Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Hubert Goltzius’s Lebendige Bilder Gar Nach Aller Keysern, Emperor Maximilian II, and Renaissance Cycles of Fresco Portraits of Emperors in Palaces in Silesia
View through CrossRef
At the beginning of the 21st century, there were sensational discoveries in two palaces located in Ciechanowice and Struga in Silesia (Poland). During their renovations, Renaissance fresco cycles of portraits of emperors from the Roman, medieval, and early modern times appeared under the layer of plaster in the representative dining rooms (27 in the palace in Struga and about 50 in the palace in Ciechanowice). They were painted in the 1580s (in Ciechanowice, the date is 1588) by the same unknown artist. This article is the first to attempt to establish the most important facts related to the creation of both fresco cycles. The frescoes were founded by representatives of influential Silesian Protestant nobility: Heinrich von Reichenbach (Ciechanowice) and Abraham von Czettritz und Neuhaus (Struga). Both nobles attended the funeral of Emperor Maximilian II, which took place in Prague in 1577. This is where they purchased a work by the Dutch printmaker, painter, and numismatist, Hubert Goltzius, Lebendige Bilder Gar Nach Aller Keysern […] (published in Antwerp in 1557), whose specially prepared copy had been solemnly presented to Emperor Maximilian II in 1562. The book contains 133 monochrome woodcut illustrations with portraits of emperors in circular frames by the Dutch artist Joss van Gietleughen, which—together with accompanying inscriptions—were used as models for fresco paintings in both Silesian palaces. The foundation of the cycles of portraits of the emperors of the Roman Empire and the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation in the representative halls of the palaces in Ciechanowice and Struda, which ended with a joint representation of Emperor Maximilian II and the King of Spain, Philip II Habsburg, was a way to show the gratitude of both prominent and wealthy Protestant nobles towards Emperor Maximilian II. During his reign, imperial power was the source and guarantee of religious freedoms for Protestants in Silesia. It is significant that both cycles left out the person of emperor regnant, Rudolf II, who soon after assuming the imperial throne abandoned his father’s tolerant policy towards Protestants. Although the author of both series of frescoes was probably a local painter, they are a unique artistic realization not only in Silesia but also in the whole of Central Europe, and they can only be compared to the popular Renaissance portrait galleries of “famous men” (uomini famosi).
Title: Hubert Goltzius’s Lebendige Bilder Gar Nach Aller Keysern, Emperor Maximilian II, and Renaissance Cycles of Fresco Portraits of Emperors in Palaces in Silesia
Description:
At the beginning of the 21st century, there were sensational discoveries in two palaces located in Ciechanowice and Struga in Silesia (Poland).
During their renovations, Renaissance fresco cycles of portraits of emperors from the Roman, medieval, and early modern times appeared under the layer of plaster in the representative dining rooms (27 in the palace in Struga and about 50 in the palace in Ciechanowice).
They were painted in the 1580s (in Ciechanowice, the date is 1588) by the same unknown artist.
This article is the first to attempt to establish the most important facts related to the creation of both fresco cycles.
The frescoes were founded by representatives of influential Silesian Protestant nobility: Heinrich von Reichenbach (Ciechanowice) and Abraham von Czettritz und Neuhaus (Struga).
Both nobles attended the funeral of Emperor Maximilian II, which took place in Prague in 1577.
This is where they purchased a work by the Dutch printmaker, painter, and numismatist, Hubert Goltzius, Lebendige Bilder Gar Nach Aller Keysern […] (published in Antwerp in 1557), whose specially prepared copy had been solemnly presented to Emperor Maximilian II in 1562.
The book contains 133 monochrome woodcut illustrations with portraits of emperors in circular frames by the Dutch artist Joss van Gietleughen, which—together with accompanying inscriptions—were used as models for fresco paintings in both Silesian palaces.
The foundation of the cycles of portraits of the emperors of the Roman Empire and the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation in the representative halls of the palaces in Ciechanowice and Struda, which ended with a joint representation of Emperor Maximilian II and the King of Spain, Philip II Habsburg, was a way to show the gratitude of both prominent and wealthy Protestant nobles towards Emperor Maximilian II.
During his reign, imperial power was the source and guarantee of religious freedoms for Protestants in Silesia.
It is significant that both cycles left out the person of emperor regnant, Rudolf II, who soon after assuming the imperial throne abandoned his father’s tolerant policy towards Protestants.
Although the author of both series of frescoes was probably a local painter, they are a unique artistic realization not only in Silesia but also in the whole of Central Europe, and they can only be compared to the popular Renaissance portrait galleries of “famous men” (uomini famosi).
Related Results
Evaluation von Sensibilitätsstörungen nach Kieferumstellungsosteotomien – eine 1-jährige Longitudinalstudie
Evaluation von Sensibilitätsstörungen nach Kieferumstellungsosteotomien – eine 1-jährige Longitudinalstudie
Hintergrund: Postoperativ auftretende Sensibilitätsstörungen entsprechen der häufigsten Komplikation nach Kieferumstellungsosteotomien. Gerade weil es sich dabei um elektive Eingri...
P-668 The LH endocrine profile in Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone analogue cycles
P-668 The LH endocrine profile in Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone analogue cycles
Abstract
Study question
What does the evolution of luteinizing hormone (LH) throughout the follicular phase look like in differe...
Roman Empire and Roman Emperor: Animal Sacrifice as an Instrument of Religious Convergence
Roman Empire and Roman Emperor: Animal Sacrifice as an Instrument of Religious Convergence
I analyze the ways that animal sacrifice functioned to construct the figure of the emperor as a point of religious convergence in the Roman Empire. Two types of practice are import...
The Luther Renaissance
The Luther Renaissance
The Luther Renaissance is the most important international network for Luther research, as well as an ecclesial, ecumenical and cultural reform movement between 1900 and 1960 in Ge...
The Renaissance
The Renaissance
The whole of the Oxford Bibliographies Renaissance and Reformation module has grown since its inception to embrace the period 1350–1750. That time span includes the period scholars...
Habsburgs imperialisme en de verspreiding van renaissancevormen in de Nederlanden: de vensters van Michiel Coxcie in de Sint-Goedele te Brussel
Habsburgs imperialisme en de verspreiding van renaissancevormen in de Nederlanden: de vensters van Michiel Coxcie in de Sint-Goedele te Brussel
AbstractThe introduction and diffusion of Italian Renaissance forms in sixteenth-century Netherlandish art has usually been described as a process initiated by artists who travelle...
The French Intervention in Mexico and the Empire of Maximilian and Carlota
The French Intervention in Mexico and the Empire of Maximilian and Carlota
In 1861, Spanish, British, and French forces all landed in Veracruz to collect the debts Mexico owed them. After two months, the Spanish and British representatives reached an agre...
Archaeological Discovery and Research into the Layout of the
Palaces and Ancestral Shrines of Han Dynasty Chang'an –A
Comparative Essay on the Capital Cities of Ancient Chinese
Archaeological Discovery and Research into the Layout of the
Palaces and Ancestral Shrines of Han Dynasty Chang'an –A
Comparative Essay on the Capital Cities of Ancient Chinese
The principal function of the ancient Chinese royal capital
city was political. From the perspective of archaeology, the
...

