A dog and his man: scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden
In 1634 the chief judicial officer of Leiden’s strict Counter-Remonstrant government, Willem de Bont, held an extravagant funeral for his pet dog Tyter. News of the event produced a flurry of satirical songs (by the persecuted Remonstrants) and poems (by Vondel and others), castigating the childless...
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | English |
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Zusammenfassung: | In 1634 the chief judicial officer of Leiden’s strict Counter-Remonstrant government, Willem de Bont, held an extravagant funeral for his pet dog Tyter. News of the event produced a flurry of satirical songs (by the persecuted Remonstrants) and poems (by Vondel and others), castigating the childless Bont for giving his dog a funeral normally reserved for a child of the elite. These satires illuminate aspects of the human-dog relationship amidst the theological-political turmoil of early seventeenth-century Leiden. The popular assumption that the Remonstrants hanged Tyter leads to a study of contemporary criminal prosecution of animals and humans alike, and a look at contradictions in the treatment of Leiden’s dogs. Visually, the serenity of Jan Miense Molenaer’s pendant paintings of the event belie the satires. Ironically, Bont thought of his dog as a fellow human but treated the Leiden Remonstrants like dogs, while many regarded Bont himself as a beast. |
Beschreibung: | Illustrationen |
ISSN: | 0169-6726 |
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520 | 3 | |a In 1634 the chief judicial officer of Leiden’s strict Counter-Remonstrant government, Willem de Bont, held an extravagant funeral for his pet dog Tyter. News of the event produced a flurry of satirical songs (by the persecuted Remonstrants) and poems (by Vondel and others), castigating the childless Bont for giving his dog a funeral normally reserved for a child of the elite. These satires illuminate aspects of the human-dog relationship amidst the theological-political turmoil of early seventeenth-century Leiden. The popular assumption that the Remonstrants hanged Tyter leads to a study of contemporary criminal prosecution of animals and humans alike, and a look at contradictions in the treatment of Leiden’s dogs. Visually, the serenity of Jan Miense Molenaer’s pendant paintings of the event belie the satires. Ironically, Bont thought of his dog as a fellow human but treated the Leiden Remonstrants like dogs, while many regarded Bont himself as a beast. | |
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spelling | Bogendorf-Rupprath, Cynthia von Verfasser aut A dog and his man scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden Cynthia von Bogendorf-Rupprath [2021] Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier In 1634 the chief judicial officer of Leiden’s strict Counter-Remonstrant government, Willem de Bont, held an extravagant funeral for his pet dog Tyter. News of the event produced a flurry of satirical songs (by the persecuted Remonstrants) and poems (by Vondel and others), castigating the childless Bont for giving his dog a funeral normally reserved for a child of the elite. These satires illuminate aspects of the human-dog relationship amidst the theological-political turmoil of early seventeenth-century Leiden. The popular assumption that the Remonstrants hanged Tyter leads to a study of contemporary criminal prosecution of animals and humans alike, and a look at contradictions in the treatment of Leiden’s dogs. Visually, the serenity of Jan Miense Molenaer’s pendant paintings of the event belie the satires. Ironically, Bont thought of his dog as a fellow human but treated the Leiden Remonstrants like dogs, while many regarded Bont himself as a beast. Molenaar, Jan Miense 1610-1668 (DE-588)124520073 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte 1620-1700 gnd rswk-swf Arminianer (DE-588)4143036-0 gnd rswk-swf Hund Motiv (DE-588)4120466-9 gnd rswk-swf Satire (DE-588)4051752-4 gnd rswk-swf Tierdarstellung (DE-588)4117216-4 gnd rswk-swf Leiden (DE-588)4074118-7 gnd rswk-swf Leiden (DE-588)4074118-7 g Arminianer (DE-588)4143036-0 s Tierdarstellung (DE-588)4117216-4 s Hund Motiv (DE-588)4120466-9 s Satire (DE-588)4051752-4 s Geschichte 1620-1700 z DE-604 Molenaar, Jan Miense 1610-1668 (DE-588)124520073 p volume:71 year:2021 pages:184-215 Nederlands kunsthistorisch jaarboek / red. A. W. Byvanck [u.a.] Zwolle, 2021 Deel 71 (2021), Seite 184-[215] (DE-604)BV002664896 0169-6726 (DE-600)2483-1 |
spellingShingle | Bogendorf-Rupprath, Cynthia von A dog and his man scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden Molenaar, Jan Miense 1610-1668 (DE-588)124520073 gnd Arminianer (DE-588)4143036-0 gnd Hund Motiv (DE-588)4120466-9 gnd Satire (DE-588)4051752-4 gnd Tierdarstellung (DE-588)4117216-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)124520073 (DE-588)4143036-0 (DE-588)4120466-9 (DE-588)4051752-4 (DE-588)4117216-4 (DE-588)4074118-7 |
title | A dog and his man scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden |
title_auth | A dog and his man scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden |
title_exact_search | A dog and his man scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden |
title_exact_search_txtP | A dog and his man scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden |
title_full | A dog and his man scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden Cynthia von Bogendorf-Rupprath |
title_fullStr | A dog and his man scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden Cynthia von Bogendorf-Rupprath |
title_full_unstemmed | A dog and his man scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden Cynthia von Bogendorf-Rupprath |
title_short | A dog and his man |
title_sort | a dog and his man scandal in seventeenth century leiden |
title_sub | scandal in seventeenth-century Leiden |
topic | Molenaar, Jan Miense 1610-1668 (DE-588)124520073 gnd Arminianer (DE-588)4143036-0 gnd Hund Motiv (DE-588)4120466-9 gnd Satire (DE-588)4051752-4 gnd Tierdarstellung (DE-588)4117216-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Molenaar, Jan Miense 1610-1668 Arminianer Hund Motiv Satire Tierdarstellung Leiden |
work_keys_str_mv | AT bogendorfrupprathcynthiavon adogandhismanscandalinseventeenthcenturyleiden |