Ars moriendi
The Ars moriendi ("The Art of Dying") are two related Latin texts dating from about 1415 and 1450 which offer advice on the protocols and procedures of a good death, explaining how to "die well" according to Christian precepts of the late Middle Ages. It was written within the historical context of the effects of the macabre horrors of the Black Death 60 years earlier and consequent social upheavals of the 15th century. It was very popular, translated into most West European languages, and was the first in a western literary tradition of guides to death and dying.
There was originally a "long version" and then a later "short version" containing eleven woodcut pictures as instructive images which could be easily explained and memorized.
Long version
The original "long version", called Tractatus (or Speculum) artis bene moriendi, was composed in 1415 by an anonymous Dominican friar, probably at the request of the Council of Constance (1414–1418, Germany).[1] This was widely read and translated into most West European languages, and was very popular in England, where a tradition of consolatory death literature survived until the 17th century. Works in the English tradition include The Waye of Dying Well and The Sick Mannes Salve. In 1650, Holy Living and Holy Dying became the "artistic climax" of the tradition that had begun with Ars moriendi.[2]
Ars Moriendi was also among the first books printed with movable type and was widely circulated in nearly 100 editions before 1500, in particular in Germany. The long version survives in about 300 manuscript versions, only one illustrated.
Ars moriendi consists of six chapters:[1]
- The first chapter explains that dying has a good side, and serves to console the dying man that death is not something to be afraid of.
- The second chapter outlines the five temptations that beset a dying man, and how to avoid them. These are lack of faith, despair, impatience, spiritual pride and avarice.
- The third chapter lists the seven questions to ask a dying man, along with consolation available to him through the redemptive powers of Christ's love.
- The fourth chapter expresses the need to imitate Christ's life.
- The fifth chapter addresses the friends and family, outlining the general rules of behavior at the deathbed.
- The sixth chapter includes appropriate prayers to be said for a dying man.
Short version
The "short version", whose appearance shortly precedes the introduction in the 1460s of block books (books printed from carved blocks of wood, both text and images on the same block), first dates to around 1450, from the Netherlands.[1] It is mostly an adaptation of the second chapter of the "long version", and contains eleven woodcut pictures. The first ten woodcuts are divided into 5 pairs, with each set showing a picture of the devil presenting one of the 5 temptations, and the second picture showing the proper remedy for that temptation. The last woodcut shows the dying man, presumably having successfully navigated the maze of temptations, being accepted into heaven, and the devils going back to hell in confusion.
The "short version" was as popular as the "long version", but there was no English translation, perhaps because educated English people at the time were expected to understand several European languages. There are six extant manuscripts of the short version, most not illustrated, and over twenty extant blockbook illustrated editions, using 13 different sets of blocks.[3]
The images
As well as the eleven different sets of blockbook woodcuts, there is a set by Master E. S. in engraving. The lengthy controversy over their respective dating and priority is now resolved by the discovery by Fritz Saxl of an earlier illuminated manuscript, of well before 1450, from whose tradition all the images in the printed versions clearly derive. Studies of the watermarks of the blockbooks by Allen Stevenson at the British Museum in the 1960s confirmed that none of them predated the 1460s, so Master E. S.' engravings are the earliest printed versions, dating from around 1450. The images remain largely the same in all media for the rest of the century.[4]
There is the exceptional number of about seventy incunabulum editions, in a variety of languages, from Catalan to Dutch, the earliest from about 1474 from Cologne.[5]
Allegorically the images depicted the contest between angels and demons over the fate of the dying man. In his dying agony his soul emerges from his mouth to be received by one of a band of angels. Common themes portrayed by illustrators include skeletons, the Last Judgement, corpses, and the forces of good and evil battling over souls.[6]
Extended tradition
The popularity of the ars moriendi texts developed into a broader tradition of writing on the good death. Jeremy Taylor's books Holy Living and Holy Dying, published in 1650 and 1651, exemplify that tradition. It developed in both Protestant and Catholic veins and continued in various forms through the nineteenth century.
See also
- Bardo Thodol, Tibetan book of the Dead
- Book of the Dead, Egyptian book of the Dead
- Consolatio
- Danse Macabre
- Memento mori
- Speculum Humanae Salvationis
- Vanitas
Notes
- 1 2 3 N.F. Blake (1982). "Ars Moriendi". Dictionary of the Middle Ages. v.1, pp547-8. ISBN 0-684-16760-3
- ↑ Nancy Beaty (1970). The Craft of Dying: A Study of the Literary Traditions of the Ars Moriendi in England. ISBN 0-300-01336-1
- ↑ A Hyatt Mayor (1971), Prints and People, Metropolitan Museum of Art/Princeton, numbers 23-25.ISBN 0-691-00326-2
- ↑ Alan Shestack (1967). Master E. S., exhibition catalogue, Philadelphia Museum of Art, exhibit numbers 4-15
- ↑ "ISTC, British Library". 138.253.81.72. 2005-10-27. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
- ↑ Martyn Lyons (2011). Books: A Living History. ISBN 978-1-60606-083-4
References
- Anonymous. "The Art of Dying Well", in Medieval Popular Religion, 1000-1500, a Reader. Ed. John Shinners, London: Broadview Press, 1997: 525-535. ISBN 1-55111-133-0, English translation.
- Campbell, Jeffrey (1995) "The Ars Moriendi": An examination, translation, and collation of the manuscripts of the shorter Latin version., Thesis (M.A.), University of Ottawa, 1995, ISBN 0-612-07840-X
- Dugdale, Lydia. Dying in the Twenty-First Century: Toward a New Ethical Framework for the Art of Dying Well (MIT Press, 2015).
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ars moriendi. |
- Eleven woodblock pictures presented in framed pairs. German language.
- Ars Moriendi page by page {Rosenwald 424} - L'art de Bien Vivre et de Bien Mourir, etcet - at the Library of Congress, circa 1493
- Ars moriendi in Castilian, with an introduction by E. Michael Gerli of Georgetown University.
- Ars Moriendi, by Donald F. Duclow.
- Danemunro.com, an article on memento mori and ars moriendi appearing in the publication of Dane Munro, 'Memento Mori, a companion to the most beautiful floor in the world' (Malta, 2005) ISBN 99932-90-11-4, 2 vols. The ars moriendi eulogies of the Knights of the Order of St John.
- Ars moriendi. Germany, ca. 1466 24 leaves. 11 illus. 28.7 cm. From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
- Ars moriendi. Germany, ca. 1470? 14 leaves. illus. 35 cm. From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
- Ars moriendi. Germany, ca. 1475? 14 leaves (the first blank, wanting). woodcuts: 11 illus. 13.9 cm. From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress