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A parte ficta totum fictum. Fanciful Illustrations of Sea Animals in the Liber de natura rerum and Other Medieval Encyclopedias
- 1.0557600 - FLÚ 2023 RIV DE eng J - Journal Article
Šedinová, Hana
A parte ficta totum fictum. Fanciful Illustrations of Sea Animals in the Liber de natura rerum and Other Medieval Encyclopedias.
Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte. Roč. 85, č. 1 (2022), s. 13-39. ISSN 0044-2992
Institutional support: RVO:67985955
Keywords : medieval encyclopaedias * Thomas of Cantimpré * Jacob van Maerlant * illuminated manuscripts * illustrations of sea animals
OECD category: Arts, Art history
Impact factor: 0.2, year: 2022
Method of publishing: Limited access
https://doi.org/10.1515/ZKG-2022-1003
Six of the twenty books of Thomas of Cantimpre’s thirteenth-century Liber de natura rerum are devoted to zoology, and two of them contain descriptions of strange sea animals whose names are often hard to make sense of, both etymologically and semantically. Illuminators had to work with textual descriptions lacking essential information, and in many cases the encyplopedist himself made matters worse by focussing on the most bizarre and peculiar traits of animals encountered in his antique and medieval sources. Consequently, some of the illuminators produced images fanciful enough to make it look like they got carried away by their own imagination. However, a detailed comparison between text and image reveals that artists did their best to follow textual descriptions it is the literal interpretation of their sources that often strikes us as unexpected and perplexing.
Permanent Link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0334717
Number of the records: 1