Get the latest tech news

Flowers of Fealty: Commemoration of the Christening of Elisabeth of Hesse (1598)


Commemorative manuscript featuring illustrations of pageants, costumes, and fireworks, later further illustrated by a separate artist, with floral motifs.

Dilich prefaces his commemoration with an introductory text, humbly comparing himself to the Greek philosopher Diogenes, who lived in a barrel and lazily looked on as the great statesmen of Athens erected feats of engineering and governed the polis. According to the Library of Congress, this aesthetic interloper “decorated all the free space left in the manuscript (i.e., on empty pages as well as along the margins) with remarkable watercolor paintings of common and exotic flowers such as the tulip, viola, and peony.” There are textual pastiches aplenty, such as a dialogue staged between the shepherds from Virgil’s eclogues, who dwell in the Arcadia of old, which recounts the knightly games held during the christening and couples floral imagery with martial themes.

Get the Android app

Or read this on Hacker News

Read more on:

Photo of flowers

flowers

Photo of commemoration

commemoration

Photo of Hesse

Hesse

Related news:

News photo

Deciphering the spectra of flowers to map landscape-scale blooming dynamics

News photo

Fruits and Flowers May Counteract Harmful Effects of Microplastics

News photo

Meet the Plant Hacker Creating Flowers Never Seen (or Smelled) Before