Les Visions du chevalier Tondal, Simon Marmion (Flemish, active 1450 - 1489), 1475

 

 
by 5T1V on November 28, 2015

 

 

The Visions of the Knight Tondal tells the story of a wealthy and errant Irish knight, whose soul goes on a journey through Hell and Paradise with an angel for a guide. As a result of his experience, Tondal is spiritually transformed and vows to lead a more pious life. 

Before Dante's Divine Comedy, the story of Tondal was one of the most popular in a long tradition of visionary and moralizing literature. Originally written in Latin in the 1100s by Marcus, an Irish monk in Regensburg, the story was later translated into fifteen vernacularlanguages. 

The Getty Museum's manuscript of Tondal, written by David Aubert, was written in French (Les Visions du chevalier Tondal). It was commissioned by Margaret of York, duchess of Burgundy and wife of Charles the Bold. She was one of the most famous patrons of manuscript illuminators in a region that outshone even its rival, the kingdom of France, in its prolific patronage. The illumination is attributed to the French artist Simon Marmion. The Museum's manuscript is the only surviving illuminated copy of the text. In its twenty miniaturesMarmion represented an extraordinary world of Paradise and Hell in vivid, often terrifying, but always naturalistic, detail.

 

 

The Beast Acheron

 

The Torment of Murderers

 

The Torment of Unbelievers and Heretics

 

The Torment of the Proud - Valley of Burning Sulphur

 

The Torment of Thieves: Tondal Leads a Cow Across a Nail-studded Bridge

 

The House of Phristinus

 

The Torment of Unchaste Monks and Nuns

 

The Forge of Vulcan, Franco-Flemish

 

Demons Dragging Tondal into the Infernal Cistern

 

The Gates of Hell and Lucifer