 19 cm. (destroyed) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1),  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 8 Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1) [side-by-side viewer]
North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1),  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 9 Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1) [side-by-side viewer]
Design for wood ornaments displaying the arms of ,  Archives of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Register 16, Bruges
Fig. 10 Design for wood ornaments displaying the arms of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood in Bruges, f. 103r, Parure Boeck, ca. 16th century, ink and watercolor on paper, (dimensions not available). Archives of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Register 16, Bruges (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1),  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 11 Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
North Netherlandish (Utrecht?) Painter,  Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1),  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Fig. 12 Detail from Christ Bearing the Cross (figure 1) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Tabard for Jacob Gheerolf, provost of the Confrat,  Archives of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Register 16, Bruges
Fig. 13 Tabard for Jacob Gheerolf, provost of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood in Bruges in 1480, f. 26r, Parure Boeck, ca. 16th century, ink and watercolor on paper, (dimensions not available). Archives of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Register 16, Bruges (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Hans Memling,  Scenes from the Passion of Christ,  Galleria Sabauda, Turin (inv. no. 8)
Fig. 14 Hans Memling, Scenes from the Passion of Christ, ca. 1470, oil on panel, 56.7 x 92.2 cm. Galleria Sabauda, Turin (inv. no. 8) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]

Footnotes

  1. 1. Carol Krinsky, “Representations of the Temple of Jerusalem before 1500,” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 33 (1970): 1-19.

  2. 2. Previous owners had posited attributions to Dirk Bouts and Gerard David; see Diane Scillia, “Gerard David and Manuscript Illumination in the Low Countries, 1480-1509” (PhD diss., Case Western Reserve University, 1975), 81, and note 17.

  3. 3. Maryan Ainsworth and Keith Christiansen, eds., From Van Eyck to Bruegel: Early Netherlandish Painting in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art/Abrams, 1998), 107-9.

  4. 4. Scillia “David,” 79-110.

  5. 5. Ainsworth and Christiansen, Van Eyck to Bruegel, 107. 

  6. 6. Scillia and Ainsworth suggested that David’s panel was painted during his North Netherlandish tenure. Scillia, “David,” 94; and Maryan Ainsworth, Gerard David: Purity of Vision in an Age of Transition (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998), 93.

  7. 7. Thomas Kren and Scot McKendrick, eds., Illuminating the Renaissance: The Triumph of Flemish Manuscript Painting in Europe (Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2003), 88-89.

  8. 8. Kren and McKendrick, Illuminating the Renaissance, 83-84.

  9. 9. Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, ms. lat. 10548, f. 34r; illustrated in Bert Cardon, “The Portfolio of a Bruges Miniaturist in the Mid-Fifteenth Century,” in ‘Als ich can’: Liber Amicorum in Memory of Professor Dr. Maurits Smeyers, ed. Bert Cardon, Jan vander Stock, and Dominique van Wijnsberghe (Louvain: Peeters, 2002), 1:319.

  10. 10. Brussels, Bibliothèque royale Albert I, ms. II 7619, f. 55v, and f. 67v; illustrated in Henri Defoer, Anne Korteweg, and Wilhelmina W¸stefeld, The Golden Age of Dutch Manuscript Painting (New York: Braziller, 1990), 173, 205.   

  11. 11. Maurits Smeyers and Bert Cardon, “Utrecht and Bruges–South and North: ‘Boundless’ Relations in the Fifteenth Century,” in Masters and Miniatures: Proceedings of the Congress of Medieval Manuscript Illumination in the Northern Netherlands (Utrecht, December 10-13, 1989), ed. K. van der Horst and Johann-Christian Klamt (Ghent: Snoeck, 1991), 89. For more on the socio-political background of these relations, see Richard Vaughan, Philip the Good: The Apogee of Burgundy (Woodbridge: Boydell, 2002), 227-30.

  12. 12. Ainsworth and Christiansen, Van Eyck to Bruegel, 107

  13. 13. The word ommegang took many alternative spellings in medieval Dutch; see J. Verdam, Middelnederlandsh handwoordenboek (The Hague: Nijhoff, 2002), 391-92.

  14. 14. Ainsworth and Christiansen, Van Eyck to Bruegel, 107.

  15. 15. etsvernieuwingen Brugge 1397-1421 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 114, no. 17), f. 64r. The expansion is noted in the Rekeningenen van het Heilig Bloed (Archief van de Broederschap van het Heilig Bloed, Brugge, register 5), f. 9r.  

  16. 16. arure Boeck (Archief van de Broederschap van het Heilig Bloed, Brugge, register 16), f. 103r. My thanks to the previous archivist of the Confraternity of the Holy Blood, Dr. Guy van Reyninghe de Voxvrie, for allowing me access to these documents.  

  17. 17. “Betaelt den zelven Jooris [de Satelare] over tvermaken van eenen stocke met eenen pellicaen”: Confrerie du Saint-Sang, Comptes 1518-1697 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 456, portfolio 5), f. 21r, item 5. Unless otherwise noted, all translations are mine. (The records on ff. 1r-23r are for payments made between 1512 and 1518.)

  18. 18. ekeningenen van het Heilig Bloed, f. 10r, items 11-12 (for 1471-72); f. 15r, item 10 (for 1472-73).

  19. 19. Ainsworth and Christiansen, Van Eyck to Bruegel, 107.

  20. 20. Another small inscription appears along the hem of the staff-bearer’s garment, beneath the left forearm. It appears to read ACV [ ]. Unfortunately, this is insufficient to support any further guesswork regarding its possible meaning.

  21. 21. arure Boeck, f. 26r.

  22. 22. “Item betaelt van drie roosen hoeden, deene om den nieuwen proost ende die twee and[eren] om[m]e de twee neiuwe zorghers,” Rekeningenen van het Heilig Bloed, f. 59v, item 4 (for 1482-83). Such a payment was repeated other years.

  23. 23. The payments for the hood often accompany payments for colored fabric, presumably that used for the provost’s tabard; interestingly the payment for the fabric went to the confraternity’s roedragher; Rekeningenen van het Heilig Bloed, f. 59r, item 18; f. 59v, item 4.

  24. 24. Abrown tabard was worn by the confraternity’s provost in 1480, 1483, 1484, and 1494, as well as in the sixteenth century; diagonal embroideries running from left to right can be found on the robes from 1458 (a green robe), 1460 (blue), 1465 (blue), 1467 (green), 1469 (blue), 1471 (green), 1474 or 1475 (blue), and 1478 (green); Parure Boeck.

  25. 25. tadsrekeningen Brugge 1395-96 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 84r, item 5. A process from 1270 states that the procession was held at least fourteen years earlier; Antoon Viaene, “Zweren ten Heleghen Bloede: Oudste getuigenis van verering der reliek in de St.-Basiliskerk te Brugge,” Biekorf 64 (1963): 176.

  26. 26. “Het Beeldt Christi, draghende het Kruys na den Bergh van Calvarien, hem volghende een hoop van Joden, Vrouwen, &c., Den Evangelist Lucas, in’t 23. Capittel”: Joost de Damhouder, Van de Grootdadigheyt Der Breedt-vermaerde Regeringhe Van de Stadt Brugge: Met de Plaets-beschryvinghe der selver stede; Beneffens eene Loflyke Uytsprake ter eere van ‘t Grootdadigh Magistraet (Amsterdam: Schipper, 1684), 564-68.

  27. 27. tadsrekeningen Brugge 1445-46 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 52v, item 7.

  28. 28. Antoon Viaene, “Het ‘Spel van den Hovekin’,” Biekorf 42 (1936): 113-18.

  29. 29. “en[de] die spelen van thovekin, va[n] taventmael, en[de] meer andere sticke[n] der Passie ons heren aengende, warende ghetoocht”: Dits die excellente cronike va[n] vlaendere[n] beghinnende va[n] Liederick Buc den eersten forestier tot de[n] latest[n], die door haer vrome feyte, namaels Grave[n] va[n] Vlaendre[n] ghemaect worde[n], actervolghende die rechte afcomste der voors[eiden] grave[n]), tot desen onsen door luchtichste hooch ghebore[n]) Keyser Karolo, altijt v[er]meederde des rijcx ghebore[n] te Ghendt (Antwerp: Willem Vorsterman, 1531), f. 203r; Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1477-78 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 153v, item 1.

  30. 30. Wat daer was ghetoocht de[n] boom van Yesse, en[de] taventmael, en[de] thovekin, tvanghe[n], thgheeselen, en[de] als Annas, Cayphas, Herodes, en[de] andere seere chierlic toe ghemaect va[n] schilderye”: Excellente Cronike van Vlaendren, f. 213v; Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1478-79 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 171r, item 4.

  31. 31. tadsrekeningen Brugge 1398-99 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 92v, item 2.

  32. 32. “al te stoffeirne van schilderyen, van allen den houte ende yserwercke, van canevetse, van de dachu[er]en vand[en] the[m]merlieden, vande mont costen van lxxij p[er]soonen, alle bezich upden dach vanden o[m]meghanghe anden voors[eider] boom ende Jh[erusa]lem”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1462-63 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 53r, item 5. This item provided funds for both the “City of Jerusalem” and a “Tree of Jesse,” probably introduced in 1401 (Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1400-01 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 105r, item 7, however the records for 1400 are lost).

  33. 33. Most master craftsmen earned ten to twelve deniers per day; see Etienne Scholliers, “Lonen te Brugge en in het Brugse Vrije (XVe-XVIIe eeuw),” in Dokumenten voor de gheschiedenis van prijzen en lonen in Vlaanderen en Brabant (XIVe-XIXe eeuw), ed. Charles Verlinden et al. (Bruges: De Tempel, 1965), 2:87-160.

  34. 34. The connection between Bruges’s “City of Jerusalem” and Memling’s panorama will be discussed further in my forthcoming book on art and theater in fifteenth-century Bruges.

  35. 35. tadsrekeningen Aalst, 1431-32 (Brussels, Archives generales du royaume, 31432), f. 69r, item 6. Elsewhere I have discussed the relationship between the plays in Aalst and Bruges in greater depth; “Processional Plays in Aalst: A View from the Archives,” Mediaevalia 28, 1 (2007): 95-117.

  36. 36. “up den dach vand[en] processie vand[en] heleghen bloede vanden hovekinne en[de] een deel vand[en]passie ons hee[re]n ghespeilt hebbene”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1507-08 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 87v, item 2.

  37. 37. “zekere p[er]sonnaige[n] vand[er] passie ons liefs heeren te spelene”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1509-10 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 72r, item 5.

  38. 38. int spelen van diverssche p[er]sonnaigen upden dach vand[en] heleghen bloede, nopende der passie ons liefs heeren ende anders”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1510-11 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 80r, item 2.

  39. 39. int spelen van diverssche p[er]sonaigen up den dach vand[er] waereden heleghen bloede, nopende der passie ons he[er]en, en[de] andere veil meer”: Stadsrekeningen Brugge 1511-12 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 109v, item 5.

  40. 40. tadsrekeningen Brugge 1396-97 (Stadsarchief Brugge, series 216), f. 92v, item 1.

  41. 41. This point will also be discussed in greater detail in my forthcoming book. Suffice to say here that the painters had not always been the principal caretakers of all the plays but rather seem to have been given greater responsibility gradually though the 1410s and 1420s, before receiving sole responsibility after 1445.

  42. 42. Susan Urbach, “Research Report on Examinations of Underdrawings in Some Early Netherlandish and German Panels in the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts II,” in Dessin sous-jacent et copies, Colloque VIII pour l’etude du dessin sous-jacent dans le peinture, 8-10 septembre 1989, ed. Hélène Verougstraete-Marcq and Roger van Shoute (Louvain-la-Neuve: …rasme, 1991), 85. Thanks go to Maximiliaan Martens and Thérèse de Hemptinne, both from the Rijksuniversiteit Gent, and Noël Geirnaert, city archivist of Bruges, for their assistance with my new transcriptions.

  43. 43. Verdam, Handwoordenboek, 73 

  44. 44. Verdam, Handwoordenboek, 93, 196.

  45. 45. Kathryn M. Rudy, “Northern European Visual Responses to Holy Land Pilgrimage, 1453-1550” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 2001), 116.

  46. 46. Kathryn M. Rudy, “A Guide to Mental Pilgrimage: Paris, Bibliothèque de l’Arsenal, Ms. 212,” Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 63 (2000): 494. 

  47. 47. Rudy, “Mental Pilgrimage,” 494-97. Stations along the route numbered anywhere from six to twenty-five; see Jan van Herwaarden, “Geloof en geloofsuitingen in de late middeleeuwen: Jeruzalembedevaarten, lijdensdevotie, en kruiswegverering,” Bijdragen en mededelingen betreffende de geschiedenis der Nederlanden 98 (1983): 421, 423 n102.

  48. 48. Rudy, “Visual Responses,” 180. On Bruges pilgrims to Jerusalem, see Antoon Viaene, “Jeruzalemvaarders uit Vlaanderen in de Bourgondische eeuw,” Biekorf 65 (1964): 5-16; Karel M. de Lille, “Jeruzalemvaarders uit Vlaanderen in de Bourgondische tijd. Aanvullingen,” Biekorf 65 (1964): 119-22; and Antoon Viaene, “Jeruzalemvaarders uit Vlaanderen in de Bourgondische tijd. Aanvullingen,” Biekorf 65 (1964): 336-37. On pilgrimages by the Adornes family, see Jacques Heers and Goergette de Groer, eds., Itineraire d’Anselme Adorno en terre sainte (1470-71) (Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1978); and Noël Geirnaert and André Vandewalle, Adornes en Jeruzalem: Internationaal leven in het 15de- en 16de-eeuwse Brugge (Bruges: Gemeentebestuur, 1983).

  49. 49. See the various publications by Kathryn M. Rudy cited here. The “spiritual pilgrimage” guidebooks were also catalogued in Ben A. J. Wasser, “Die peregrenatie van Iherusalem: Pelgrimsverslagen van Nederlandse Jerusalemgangers in de 15e, 16e, en 17e eeuw: ontstaan en ontwikkeling,” De gulden passer: Bulletin van de ‘Vereening der Antwerpsche Bibliophilen’ 69 (1991): 5-72.

  50. 50. Heer Bethlem, Dit is een devote meditatie op die passie ons Heeren ende van plaetse die mate ghestelt daer onse lieven Heere voor ons gheleden heeft, met die figueren ende schoone oratien daer op dienende (Antwerp, 1515), f. 5v. This text seems to have been available earlier than its printing; see Kathryn M. Rudy, “‘Den aflaet der heiliger stat Jherusalem ende des berchs van Calvarien’: Indulgenced Prayers for the Mental Holy Land Pilgrimage in Manuscripts from the St. Agnes Convent in Maaseik,” Ons geestelijk erf 74 (2000): 219.

  51. 51. Jan Pascha, Een devote maniere om ghesstelyck Pelgrimagie te trecken, tot den heylighen lande, als te Jherusalem, Bethleem, ter Jordanen, etc. (Louvain: Hieronymus Welle, 1568), f. 108v.

  52. 52. Translations by Rudy, “Visual Responses,” 116-19, 342-47.

  53. 53. Rudy, “Indulgenced Prayers,” 219.

  54. 54. Henri Rommel, “De Processiën ter vereering van het H. Bloed,” Biekorf 11 (1900): 113.

  55. 55. Joseph Cuvelier “Inventaire analytique des archives de la chapelle du St-Sang à Bruges, précédé d’une notice historique sur la chapelle,” Annales de la Société d’Émulation pour l’étude de l’histoire et des antiquités de la Flandre 50 (1900): 18, 20, 57.

  56. 56. Walter Cahn, “Margaret of York’s Guide to Pilgrimage Churches of Rome,” in Margaret of York, Simon Marmion, and the Visions of Tondal, ed. Thomas Kren (Malibu: J. Paul Getty Museum, 1992), 89-98; Kathryn M. Rudy, “A Pilgrim’s Book of Hours: Stockholm Royal Library A.233,” Studies in Iconography 21 (2000): 237-79.

  57. 57. The seven local churches in Bruges were: the cathedral of Sint Donaas and the churches of Onse Lieve Vrouw, Sint Salvator, Sint Jakob, Sint Gillis, Sinte Walburga, and Sint Kruis outside the city walls; see F. Rémy, Les grandes indulgences pontificales aux Pays-Bas à la fin du Moyen-Age, 1300-1531: Essai sur leur histoire et leur importance financière (Louvain: Librairie Universitaire, 1928), 102.

Bibliography

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Ainsworth, Maryan, and Keith Christiansen, eds. From Van Eyck to Bruegel: Early Netherlandish Painting in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art / Abrams, 1998.

Heer Bethlem. Dit is een devote meditatie op die passie ons Heeren ende van plaetse die mate ghestelt daer onse lieven Heere voor ons gheleden heeft, met die figueren ende schoone oratien daer op dienende. Antwerp, 1515.

Cahn, Walter. “Margaret of York’s Guide to Pilgrimage Churches of Rome,” in Margaret of York, Simon Marmion, and the Visions of Tondal, 89-98. Edited by Thomas Kren,. Malibu: J. Paul Getty Museum, 1992.

Cardon, Bert. “The Portfolio of a Bruges Miniaturist in the Mid-Fifteenth Century,” in ‘Als ich can’: Liber Amicorum in Memory of Professor Dr. Maurits Smeyers, 1:317-55. Edited by Bert Cardon, Jan vander Stock, and Dominique van Wijnsberghe. 2 vols. Louvain: Peeters, 2002.

Cuvelier, Joseph. “Inventaire analytique des archives de la chapelle du St-Sang à Bruges, précédé d’une notice historique sur la chapelle.” Annales de la Société d’Émulation pour l’étude de l’histoire et des antiquités de la Flandre 50 (1900): 1-152.

De Damhouder, Joost. Van de Grootdadigheyt Der Breedt-vermaerde Regeringhe Van de Stadt Brugge: Met de Plaets-beschryvinghe der selver stede; Beneffens eene Loflyke Uytsprake ter eere van ët Grootdadigh Magistraet. Amsterdam: Schipper, 1684.

Defoer, Henri, Anne Korteweg, and Wilhelmina Wüstefeld. The Golden Age of Dutch Manuscript Painting. New York: Braziller, 1990.

Dits die excellente cronike va(n) vlaendere(n) beghinnende va(n) Liederick Buc den eersten forestier tot de(n) laetste(n), die door haer vrome feyte, namaels Grave(n) va(n) Vlaendre(n) ghemaect worde(n), actervolghende die rechte afcomste der voors(eiden) grave(n), tot desen onsen door luchtichste hooch ghebore(n) Keyser Karolo, altijt v(er)meederde des rijcx ghebore(n) te Ghendt. Antwerp: Willem Vorsterman, 1531.

Geirnaert, Noël, and André Vandewalle. Adornes en Jeruzalem: Internationaal leven in het 15de- en 16de-eeuwse Brugge. Bruges: Gemeentebestuur, 1983.

Heers, Jacques, and Goergette de Groer, eds. Itineraire d’Anselme Adorno en terre sainte (147071). Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1978.

Herwaarden, Jan van. “Geloof en geloofsuitingen in de late middeleeuwen. Jeruzalembedevaarten, lijdensdevotie, en kruiswegverering.” Bijdragen en mededelingen betreffende de geschiedenis der Nederlanden 98 (1983): 400-429.

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Imprint

Review: Peer Review (Double Blind)
DOI: 10.5092/jhna.2009.7.1.4
License:
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Recommended Citation:
Mark Trowbridge, "Jerusalem Transposed: A Fifteenth-Century Panel for the Bruges Market," Journal of Historians of Netherlandish Art 1:1 (Winter 2009) DOI: 10.5092/jhna.2009.7.1.4

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