Koen G > 02-01-2026, 11:02 PM
Stefan Wirtz_2 > 02-01-2026, 11:37 PM
(02-01-2026, 09:42 PM)MarcoP Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Personally, I believe there's a "tents" theme in the Rosettes page, as discussed by Ellie Velinska and You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view..
This is my rendering of how I read that detail from You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.. Sorry for being somehow off-topic.
bi3mw > 02-01-2026, 11:44 PM
(02-01-2026, 11:02 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.What if the novelty is in the way things are combined and depicted, rather than in the things themselves?
nablator > 02-01-2026, 11:56 PM
(02-01-2026, 06:10 PM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.But, even dismissing that paper, we can ask whether the central rosette is meant to be Jerusalem. The problem is those onion domes. I have seen some images from the time, in which Jerusalem is shown with many towers of all sizes and shapes (not just six equal round ones) with conical or at most hemispherical domes. And the Scribe surely must have been familiar with those images. So, are there any Medieval images of Jerusalem that even remotely resemble the central plaza of f86v2?
Jorge_Stolfi > 03-01-2026, 12:57 AM
Jorge_Stolfi > 03-01-2026, 01:10 AM
(02-01-2026, 11:44 PM)bi3mw Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The author was also just a child of his time
Jorge_Stolfi > 03-01-2026, 01:23 AM
(02-01-2026, 11:56 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Church of the Holy Sepulchre. This one is dated ca. 1546:
Bluetoes101 > 03-01-2026, 01:54 AM
bi3mw > 03-01-2026, 02:16 AM
(03-01-2026, 01:10 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.That is a theory, that I would dispute...
I believe that most of the decorative elements -- like the nymphs, Zodiac symbols, merlons, towers, dragons -- were almost certainly provided by the Scribe, who presumably was a "child of his time" (and maybe even literally a child...)
But the Author may well have been from anywhere, from Constantinople to Timbuktu to Mars. It is unclear what exactly he asked the Scribe to draw, and what he left to his discretion; and those parts of the contents that are likely to be "his" can't be recognized as "things of his time"...
All the best, --stolfi