Devils, Demons, and Witchcraft (gnv64) PDF
Devils, Demons, and Witchcraft (gnv64) PDF
Devils, Demons, and Witchcraft (gnv64) PDF
12. Angel and Dev v for the soul of a dying man. After a
miniature in an English manuscript, fourteenth centUY.
Devils and Demons
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58. Playbill for the oldest German Faust comedy, The Life and
Death of the Great Ach-Sorcerr Dr. Johannes Faustlls, Bremen,
1688.
JV. Dungeon scene with Mephistopheles, Faust and Margart.
Lithograph by Eugene Delacroix for Johann Wolfgang von
Goethe's Faust, printed by Goyer Hermet, Paris, 1828.
bu. Garden scene with Mephistopheles, Faust, and Margaret.
Lithograph by Eugene Delacroix for Johann Wolfgang von
Goethe's Faust, printed by Goyer Heret, Paris, 1828.
bJ Prototpe of the nineteenth-century romantic devil. From The
Devil Walk by Thomas Landseer, London, JoJJ.
Hell and Damnation
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pamphlets, printed by Benjamin Harris [or Samuel Phillips,
BostOI, 1693.
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131. Page from La dance Macabre des Femmes, printed by Guyot
Marchant, Paris, 1486.
132. Pope and Emperor. Frm La dance Macabre des Hommes,
pdnted by Antoine Verard, Pads, 1486.
133. Doctor and lover. Frm La dance Macabre des Hommes,
printed by Guyot Marchant, Paris, 1486.
134. Pope and Emperor.
135. Astrologer and bourgeois. From La dance Macabr des
Hommes, printed by Guyot Marchant, Paris, 1486.
136. Chambermaid and matron.
137. Blde and prostitute. From La dance Macabre des Femmes,
plnted by Antoine Verard, Pals, 1486.
138,139. The townsman and Death.
140,141. The countryman and Death. From the Dance of Death
by the Master of the Lubeck Bible, Lubeck, 1489.
142. Death and the gentleman. From Der Doten Dantz (ance of
the Dead), printed by Heinrich Knoblochzel Heidelberg, 1490.
143. Death and the notables. Frm Der Doten Dantz, pInted by
Jacob Meydenbach, Mainz, 1492.
J 44. The orchestra of Death. From Der Doten Dantz, printed by
Heinrich Koblochzer, Heidelberg, /490.
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by Heimich Knoblochzel Heidelberg, 1490.
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146. Orchestra orthe dead. Woodclt by Michael Wolgemut, frm
Hartmann Schedel's Liber Chronicamm, printed by Anton
Koberger, Nuremberg, 1493.
147. Death and the miserly fool
148. Death and the poor fool.
From Sebastian Brandt's Navis Stultifera (Ship of Fools);
attributed to Albrecht Durer; prnted by Bergman de Dlpe. Basle.
1494.
149. The physician's discussion with Death. Frm Strub's
Orationes Dual, Vienna, 1511.
150. Three revelers meet three cOlpses who war them to repent.
From Horae, pInted by Wynkyn de Worde, Westminstel 1494.
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des hommes et des femmes, printed by Nicolas Le Rouge, Tryes,
1496.
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167. "The dalnce of Machabree, " from John Lydgate's The Fall
of PInces, pInted by Richard Tofel, London, 1554.
168. Reli gious f'natics dancing amid the graves in a churchyard,
in defance of civilian superstition and ecclesiastic ukases. From
a Gelman engraving, about 1600.
169. Ghost cotillion of the souls of Black Death victims who were
buried alive in 1347. Frm an engraving by A. Aubrey, Gelwany,
1604.
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170. Death and the artists. Designed by Conrad Meyer, frm
Rudolf Meyer's Sterbespiegel (irror of Dying), Zurich, 1650.
171. Death on the barricades in the March Revolution, 1848.
From a Danse Macabre series by Ad Rethel.
Memento Mori
A memento mori (Latin for remember that you must die") is an
object or pictorial symbol associated with death. Such symbols
include skulls, bones, coffns, urns, angels of death, upside-down
torches, graves and gravestones, hourglasses, scythes, spades,
toads, serpents, worms, owls, ravens, cypresses, weeping willows,
tuberoses, parsley, and many more. A good number of these
associations (and of our present-day funeral practices) can be
traced back to antiquity. These emblems of mortality have long
been used as items of adornment: Mary, Queen of Scots, owned a
skull-shaped watch; Martin Luther had a gold ring with a death's
head in enamel; even today skull motifs are used in all sorts of
jewelry and brie-a-brae.
172 Scribes counting the severed heads of slain enemies after a
battle. Aller an Assyrian-Babylonian wall relief Konyunjic
Palace.
173. Page [rom an Egptian papyrus Book of the Dead. which
was placed into Ihe tomb with the mummies as c guide for the
souls of the departed.
174. Death as mounted hunter and as reaper. Frm Der
Ackermann aus Bahmen (he Ploughman from Bohemia),
Bamberg, 1463.
175. A skull-watch.
176. One of the eaIliest extant printed labels for a poison bottle,
representing Death as a WOlw-eaten corpse. By an unknown
Rhenish arist, 1480-90.
177. Allegoric reprsentation of Death. From Le grant kalendrier
et compost des Bergiers, printed by Nicolas le Roage, Tryes,
1496.
178. The Tree of Death (barial tree on the Island of Cafolos).
From Sir John Maandev ile 's Tvels, pIinted by Wynkyn de
Warde, London, 1499.
179. Death leaping from Hell on his charger with arrow and
cofn, to claim his Jights over mortals. Frm Le grant kalendrieJ
printed by Nicolas le Roage, Tryes, 1496.
180. Emblem of Death, with the motto "EveJbodyaferwards. "
Designed by Master A. 1,frm the Heiligtl1 blch {ook of
Relics}, Vienna, 1502.
181. Death in the cloister. Frm Robert Gobin's Les LOlps
Ravissans (he Ravishing Wolves), printed by Antoine Verard,
Paris, 1503.
J 82 The AngeJ of Death taking the soul, in the form of a child,
from a dying man. From Reiter Mortilogus, printed by Oegelin
and Nadler, Augsburg, J 508.
183. Coat-of-arms of Death. Engraving by Albrecht Durer,
Nuremberg, 1503.
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The Boke named the Royal, printed by Wykyn de Warde for
Wj}jam Caxton, London, 1507
185. Macabre printer's device, using selpents, skul and
hourglass as symbols of Death. The mark of Andreas Gesnel
Zurich, 1550.
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202. Title page in the fon of a gravestone. From Bills of
Mortality. a printed report to the king about the people who died
of the plague from December 1664 to December 1665, printed by
1 Cotes, London, 1665.
203. "The Triumphal Arch of Death. " Eving by Anders Trst
after Johann Koch, from Johann Vavasor's Theatrum mortis
humanae, Ljubljana, 1682.
204. The winged hourglass and the sce, symbolzing the fght
of time and the certainty of death. From a Rosicmcian emblem
book seventeenth century.
205. The skeleton on the casket and the broken tree stump
symbolize Death, and the buring candle represents the human
mind Ising to Heaven. From a Rosicmcian emblem book,
seventeenth centUlY.
206. The ur, the leafess branch and the weeping wilow as
symbols of Death. By the American wood engraver Alexander
Anderson ( 775-1870).
207. The toad of Death. From a pen drawing in an occult
manuscript La Magie Noire (Black magic), France, nineteenth
century.
1think the Vessel, that with fugit ive
Articulation answer'd, once did live,
And MelTy-make; and the cold Lip I kiss'd
How many Kisses might Ltake-and give.
208. Macabre illustration by Edmund J. Sullivan for Quatrain
of The Rllbaiyat of Omar Khayyam, by Edward Fitzgerld,
London, l859.
Oh, come with old Khayam, and leave lhe Wise
To talk; one thing is certain, that Life fies;
One thing is certain, and the Rest is Lies:
7e Flower (hat once has blown for ever dies.
209. Macabre illustration by Edmund J. Sullivan for Quatrain
XXVI of The Rubaiyat of Dmar Khayyam, by Edward Fizgerald,
London, 1859.
Resurrection and Reckoning
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215. Allegoric representation of reslrrection. From Robert
Blair's The Grave, engraved by Louis Schiavonetti after William
Blake, pInted by 1Bensley, London, 1808.
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233. The Dev of tobacco "drinking. " Frm William Horby's
The Scourge of Dnmkennes, an anti-smoking pamphlet printed by
C. EJd for Thomas Baylie, London, 1618.
234. The Dev 's mil of discord. From an anti-Huguenot handbil
printed by J Moreau, Paris, 1630.
The Englilh Vfurer.
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235. The Devil of Usury. From John Bton 's pamphlet against
loan sharks. The English Usurel printed by 10hn Norton [or
Francis Bowman of Oxford, London, 1634.
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236. The Round-head Dev From an anti-Puritan pamphlet by
John TaylOl The Dev Tur 'd Round-Head, London, 1642.
237. The Money Devl. From a satiric handbill against loan
shaIs, Frclce, about 1650.
238. Pluto, the Papist Devi, falling sick over the order of the so
called Long Parliament to deface all Romanistic churches and to
destry all their idolatrus images. From the pamphlet A
Dreame; Q Newes frm Hell, anonymously pInted in London,
1641.
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