
Hand-coloured
woodcut by Erhard Reuwich of the entrance to the Church of the Holy Sepulchure, Jerusalem
'Erhard Reuwich' (
Dutch: 'Reeuwijk') was a
Dutch artist, as a designer of
woodcuts, and a
printer, who came from
Utrecht but then worked in
Mainz. His dates and places of birth and death are unknown, but he was active in the 1480s.
He came from a family of painters in Utrecht, and his father may have been Hildebrand Reuwich, who was Dean of the
painters' guild there in 1470. He traveled on a
pilgrimage to
Jerusalem, which gave rise to his most famous work. It has been suggested that he was the
Master of the Housebook, but this has not been generally accepted. Perhaps more likely is his identification as an
engraver known as the ''Master of the Book of Reason''.
[1]
''Peregrinatio in terram sanctam''
The ''Peregrinatio in terram sanctam'' or ''Sanctae Peregrinationes'', an
incunabulum account of a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, by Bernhard von Breydenbach, was published in 1486, with the illustrations drawn by Reuwich. Breydenbach was a wealthy
canon of
Mainz Cathedral who made the pilgrimage in 1483-4, taking with him, as the book explains, "Erhard Reuwich of Utrecht", a 'skillful artist', to make drawings of the sights. Breydenbach was made
Dean of the Cathedral soon after his return. The party also included two friends, one a knight, and a cook. Many scholars believe the text was actually "as told to" a German monk who did not make the journey.
Leaving in April 1483 and arriving back in January 1484, they travelled first to
Venice, where they stayed for three weeks. They then took ship for
Corfu,
Modon and
Rhodes - all still Venetian possessions. After Jerusalem and
Bethlehem and other sights of the
Holy Land, they went to
Mount Sinai and
Cairo. After taking a boat down the
Nile to
Rosetta, they took ship back to Venice.
It is most unusual for an illustrator to be named at this time - no doubt the fact that Reuwich was also the printer helped. The book also says that he printed the first edition (in
Latin) at his house in
Mainz; he may have inserted this information himself.
That is all the biographical detail that is known of Reuwich; no other documentation for him has been discovered. No other books say that he printed or illustrated them, but it is believed that Reuwich also designed the woodcuts for some illustrations of plants for a
herbal published in Mainz in 1485. In December 1486 a "Meister Erhard von Mainz" is recorded as installing stained-glass panels in the "Amtskellerei" in
Amorbach in
Bavaria; this could be him.
Innovations
The ''Sanctae Peregrinationes'', or the ''Peregrinatio in terram sanctam'', was the first illustrated travel-book, and marked a leap forward for book illustration generally. It featured five large fold-out woodcuts, the first ever seen in the
West, including a spectacular five-foot-long (1600 x 300 mm)
woodcut panoramic view of
Venice, where the pilgrims had stayed for three weeks. The book also contained a three-block map of
Palestine and
Egypt, centred on a large view of Jerusalem
[1], and panoramas of five other cities:
Iraklion,
Modon,
Rhodes,
Corfu and
Parenzo. There were also studies of Near Eastern costume, and an
Arabic alphabet - also the first in print
[2] [3]. Pictures of animals seen on the journey, including a
crocodile,
camel, and
unicorn, were also included.
The
colophon of the book is a lively
coat-of-arms of the current
Archbishop of Mainz, which includes the first
cross-hatching in woodcut.
Bestseller
The book was a bestseller, reprinted thirteen times over the next three decades, including printings in France and Spain, for which the illustration blocks were shipped out to the local printers. The first edition in
German was published within a year of the Latin one, and it was also translated into
French,
Flemish and
Spanish before 1500.
[2] Additional text-only editions and various abridged editions were also published.
The illustrations were later adapted by
Michael Wolgemut for the
Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493, and much copied by various other publishers.
The Master of the Housebook?
It was first suggested in 1937 that Reuwich should be identified as the
Master of the Housebook, a
painter and
engraver in
drypoint, the first artist to use this technique. His identification with the Housebook Master has not been generally accepted, though A Hyatt Mayor supported it; other suggestions have been made for the identity of the Housebook Master. The trend of scholarly opinion appears to be moving against the identification.
References
1. Châtelet, Albert, ''Early Dutch Painting, Painting in the northern Netherlands in the fifteenth century'', 1980, Montreux, Lausanne, ISBN 2882600097
2. A Hyatt Mayor, Prints and People, Metropolitan Museum of Art/Princeton, 1971, nos 43.ISBN 0691003262
See also
★
Nuremberg Chronicle
★
Old master print
External links (Peregrinatio in terram sanctam)
★
Hand-coloured copy from the Smithsonian, including the Map of Palestine. 7th item down
★
More details and images from the National Library of Scotland
★
Copy of the Spanish edition, previously owned by Ferdinand Columbus, the son of
Christopher Columbus, from Indiana. Item 8
★
annotated Egypt section of the Map of Palestine, from Princeton