The '''Nuremberg Chronicle''' is one of the best documented early printed books and, being printed in
1493, is an
incunabulum.
As was common at the time, the book did not have a title page. Latin scholars refer to it as '''Liber Chronicarum''' ('''Book of Chronicles''') as this phrase appears in the index introduction of the Latin edition.
English speakers have long referred to it as the Nuremberg Chronicle after the city in which it was published. German speakers refer to it as '''Die Schedelsche Weltchronik''' ('''Schedel's World History''') in honour of its author.
The illustrations in many copies were hand-coloured after printing.
Contents
The Chronicle is an illustrated world history, in which the contents are divided into seven ages:
★ First age: from the
Creation to the
Deluge
★ Second age: up to the birth of
Abraham
★ Third age: up to
King David
★ Fourth age: up to the
Babylonian captivity
★ Fifth age: up to the birth of
Jesus Christ
★ Sixth age: up to the present time (the largest part)
★ Seventh age: Outlook on the end of the world and the
Last Judgement
Publication
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Omens from a coloured copy
The ''Chronicle'' was first published in
Latin on
12 June 1493 in the city of
Nuremberg. This was quickly followed by a
German translation on
23 December 1493. An estimated 1400-1500 Latin and 700-1000 German copies were published. A document from 1509 records that 539 Latin versions and 60 German versions had not been sold. Approximately 400 Latin and 300 German copies survived into the twenty-first century.
[1] The larger illustrations were also sold separately as
prints, often hand-coloured in
watercolour. Many copies of the book are also coloured, with varying degrees of skill; there were specialist shops for this. The colouring on some examples has been added much later, and some copies have been broken up for sale as decorative prints.
The publisher and printer was Anton Koberger, the godfather of
Albrecht Dürer , who in the year of Dürer's birth in 1471 ceased goldsmithing to become a printer and publisher. He quickly became the most successful publisher in Germany, eventually owning 24 printing-presses and having many offices in Germany and abroad, from
Lyon to
Budapest.
[2]
The author of the ''Nuremberg Chronicle'' was
Hartmann Schedel, while Georg Alt is credited with the German translation.
Illustrations
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Catching a "lion fish" - a small illustration from a Latin copy. Note the red capital done in pen and ink, and the
doodle in the margin below
The large workshop of
Michael Wolgemut, then Nuremberg's leading artist in various media, provided the unprecedented 1,809
woodcut illustrations (before duplications are eliminated - see below). Sebastian Kammermeister and Sebald Schreyer financed the printing in a contract dated March 16, 1492, although preparations had been well under way for several years. Wolgemut and his stepson Wilhelm Pleydenwurff were first commissioned to provide the illustrations in 1487-8, and a further contract of December 29th 1491 commissioned manuscript layouts of the text and illustrations.
Albrecht Dürer was an apprentice with Wolgemut from 1486-1489, so may well have participated in designing some of the illustrations for the specialist craftsmen (called "formschneider"s) who cut the blocks, onto which the design had been drawn, or a drawing glued. From 1490-1494 Dürer was travelling. A drawing by Wolgemut for the elaborate frontispiece, dated 1490, is in the
British Museum.

A typical opening, uncoloured
As with other books of the period, many of the woodcuts, showing towns, battles or kings were used more than once in the book, with the text labels merely changed; one count of the number of original woodcuts is 645. The book is large, with a double-page woodcut measuring about 342 x 500mm.
Only the city of Nuremberg is given a double page illustration with no text. The illustration for the city of Venice is adapted from a much larger (and, it must be said, finer) woodcut of 1486 by
Erhard Reuwich in the first illustrated printed travel-book, the ''Sanctae Perigrinationes'' of 1486. This and other sources were used where possible; where no information was available a number of stock images were used, and reused up to eleven times. The view of
Florence was adapted from an engraving by
Francesco Rosselli.
[3]
References
1. "About this book - Latin and German Editions", Beloit College Morse Library
2. ,Giulia Bartrum, ''Albrecht Dürer and his Legacy'', British Museum Press, 2002, pp. 94-96, ISBN 0-7141-2633-0
3. A Hyatt Mayor, Prints and People, Metropolitan Museum of Art/Princeton, 1971, nos 43 & 173.ISBN 0-691-00326-2
External links
Commons has well over 400 images from the Book
★
Beloit College's extensive account of their version of the Chronicle, with illustrations
★
on-line exhibition from MIT, of an uncoloured copy
★
More views from the Metropolitan Museum's uncoloured copy: Rome, Nuremberg, saints
★
Online images of an uncoloured copy from the
State Library of Victoria