Home  ➞  Iconology  ➞  Interpretations  ➞  Detail

Iconology of the Wayfarer Triptych – Detail

Location of Visual Attribute
Exterior of the Wayfarer Triptych
#714
Cow (Ox) from The Pedlar

The steer, the ox and the aurochs can stand for the idea of Death. This is a familiar and well documented symbolic meaning of the animal [de Mély, 1904, 296f.; Cuttler, 1957, 119, note 72; Laborde, 1923]. Oxen occur in this particular meaning, for instance, in the series of Italian prints which were previously discussed as possible models for study [Philip, 1958, 4:note 7-8, 4:note 10, 7:note 20, 12:note 30, 74:note 157; Galle, ca. 1565; Essling & Müntz, 1902, 168-173; Wierix, ca. 1604]. In the story-telling context of Bosch’s painting the ox undoubtedly signifies Death. (p. 74)

Philip, 1958
The Peddler by Hieronymus Bosch, a study in detectio

Keywords
Category
Human being and life,Earth and world,Planets and zodiacal signs,Literary and mythical characters and objects
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)
Iconological interpretation Relevance (Iconological) Interpretations,Narratives Third world (Culture)
Reference Source(s)
Cuttler, 1957; de Mély, 1904; Essling & Müntz, 1902; Galle, ca. 1565; Laborde, 1923; Philip, 1958; Wierix, ca. 1604
Symbolic Images

#693
Cow (Ox) from The Pedlar

Almost any mammal can be used as a symbol of Earth. Yet in Northern art of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, cattle are preferred function. In many of the engraved series represendng the the animal of terra is a bull or cow [insert examples]… they nevertheless show that there was a powerful tradition in for relating the cow or the bull to the idea of Earth… [”Terra, from Engelberg Crucifix”, ca. 1200]. Bosch could have found some additional material for this revival in the folklore of his time since the cow and the bull play an important part as symbols of the earth in the old mythological tradition of many nations, among them that of the Teutonic peoples [Philip, 1958, 12:note 29, 13:note 32, Beer, 1957, col. 1262f., 1266f.; Mannhardt, 1858, 37:note 6, 41]. In addition, taurus has always been regarded as one of the three earthly signs in the astrological tradition of the middle ages [Philip, 1958, 13:note 33; Gundel, 1922, 130-135; Eisler, 1946, 91f., 115f., 116: fig. 28; Strauss, 1926, 46:fig. 37]. Bosch must have been familiar with this idea since he certainly knew the popular publications on astrology: his cow, though she does not signify a zodiac sign in this context, is nevertheless modeled on the recumbent half-figure of the taurus com- mon in fifteenth- and sixteenth century astrological illustrations [Philip, 1958, 13:note 34; Eisler, 1946, 91f.; Strauss, 1926, 44:fig. 37, 54:fig. 49; Thiele, 1898, 70]… (pp. 12-13)

Philip, 1958
The Peddler by Hieronymus Bosch, a study in detectio