Jacob Bellaert (born in Zierikzee) was an early Dutch publisher who produced seventeen books in Haarlem from 1483 to 1486. The early Netherlandish painter Master of Bellaert or Master of Jacob Bellaert is so called for his many woodcuts in Bellaert's publications.

Illustration from Bartholomeus Anglicus's book Van de proprieteiten der dingen, 1484.

Biography

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Christ before Pilate, by the Master of Bellaert, showing the Haarlem City Hall in the background.

Little is known of his life or that of his illustrator. According to the National Library of the Netherlands (KB), the edition of Der sonderen troest of het Proces tussen Belial ende Moyses is the only version of Jacobus de Teramo's story of Liber Bellial known to have been produced in Dutch.[1] In his 1484 edition of Bartholomeus Anglicus's book Van de proprieteiten der dingen (English:"Of the propriety of things"), Jacob Bellaert printed his own name in the colophon, which is how his name survived.[2]

According to the RKD the art historian W.R. Valentiner identified the illustrator as identical to the painter Albert van Ouwater and the Master of the Tiburtine Sibyl.[3]

Books

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Recueil des histoires de Troyes by Raoul Le Fèvre, printed by Jacob Bellaert, 1485-1486.

References

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  1. ^ Jacob Bellaert Archived 2015-07-05 at archive.today in the KB
  2. ^ Record "KW 168 E 8" in the National Library of the Netherlands for Van den proprieteyten der dinghen, dated 24 Dec. 1485
  3. ^ Meester van Bellaert in the RKD