Home  ➞  Iconology  ➞  Interpretations  ➞  Detail

Iconology of the Wayfarer Triptych – Detail

Location of Visual Attribute
Interior Panels of the Wayfarer Triptych
#103
Knightly jousting objects, draped cloth with winged figure from Death and the Miser

Clearly, the principal deathbed temptation here is avarice, although pride might also be suggested by the foreground trappings of status and power, in the form of knightly jousting equipment (hardly of any use to such an old man) and the official, seal-marked documents that demons display along with moneybags in the strongbox at the foot of the bed [vandenbroeck, 1987, 96-97.]. What this painting makes clear is that the issue of choice, expressed in the form of right seeing, is still being offered to this dying man, who opts in the (very) end for the sinful temptations of a demon rather than the way of the cross and the light urged by the angel. (p.630)

Silver, 2001
God in the Details: Bosch and Judgment(s)

Keywords
Category
Society and social classes,Morality and immorality,Reasoning, judgement and intelligence,Social life, culture and activities,Human being and life,Intention, will and state of being
Interpretation Type
InfoSensorium Facet
(Sum, 2022)
Layer of meaning
(van Straten, 1994)
Conception of Information
(Furner, 2004)
Level of knowledge
(Nanetti, 2018)
View of reality
(Popper, 1972, 1979; Gnoli, 2018)
Iconographical interpretation Relevance (Iconographical) Interpretations,Narratives Second world (Mind)
Reference Source(s)
Vandenbroeck, 1987
Symbolic Content

#738
Knightly jousting objects, draped cloth with winged figure from Death and the Miser

… all of these articles were among those commonly pawned by people in need of cash in the late Middle Ages [Morganstern, 1982, 39:note 9]. Jewelry and plate were among the most common articles pawned by the nobility; the tournament knights were prone to pawn their jousting equipment; but clothing, kitchenware, and even bedding were commonly pawned by the poor [Bigwood, 1921, 479-506; de Roover, 1948, 114, 121; Cartellieri, 1929, 90]… There is a striking resemblance between his hoard and that of a proven usurer. The inventory made in 1368 of the household of Hugues du Chataignier, recently deceased canon at Rouen, mentions a collection of goods curious in the possession of a venerable canon, but similar in nature to the miser’s [Bishop, 1918, 423-425]… he had stored many belongings for which he could have no obvious use. The nature of this dubious assemblage was explained, however, by little labels found on some of the plate and jewelry, inscribed “put on pawn” by so and so. Hugues du Chataignier, canon at Rouen, was a clandestine usurer, an undeniable violator of the law of his church concerning lending at a profit. The position of the medieval church on the question of usury was unequivocal. It rested on the combined weight of the Bible, the patristic writings, and the councils [Noonan, 1957, 11, 14, 19-20, 30, 294-303; Postan, 1963, 564-570; de Roover, 1967, 28; Le Goff, 1979, 27-29]. (pp. 33-35)

Morganstern, 1982
The Pawns in Bosch’s” Death and the Miser”