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Protest and Reform: The Waning of the Old Order ca. 1400–1600
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Figure 19.1 ALBRECHT DÜRER, Knight, Death, and the Devil, 1513. Engraving, 95⁄8 � 71⁄2 in. Dürer’s engraving is remarkable for its wealth of microscopic detail. Objects in the real world— the horse, the dog, and the lizard—are depicted as precisely as those imagined: the devil and the horned demon.
“Now what else is the whole life of mortals but a sort of comedy, in which the various actors, disguised by various costumes and masks, walk on and play each one his part, until the manager waves them off the stage?” Erasmus
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The Temper of Reform
Science and Technology
CHAPTER 19 Protest and Reform: The Waning of the Old Order 1
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1450, in the city of Mainz, the German goldsmith Johannes Gutenberg (ca. 1400–ca. 1468) perfected a printing press that made it possible to fabricate books more cheaply, more rapidly, and in greater numbers than ever before (Figure 19.2). As information became a commodity for mass pro- duction, vast areas of knowledge—heretofore the exclusive domain of the monastery, the Church, and the universi- ty—became available to the public. The printing press facilitated the rise of popular education and encouraged individuals to form their own opinions by reading for themselves. It accelerated the growing interest in vernacu- lar literature, which in turn enhanced national and indi- vidual self-consciousness. Print technology proved to be the single most important factor in the success of the Protestant Reformation, as it brought the complaints of Church reformers to the attention of all literate folk.
By the sixteenth century, the old medieval order was crumbling.
Classical humanism and the influence of Italian Renaissance
artist–scientists were spreading throughout Northern Europe (Map
19.1). European exploration and expansion were promoting a
broader world-view and new markets for trade. The rise of a glob-
al economy with vast opportunities for material wealth was
inevitable. Europe’s population grew from 69 million in 1500 to 188
million in 1600. As European nation-states tried to strengthen their
international influence, political rivalry intensified. The “super-
powers”—Spain, under the Hapsburg ruler Philip II (1527–1598)
and England, under Elizabeth I (1533–1603)—contended for
advantage in Atlantic shipping and trade. In order to resist the
encroachment of Europe’s stronger nation-states, the weaker ones
formed balance-of-power alliances that often provoked war. The
new order took Europe on an irreversibly modern course.
While political and commercial factors worked to transform
the West, the event that most effectively destroyed the old
medieval order was the Protestant Reformation. In the wake of
Protestantism, the unity of European Christendom would disap-
pear forever. Beginning in the fifteenth century, the Northern
Renaissance, endorsed by middle-class patrons and Christian
humanists, assumed a religious direction that set it apart from
Italy’s Classical revival. Its literary giants, from Erasmus to
Shakespeare, and its visual artists, Flemish and German, shared
little of the idealism of their Italian Renaissance counterparts.
Their concern for the realities of human folly and for the fate
of the Christian soul launched a message of protest and a plea
for church reform expedited by way of the newly perfected
printing press.
The Impact of Technology In the transition from medieval to early modern times, technology played a crucial role. Gunpowder, the light cannon, and other military devices made warfare more impersonal and ultimately more deadly. At the same time, Western advances in navigation, shipbuilding, and mar- itime instrumentation propelled Europe into a dominant position in the world.
Just as the musket and the cannon transformed the his- tory of European warfare, so the technology of mechanical printing revolutionized learning and communication. Block printing originated in China in the ninth century and movable type in the eleventh, but print technology did not reach Western Europe until the fifteenth century. By
1320 paper adopted for use in Europe (having long been in use in China)
1450 the Dutch devise the first firearm small enough to be carried by a single person
1451 Nicolas of Cusa (German) uses concave lenses to amend nearsightedness
1454 Johannes Gutenberg (German) prints the Bible with movable metal type
Figure 19.2 An early sixteenth-century woodcut of a printer at work.
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Oxford Amsterdam
Antwerp Brussels
Bruges
Rotterdam London
Hamburg Wittenberg
ErfurtCologne
Worms Mainz
Heidelberg
Prague Nuremberg
Posen
Augsburg Vienna
Paris
Tours Bourges
Sens
Rouen Caen
Dijon Basel Constance
Orleans
Toulouse
Saragossa
Avignon
Madrid
Toledo
Seville
Milan
Parma
Genoa Modena
Padua
Pest
Venice
Florence
UrbinoPisa Siena
Lucca
Rome
Naples
Bremen
Canterbury
Zürich
SCOTLAND
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HUNGARY
SICILY
SARDINIA
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FRANCE
SPAIN
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PAPAL STATES
VENETIAN REPUBLIC
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Christian Humanism and the Northern Renaissance The new print technology broadcast an old message of reli- gious protest and reform. For two centuries, critics had attacked the wealth, worldliness, and unchecked corrup- tion of the Church of Rome. During the early fifteenth century, the rekindled sparks of lay piety and anticlerical- ism spread throughout the Netherlands, where religious leaders launched the movement known as the devotio moderna (“modern devotion”). Lay Brothers and Sisters of the Common Life, as they were called, organized houses in which they studied and taught Scripture. Living in the manner of Christian monks and nuns, but taking no monastic vows, these lay Christians cultivated a devotion- al lifestyle that fulfilled the ideals of the apostles and the church fathers. They followed the mandate of Thomas a Kempis (1380–1471), himself a Brother of the Common Life and author of the Imitatio Christi (Imitation of Christ), to put the message of Jesus into daily practice. After the Bible, the Imitatio Christi was the most frequently published book in the Christian West well into modern times.
The devotio moderna spread quickly throughout Northern Europe, harnessing the dominant strains of anti- clericalism, lay piety, and mysticism, even as it coincided with the revival of Classical studies in the newly estab- lished universities of Germany. Although Northern humanists, like their Italian Renaissance counterparts, encouraged learning in Greek and Latin, they were more concerned with the study and translation of Early Christian manuscripts than with the Classical and largely
secular texts that pre- occupied the Italian humanists. This criti- cal reappraisal of reli- gious texts is known as Christian humanism. Christian humanists
studied the Bible and the writings of the church fathers with the same intellectual fervor that the Italian humanists had brought to their examination of Plato and Cicero. The efforts of these Northern scholars gave rise to a rebirth (or renaissance) that focused on the late Classical world and, specifically, on the revival of church life and doctrine as gleaned from Early Christian literature. The Northern Renaissance put Christian humanism at the service of evangelical Christianity.
The leading Christian humanist of the sixteenth centu- ry—often called “the Prince of Humanists”—was Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam (1466–1536; Figure 19.3). Schooled among the Brothers of the Common Life and learned in Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, Erasmus was a superb scholar and a prolific writer (see Reading 19.2). The first humanist to make extensive use of the printing press, he once dared a famous publisher to print his words as fast as he could write them. Erasmus was a fervent Neoclassicist— he held that almost everything worth knowing was set forth in Greek and Latin. He was also a devout Christian. Advocating a return to the basic teachings of Christ, he criticized the Church and all Christians whose faith had been jaded by slavish adherence to dogma and ritual. Using four different Greek manuscripts of the Gospels, he pro- duced a critical edition of the New Testament that correct- ed Jerome’s mistranslations of key passages. Erasmus’ New Testament became the source of most sixteenth-century German and English vernacular translations of this central text of Christian humanism.
Map 19.1 Renaissance Europe, ca. 1500.
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priesthood. Inspired by the words of Saint Paul, “the just shall live by faith” (Romans 1:17), Luther argued that sal- vation could be attained only by faith in the validity of Christ’s sacrifice: human beings were saved by the unearned gift of God’s grace, not by their good works on earth. The purchase of indulgences, the veneration of relics, making pilgrimages, and seeking the intercession of the saints were useless, because only the grace of God could save the Christian soul. Justified by faith alone, Christians should assume full responsibility for their own actions and intentions.
In 1517, in pointed criticism of Church abuses, Luther posted on the door of the collegiate church at Wittenberg a list of ninety-five issues he intended for dispute with the leaders of the Church of Rome. The Ninety-Five Theses, which took the confrontational tone of the sample below, were put to press and circulated throughout Europe:
27 They are wrong who say that the soul flies out of Purgatory as soon as the money thrown into the chest rattles. 32 Those who believe that, through letters of pardon [indulgences], they are made sure of their own salvation will be eternally damned along with their teachers. 37 Every true Christian, whether living or dead, has a share in all the benefits of Christ and of the Church, given by God, even without letters of pardon. 43 Christians should be taught that he who gives to a poor man, or lends to a needy man, does better than if he bought pardons. 44 Because by works of charity, charity increases,
During the sixteenth century, papal extravagance and immorality reached new heights, and Church reform became an urgent public issue. In the territories of Germany, loosely united under the leadership of the Holy Roman emperor Charles V (1500–1558), the voices of protest were more strident than anywhere else in Europe. Across Germany, the sale of indulgences (see chapter 15) for the benefit of the Church of Rome—specifically for the rebuilding of Saint Peter’s Cathedral—provoked harsh criticism, especially by those who saw the luxuries of the papacy as a betrayal of apostolic ideals. As with most movements of religious reform, it fell to one individual to galvanize popular sentiment. In 1505, Martin Luther (1483–1546), the son of a rural coal miner, abandoned his legal studies to become an Augustinian monk (Figure 19.4). Thereafter, as a doctor of theology at the University of Wittenberg, he spoke out against the Church. His inflammatory sermons and essays offered radical remedies to what he called “the misery and wretchedness of Christendom.”
Luther was convinced of the inherent sinfulness of humankind, but he took issue with the traditional medieval view—as promulgated, for instance, in Everyman —that salvation was earned through the performance of good works and grace mediated by the Church and its
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Figure 19.3 ALBRECHT DÜRER, Erasmus of Rotterdam, 1526. Engraving, 93⁄4 � 71⁄2 in. The Latin inscription at the top of the engraving reports that Dürer executed the portrait from life. The Greek inscription below reads, “The better image [is found] in his writings.” The artist wrote to his friend that he felt the portrait was not a striking likeness.
Figure 19.4 LUCAS CRANACH THE ELDER, Portrait of Martin Luther, 1533. Panel, 8 � 53⁄4 in.
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and the man becomes better; while by means of pardons, he does not become better, but only freer from punishment. 45 Christians should be taught that he who sees any one in need, and, passing him by, gives money for pardons, is not purchasing for himself the indulgences of the Pope but the anger of God. 49 Christians should be taught that the Pope’s pardons are useful if they do not put their trust in them, but most hurtful if through them they lose the fear of God. 50 Christians should be taught that if the Pope were acquainted with the exactions of the Preachers of pardons, he would prefer that the Basilica of St. Peter should be burnt to ashes rather than that it should be built up with the skin, flesh, and bones of his sheep. 54 Wrong is done to the Word of God when, in the same sermon, an equal or longer time is spent on pardons than on it. 62 The true treasure of the Church is the Holy Gospel of the glory and grace of God. 66 The treasures of indulgences are nets, wherewith they now fish for the riches of men. 67 Those indulgences which the preachers loudly proclaim to be the greatest graces, are seen to be truly such as regards the promotion of gain. 68 Yet they are in reality most insignificant when compared to the grace of God and the piety of the cross. 86 . . . why does not the Pope, whose riches are at this day more ample than those of the wealthiest of the wealthy, build the single Basilica of St. Peter with his own money rather than with that of poor believers? . . .
Luther did not set out to destroy Catholicism, but rather, to reform it. Gradually he extended his criticism of Church abuses to criticism of church doctrine. For instance, because he found justification in Scripture for only two Roman Catholic sacraments—baptism and Holy Communion—he rejected the other five. He attacked monasticism and clerical celibacy. (Luther himself married and fathered six children.) Luther’s boldest challenge to the old medieval order, however, was his unwillingness to accept the pope as the ultimate source of religious author- ity. Denying that the pope was the spiritual heir to Saint Peter, he claimed that the head of the Church, like any other human being, was subject to error and correction. Christians, argued Luther, were collectively a priesthood of believers; they were “consecrated as priests by baptism.” The ultimate source of authority in matters of faith and doctrine was Scripture, as interpreted by the individual Christian. To encourage the reading of the Bible among his followers, Luther translated the Old and New Testaments into German.
Luther’s assertions were revolutionary because they defied both church dogma and the authority of the Church
of Rome. In 1520, Pope Leo X issued an edict excommuni- cating the outspoken reformer. Luther promptly burned the edict in the presence of his students at the University of Wittenberg. The following year, he was summoned to the city of Worms in order to appear before the Diet—the German parliamentary council. Charged with heresy, Luther stubbornly refused to back down, concluding, “I cannot and will not recant anything, for to act against our conscience is neither safe for us, nor open to us. On this I take my stand. I can do no other. God help me. Amen.” Luther’s confrontational temperament and down-to-earth style are captured in this excerpt from his Address to the German Nobility, a call for religious reform written shortly before the Diet of Worms and circulated widely in a print- ed edition.
From Luther’s Address to the German Nobility (1520)
It has been devised that the Pope, bishops, priests, and 1 monks are called the spiritual estate; princes, lords, artificers, and peasants are the temporal estate. This is an artful lie and hypocritical device, but let no one be made afraid by it, and that for this reason: that all Christians are truly of the spiritual estate, and there is no difference among them, save of office alone. As St. Paul says (1 Cor.: 12), we are all one body, though each member does its own work, to serve the others. This is because we have one baptism, one Gospel, one faith, and 10 are all Christians alike; for baptism, Gospel, and faith, these alone make spiritual and Christian people.
As for the unction by a pope or a bishop, tonsure, ordination, consecration, and clothes differing from those of laymen—all this may make a hypocrite or an anointed puppet, but never a Christian or a spiritual man. Thus we are all consecrated as priests by baptism. . . .
And to put the matter even more plainly, if a little company of pious Christian laymen were taken prisoners and carried away to a desert, and had not among them a 20 priest consecrated by a bishop, and were there to agree to elect one of them, born in wedlock or not, and were to order him to baptise, to celebrate the mass, to absolve, and to preach, this man would as truly be a priest, as if all the bishops and all the popes had consecrated him. That is why in cases of necessity every man can baptise and absolve, which would not be possible if we were not all priests. . . .
[Members of the Church of Rome] alone pretend to be considered masters of the Scriptures; although they learn 30 nothing of them all their life. They assume authority, and juggle before us with impudent words, saying that the Pope cannot err in matters of faith, whether he be evil or good, albeit they cannot prove it by a single letter. That is why the canon law contains so many heretical and unchristian, nay unnatural, laws. . . .
And though they say that this authority was given to St. Peter when the keys were given to him, it is plain enough that the keys were not given to St. Peter alone,
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Q Which of Luther’s assertions would the Church of Rome have found heretical? Why?
Q Which aspects of this selection might be called anti-authoritarian? Which might be called democratic?
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landholding aristocracy. The result was full-scale war, the so-called “Peasant Revolts,” that resulted in the bloody defeat of thousands of peasants. Although Luther con- demned the violence and brutality of the Peasant Revolts, social unrest and ideological warfare had only just begun. His denunciation of the lower-class rebels brought many of the German princes to his side; and some used their new religious allegiance as an excuse to seize and usurp church properties and revenues within their own domains. As the floodgates of dissent opened wide, civil wars broke out between German princes who were faithful to Rome and those who called themselves Lutheran. The wars lasted for some twenty-five years, until, under the terms of the Peace of Augsburg in 1555, it was agreed that each German prince should have the right to choose the religion to be practiced within his own domain. Nevertheless, religious wars resumed in the late sixteenth century and devastated German lands for almost a century.
Calvin All of Europe was affected by Luther’s break with the Church. The Lutheran insistence that enlightened Christians could arrive at truth by way of Scripture led reformers everywhere to interpret the Bible for themselves. The result was the birth of many new Protestant sects, each based on its own interpretation of Scripture. In the inde- pendent city of Geneva, Switzerland, the French theolo- gian John Calvin (1509–1564) set up a government in which elected officials, using the Bible as the supreme law, ruled the community. Calvin held that Christians were predestined from birth for either salvation or damnation, a circumstance that made good works irrelevant. The “Doctrine of Predestination” encouraged Calvinists to glorify God by living an upright life, one that required abstention from dancing, gambling, swearing, drunken- ness, and from all forms of public display. For, although one’s status was known only by God, Christians might manifest that they were among the “elect” by a show of moral rectitude. Finally, since Calvin taught that wealth was a sign of God’s favor, Calvinists extolled the “work ethic” as consistent with the divine will.
The Anabaptists In nearby Zürich, a radical wing of Protestantism emerged: the Anabaptists (given this name by those who opposed their practice of “rebaptizing” adult Christians) rejected all seven of the sacraments (including infant baptism) as sources of God’s grace. Placing total emphasis on Christian conscience and the voluntary acceptance of Christ, the Anabaptists called for the abolition of the Mass and the complete separation of Church and state: holding individ- ual responsibility and personal liberty as fundamental ideals, they were among the first Westerners to offer reli- gious sanction for political disobedience. Many Anabaptist reformers met death at the hands of local governments— the men were burned at the stake and the women were usually drowned. English offshoots of the Anabaptists— the Baptists and the Quakers—would come to follow
but to the whole community. Besides, the keys were not 40 ordained for doctrine or authority, but for sin, to bind or loose; and what they claim besides this from the keys is mere invention. . . .
Only consider the matter. They must needs acknowledge that there are pious Christians among us that have the true faith, spirit, understanding, word, and mind of Christ: why then should we reject their word and understanding, and follow a pope who has neither understanding nor spirit? Surely this were to deny our whole faith and the Christian Church. . . . 50
Therefore when need requires, and the Pope is a cause of offence to Christendom, in these cases whoever can best do so, as a faithful member of the whole body, must do what he can to procure a true free council. This no one can do so well as the temporal authorities, especially since they are fellow-Christians, fellow-priests, sharing one spirit and one power in all things, . . . Would it not be most unnatural, if a fire were to break out in a city, and every one were to keep still and let it burn on and on, whatever might be burnt, simply because they had not the mayor’s 60 authority, or because the fire perchance broke out at the mayor’s house? Is not every citizen bound in this case to rouse and call in the rest? How much more should this be done in the spiritual city of Christ, if a fire of offence breaks out, either at the Pope’s government or wherever it may! The like happens if an enemy attacks a town. The first to rouse up the rest earns glory and thanks. Why then should not he earn glory that decries the coming of our enemies from hell and rouses and summons all Christians?
But as for their boasts of their authority, that no one 70 must oppose it, this is idle talk. No one in Christendom has any authority to do harm, or to forbid others to prevent harm being done. There is no authority in the Church but for reformation. Therefore if the Pope wished to use his power to prevent the calling of a free council, so as to prevent the reformation of the Church, we must not respect him or his power; and if he should begin to excommunicate and fulminate, we must despise this as the doings of a madman, and, trusting in God, excommunicate and repel him as best we may. 80
The Spread of Protestantism Luther’s criticism constituted an open revolt against the institution that for centuries had governed the lives of Western Christians. With the aid of the printing press, his “protestant” sermons and letters circulated throughout Europe. His defense of Christian conscience worked to jus- tify protest against all forms of dominion. In 1524, under the banner of Christian liberty, German commoners insti- gated a series of violent uprisings against the oppressive
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Anabaptist precepts, including the rejection of religious ritual (and imagery) and a fundamentalist approach to Scripture.
The Anglican Church In England, the Tudor monarch Henry VIII (1491–1547) broke with the Roman Catholic Church and established a church under his own leadership. Political expediency col- ored the king’s motives: Henry was determined to leave England with a male heir, but when eighteen years of mar- riage to Catherine of Aragon produced only one heir (a daughter), he attempted to annul the marriage and take a new wife. The pope refused, prompting the king—former- ly a staunch supporter of the Catholic Church—to break with Rome. In 1526, Henry VIII declared himself head of the Church in England. In 1536, with the support of Parliament, he closed all Christian monasteries and sold church lands, accumulating vast revenues for the royal treasury. His actions led to years of dispute and hostility between Roman Catholics and Anglicans (members of the new English Church). By the mid-sixteenth century, the consequences of Luther’s protests were evident: the reli- gious unity of Western Christendom was shattered forever. Social and political upheaval had become the order of the day.
Music and the Reformation Since the Reformation clearly dominated the religious and social history of the sixteenth century, it also touched, directly or indirectly, all forms of artistic endeavor, includ- ing music. Luther himself was a student of music, an active performer, and an admirer of Josquin des Prez (see chapter 17). Emphasizing music as a source of religious instruction, he encouraged the writing of hymnals and reorganized the German Mass to include both congregational and profes- sional singing. Luther held that all religious texts should be sung in German, so that the faithful might understand their message. The text, according to Luther, should be both comprehensible and appealing.
Luther’s favorite music was the chorale, a congregation- al hymn that served to enhance the spirit of Protestant worship. Chorales, written in German, drew on Latin hymns and German folk tunes. They were characterized by monophonic clarity and simplicity, features that encour- aged performance by untrained congregations. The most famous Lutheran chorale (the melody of which may not have originated with Luther) is “Ein’ feste Burg ist unser Gott” (“A Mighty Fortress Is Our God”)—a hymn that has been called “the anthem of the Reformation.” Luther’s chorales had a major influence on religious music for cen- turies. And although in the hands of later composers the chorale became a complex polyphonic vehicle for voices and instruments, at its inception it was performed with all voices singing the same words at the same time. It was thus an ideal medium for the communal expression of Protestant piety.
Other Protestant sects, such as the Anabaptists and the Calvinists, regarded music as a potentially dangerous
distraction to the faithful. In many sixteenth-century churches, the organ was dismantled and sung portions of the service edited or deleted. Calvin, however, who encouraged devotional recitation of psalms in the home, revised church services to include the congregational singing of psalms in the vernacular.
Jan van Eyck Prior to the Reformation, in the cities of Northern Europe, a growing middle class joined princely rulers and the Church to encourage the arts. In addition to traditional religious subjects, middle-class patrons commissioned por- traits that—like those painted by Italian Renaissance artists (see chapter 17)—recorded their physical appear- ance and brought attention to their earthly achievements. Fifteenth-century Northern artists, unlike their Italian counterparts, were relatively unfamiliar with Greco- Roman culture; many of them moved in the direction of detailed Realism, already evident in the manuscript illumi- nations of the Limbourg brothers (see Figure 15.13).
The pioneer of Northern Realism was the Flemish artist Jan van Ecyk (ca. 1380–1441). Jan, whom we met in chapter 17, was reputed to have perfected the art of oil painting (see Figure 17.12). His application of thin glazes of colored pigments bound with linseed oil achieved the impression of dense, atmospheric space, and simulated the naturalistic effects of light reflecting off the surfaces of objects. Such effects were almost impossible to achieve in fresco or tempera. While Jan lacked any knowledge of the system of linear perspective popularized in Florence, he achieved an extraordinary level of realism both in the miniatures he executed for religious manuscripts and in his panel paintings.
Jan’s full-length double portrait of 1434 was the first painting in Western art that portrayed a secular couple in a domestic interior (Figure 19.5). The painting has long been the subject of debate among scholars who have ques- tioned its original purpose, as well as the identity of the sit- ters. Most likely, however, it is a visual document recording the marriage of Giovanni Nicolas Arnolfini (an Italian merchant who represented the Medici bank in Bruges), and his Flemish bride, Jeanne Cenami. Clearly, the couple are in the process of making a vow, witness the raised right hand of the richly dressed Arnolfini; their hands are joined, a gesture traditionally associated with engagement or marriage. Behind the couple, an inscription on the back wall of the chamber reads “Johannes de Eyck fuit hic” (“Jan van Eyck was here”); this testimonial is reiterated by the presence of two figures, probably the artist himself and a second observer, whose painted reflections are seen in the convex mirror below the inscription.
This Lutheran chorale inspired Johann Sebastian Bach’s Cantata No. 80, an excerpt from which may be heard on CD Two, as Music Listening Selection 4.
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Jan’s consummate mastery of minute, realistic details— from the ruffles on the young woman’s headcovering to the whiskers of the monkey-faced dog—demonstrate the artist’s determination to capture the immediacy of the physical world. This love of physical detail, typical of Northern painting, sets it apart from that of most Italian Renaissance art. Also typical of the Northern sensibility is the way in which these details “speak” to the greater mean- ing of the painting: the burning candle (traditionally car- ried to the marriage ceremony by the bride) suggests the all-seeing presence of Christ; the ripening fruit lying on and near the window sill both symbolizes fecundity and alludes to the union of the First Couple in the Garden of Eden; the small dog represents fidelity; the carved image on the chairback near the bed represents Saint Margaret, the patron saint of childbirth. The physical objects in this domestic interior, recreated in loving detail, suggest a world of material comfort and pleasure; but they also make symbolic reference to a higher, spiritual order. In this effort to reconcile the world of the spirit with that of the flesh, Jan anticipated the unique character of Northern Renaissance art.
Bosch The generation of Flemish artists that followed Jan van Eyck produced one of the most enigmatic figures of the Northern Renaissance: Hieronymus Bosch (1460–1516). Little is known about Bosch’s life, and the exact meaning of some of his works is much dis- puted. His career spanned the decades of the High Renaissance in Italy, but comparison of his paintings with those of Raphael or Michelangelo underscores the enormous difference between Italian Renaissance art and that of the European North: whereas Raphael and Michelangelo elevated the natural nobility of the individual, Bosch detailed the fallibility of humankind, its moral struggle, and its apocalyptic destiny. Bosch’s Death and the Miser (Figure 19.6), for instance, belongs to the tradition of the memento mori (discussed in chapter 12), which works to warn the beholder of the inevitability of death. The painting also shows the influence of popular fifteenth-century handbooks on the art of dying (the ars moriendi), designed to remind Christians that they must choose between sin- ful pleasures and the way of Christ. As Death looms on the threshold, the miser, unable to resist worldly temptations even in his last min- utes of life, reaches for the bag of gold
offered to him by a demon. In the foreground, Bosch depicts the miser storing gold in his money chest while clutching his rosary. Symbols of worldly power—a helmet, sword, and shield—allude to earthly follies. The depiction of such still-life objects to symbolize vanity, transience, or decay would become a genre in itself among seventeenth-century Flemish artists.
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Figure 19.5 JAN VAN EYCK, Marriage of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Bride, 1434. Tempera and oil on panel, 321⁄4 � 231⁄2 in.
Figure 19.6 HIERONYMUS BOSCH, Death and the Miser, ca. 1485–1490. Oil on oak, 3 ft. 5⁄8in. � 121⁄8 in.
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Bosch’s most famous work, The Garden of Earthly Delights (Figure 19.7) was executed around 1510, the very time that Raphael was painting The School of Athens. In the central panel of the triptych, Bosch depicts a cos- mic landscape in which youthful nudes cavort in a vari- ety of erotic and playful pastimes. The terrain, filled with oversized flora, real and imagined animals and birds, and strangely shaped vessels, is similar to that of the panel on
the left, where God is shown creating Adam and Eve. In the right wing of the triptych, Hell is pic- tured as a dark and sulfurous inferno where the damned are tormented by an assortment of terri- fying creatures who inflict on sinners punish- ments appropriate to their sins—the greedy hoarder of gold (on the lower right) excretes coins into a pothole, while the nude nearby, fon-
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CHAPTER 19 Protest and Reform: The Waning of the Old Order 9
dled by demons, is punished for the sin of lust. When the wings of the altarpiece are closed, one sees an image of God hover- ing above a huge transparent globe: the planet Earth in the process of creation.
The Garden of Earthly Delights has been described by some as an exposition on the decadent behavior of the descendants of Adam and Eve, but its distance from conventional religious iconography has made it the subject of endless scholarly interpretation. Bosch,
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Figure 19.7 HIERONYMUS BOSCH, The Creation of Eve: The Garden of Earthly Delights: Hell (triptych), ca. 1510–1515. Oil on wood, 7 ft. 25⁄8 in. � 6 ft. 43⁄4 in. Bosch probably painted this moralizing work for lay patrons. Many of its individual images would have been recognized as references to the Seven Deadly Sins, for instance: the bagpipe (a symbol of Lust) that sits on a disk crowning the Tree-Man (upper center) and the man who is forced to disgorge his food (symbolic of Gluttony) depicted beneath the enthroned frog (lower right).
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a Roman Catholic, clearly drew his imagery from a variety of medieval and contemporary sources, including the Bible, popular proverbs, marginal grotesques in illuminated manu- scripts, pilgrimage badges, and the popular pseudosciences of his time: astrology, the study of the influence of heavenly bodies on human affairs (the precursor of astronomy); and alchemy, the art of transmuting base metals into gold (the precursor of chemistry). The egg-shaped vessels, beakers, and transparent tubes that appear in all parts of the triptych were commonly used in alchemical transmutation. The process may have been familiar to Bosch as symbolic of creation and destruction, and, more specifically, as a metaphor for the bib- lical Creation and Fall.
Regardless of whether one interprets Bosch’s “Garden” as a theater of perversity or a stage for innocent procre- ation, it is clear that the artist transformed standard Christian iconography to suit his imagination. Commissioned not by the Church, but by a private patron, he may have felt free to do so. The result is a moralizing commentary on the varieties of human folly afflicting crea- tures hopeful of Christian salvation.
Printmaking The Protestant Reformation cast its long shadow upon the religious art of the North. Protestants rejected the tradi- tional imagery of medieval piety, along with church relics
The age of Christian humanism witnessed the rise of religious fanaticism, the most dramatic evidence of which is the witch hunts that infested Renaissance Europe and Reformation Germany. While belief in witches dates back to humankind’s earliest societies, the practice of persecuting witches did not begin until the late fourteenth century. Based in the medieval practice of finding evidence of the supernatural in natural phenomena, and fueled by the popular Christian belief that the devil is actively engaged in human affairs, the first massive persecutions occurred at the end of the fifteenth century, reaching their peak approximately 100 years later. Among Northern European artists, witches and witchcraft became favorite subjects (Figure 19.8).
In 1484, two German theologians published the Malleus Maleficarum (The Witches’ Hammer), an encyclopedia that described the nature of witches, their collusion with the devil, and the ways in which they might be recognized and punished. Its authors reiterated the traditional claim that women—by nature more feeble than men—were dangerously susceptible to the devil’s temptation. As a result, they became the primary victims of the mass hysteria that prevailed during the so-called “age of humanism.” Women—particularly those who were single, old, or eccentric—constituted four-fifths of the roughly 70,000 witches put to death between the years 1400 and 1700. Females who served as midwives might be accused of causing infant deaths or deformities; others were condemned as witches at the onset of local drought or disease. One recent study suggests that witches were blamed for the sharp drops in temperature that devastated sixteenth-century crops and left many Europeans starving.
The persecution of witches may be seen as an instrument of post-Reformation religious oppression, or as the intensification of antifemale sentiment in an age when women had become more visible politically and commercially. Nevertheless, the witchcraft hysteria of the early Modern Era dramatizes the troubling gap between humanism and religious fanaticism.
Figure 19.8 HANS BALDUNG (“Grien”), Witches, 1510. Chiaroscuro woodcut, 157⁄8 � 101⁄4 in. Three witches, sitting under the branches of a dead tree, perform a black Mass. One lifts the chalice, while another mocks the Host by elevating the body of a dead toad. An airborne witch rides backward on a goat, a symbol of the devil.
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CHAPTER 19 Protest and Reform: The Waning of the Old Order 11
and sacred images, which they associated with superstition and idolatry. Protestant iconoclasts stripped the stained glass from cathedral windows, shattered religious sculpture, whitewashed church frescoes, and destroyed altarpieces. At the same time, however, the voices of reform encouraged the proliferation of private devotional art, particularly that which illustrated biblical themes. In the production of portable, devotional images, the technology of printmak- ing played a major role. Just as movable type had facilitat- ed the dissemination of the printed word, so the technology of the print made devotional subjects available more cheaply and in greater numbers than ever before.
The two new printmaking processes of the fifteenth century were woodcut, the technique of cutting away all parts of a design on a wood surface except those that will be inked and transferred to paper (Figure 19.9), and engraving (Figure 19.10), the process by which lines are incised on a metal (usually copper) plate that is inked and run through a printing press. Books with printed illustra- tions became cheap alternatives to the hand-illuminated manuscripts that were prohibitively expensive to all but wealthy patrons.
Dürer The unassailed leader in Northern Renaissance print- making and one of the finest graphic artists of all time was Albrecht Dürer of Nuremberg (1471–1528). Dürer earned international fame for his woodcuts and metal engravings. His mastery of the laws of linear perspective and human anatomy and his investigations into Classical principles of proportions (enhanced by two trips to Italy) equaled those of the best Italian Renaissance artist– scientists. In the genre of portraiture, Dürer was the match of Raphael but, unlike Raphael, he recorded the features of his sitters with little idealization. His portrait engraving of Erasmus (see Figure 19.3) captures the concentrated intel- ligence of the Prince of Humanists.
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Figure 19.11 ALBRECHT DÜRER, The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, ca. 1496. Woodcut, 151⁄2 � 11 in.
Figure 19.9 Woodcut. A relief printing process created by lines cut into the plank surface of wood. The raised portions of the block are inked and transferred by pressure to the paper by hand or with a printing press.
Figure 19.10 Engraving. An intaglio method of printing. The cutting tool, a burin or graver, is used to cut lines in the surface of metal plates. (a) A cross section of an engraved plate showing burrs (ridges) produced by scratching a burin into the surface of a metal plate; (b) the burrs are removed and ink is wiped over the surface and forced into the scratches. The plate is then wiped clean, leaving ink deposits in the scratches; the ink is forced from the plate onto paper under pressure in a special press.
Dürer brought to the art of his day a desire to convey the spiritual message of Scripture. His series of woodcuts illustrating the last book of the New Testament, The Revelation According to Saint John (also called the “Apocalypse”), reveals the extent to which he achieved his purpose. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse—one of fifteen woodcuts in the series—brings to life the terrifying events described in Revelation 6.1–8 (Figure 19.11). Amidst billowing clouds, Death (in the foreground), Famine (carrying a pair of scales), War (brandishing a sword), and Pestilence (drawing his bow) sweep down upon humankind; their victims fall beneath the horses’ hooves, or, as with the bishop in the lower left, are devoured by infernal monsters. Dürer’s image seems a grim prophecy of the coming age, in which five million people would die in religious wars.
Dürer was a humanist in his own right and a great admirer of both the moderate Erasmus and the zealous Luther. In one of his most memorable engravings, Knight, Death, and the Devil, he depicted the Christian soul in the allegorical guise of a medieval knight (see Figure 19.1), a figure made famous in a treatise by Erasmus entitled Handbook for the Militant Christian (1504). The knight, the
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medieval symbol of fortitude and courage, advances against a dark and brooding landscape. Accompanied by his loyal dog, he marches forward, ignoring his fearsome compan- ions: Death, who rides a pale horse and carries an hour- glass, and the devil, a shaggy, cross-eyed, and horned demon. Here is the visual counterpart for Erasmus’ message that the Christian must hold to the path of virtue, and in spite of “all of those spooks and phantoms” that come upon him, he must “look not behind.” The knight’s dignified bearing (probably inspired by heroic equestrian statues Dürer had seen in Italy) contrasts sharply with the bestial and cankerous features of his forbidding escorts. In the tra- dition of Jan van Eyck, but with a precision facilitated by the new medium of metal engraving, Dürer records every leaf and pebble, hair and wrinkle; and yet the final effect is not a mere piling up of minutiae but, like nature itself, an astonishing amalgam of organically related elements.
In addition to his numerous woodcuts and engravings, Dürer produced hundreds of paintings: portraits and large- scale religious subjects. His interest in the natural world inspired the first landscapes in Western art (Figure 19.12). These detailed panoramic views of the countryside, execut- ed in watercolor during his frequent travels to Italy and elsewhere, were independent works, not mere studies for larger, more formal subjects. To such landscapes, as well as
to his meticulously detailed renderings of plants, animals, and birds, Dürer brought the eye of a scientific naturalist and a spirit of curiosity not unlike that of his Italian con- temporary, Leonardo da Vinci.
Grünewald Dürer’s German contemporary Matthias Gothardt Neithardt, better known as “Grünewald” (1460–1428) did not share his Classically inspired aesthetic ideals, nor his quest for realistic representation. The few paintings and drawings left by Grünewald (as compared with the hun- dreds of works left by Dürer) do not tell us whether the artist was Catholic or Protestant. In their spiritual intensi- ty and emotional subjectivity, however, they are among the most striking devotional works of the Northern Renaissance.
Grünewald’s landmark work, the Isenheim Altarpiece, was designed to provide solace to the victims of disease and especially plague at the Hospital of Saint Anthony in Isenheim, near Colmar, France (Figure 19.13). Like the Imitatio Christi, which taught Christians to seek identifica- tion with Jesus, this multipaneled altarpiece reminded its beholders of their kinship with the suffering Jesus, depict- ed in the central panel. Following the tradition of the devotional German Pietà (see Figure 15.10), Grünewald
Figure 19.12 ALBRECHT DÜRER, Wire Drawing Mill, undated. Watercolor, 111⁄4 � 163⁄4 in.
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