Aspects of Death in Art
Aspects of Death in Art
Aspects of Death in Art
by Foreign Artists.
With Two Autotype
1894.
Plates.
Conclusion, to the
1900.
End
of the
Year
LONDON:
11,
BERNARD QUARITCH,
GRAFTON STKEET, W.
ASPECTS OF DEATH
AND THEIR EFFECTS ON THE LIVING, AS ILLUSTRATED BY MINOR WORKS OF ART, ESPECIALLY MEDALS, ENGRAVED GEMS, JEWELS, &c.
F.
PAEKES WEBER,
M.A., M.D.,
'
FELLOW OF THE SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES AND OF THE ROYAL NUMISMATIC SOCIETY OF LONDON.
WITH
5S
T.
FISHER UNWIN
:
LONDON
ADELPHI TERRACE
1910.
LEIPSIC: INSELSTRASSE 20
PEEFACE.
THIS
little
volume
and additions, from the It is inNumismatic Chronicle, 1909-10, Nos. 36-38. tended to be an essay, not on the iconography of death, but on the mental attitudes towards the idea of death, and the various ways in which the idea of death has, or may be supposed to have, affected the living individual his mental and physical state, and especially the direction and force of his action as illustrated by minor
printed, with
many
alterations
works of
&c.
art, especially
The book is divided into four parts. The first is meant to serve as an introduction to the whole subThe second is an arrangement and analysis of ject.
the various possible aspects of death and the mental attitudes towards the idea of death, intended to show
may
the headings under which the illustrative works of art be grouped. The third deals with the medals and
;
coins and in the fourtli the engraved gems, finger-rings, In jewels, &c., bearing on the subject, are described. Part II. (Classification) the arrangement of the various
aspects of death is somewhat out of order, owing to the fact that the last paragraphs were added too late to be
inserted in their proper places. The repetitions which occur in various parts of the book will, it is hoped, be
to all those
I wish to thank and express my great indebtedness who have assisted me, especially Mr. H. A.
Grueber, Mr. Warwick Wroth, Mr. G. F. Hill, Mr. J. Allen, Mr. C. H. Bead, Mr. R. L. Binyon, and other officials of the British Museum; the late Sir John
VI
PKEFACE.
Evans, President of the Royal Numismatic Society, Dr. H. E. Storer, Dr. Oliver Codrington, Dr. Ernest Schuster, Mr. Alfred Schuster, Dr. J. P. zum Busch, Dr. G. Dorner, Mr. W. T. Eeady, and Mr. L. Forrer and, needless to say, the authors of the numerous books and papers to which I have referred. The study of human aspects of death derives most of The aspects of its interest from human aspects of life. the one are naturally more or less dependent on and
Lady Evans,
Death is as modified by the aspects of the other. necessary as birth for the continuance and progress of the human race, and life cannot even be imagined
without death (except, indeed, in regard to the doctrine of the immortality of germ-plasm). man's ideas on death depend largely on the particular conditions of
and his surroundings, whilst his ideas and may be considerably modified by his views and hopes regarding the nature of death and the nature
his
life
own
ideals of life
of the
said that
man
But certainly man steadily at death than at the sun. may, without harm to himself, see death or ideas on death reflected in works of art. Just so, in the ancient
legend, Perseus was able, without being turned into stone, to behold the head of the Gorgon Medusa, reflected in the
mirror given to him by Athene and thus he succeeded in slaying the dreadful monster.
;
At all events, a study of this kind to some extent increases one's knowledge, and brings with it a certain amount of satisfaction, though neither this nor any other
study can quite place one in the position described by
Virgil:
" Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas ; Atque metus omnes, et inexorabile fatum Subjecit pedibus, strepitumque Acherontis avari
November, 1910.
"
!
F. P.
W.
CONTENTS.
PAGE
PREFACE
PART
I.
INTRODUCTION
PART
II.
ARRANGEMENT
I.
26
26
II.
28
III.
POSTHUMOUS FAME
IV.
DEATH
DEATH
AS THE
...
IN
34
35
V.
AS A MEANS OF PUNISHMENT, VENGEANCE, OR ATONEMENT. THE THREAT OF DEATH AS A MEANS POLITICAL MURDERS AND OF EXCITING TERROR. POLITICAL EXECUTIONS
36
VI.
VII.
WAR
.
38 40
41
DEATH
DEATH
AS AN AS
VIII.
...
INVESTI-
IX.
THE
43
X.
DEATH.
. .
43
XI.
DEATH FOR THE GOOD OF OTHERS, OR FOR THE SAKE OF ORDINARY DUTY OR HONOUR. MARTYRDOM
FOR RELIGIOUS, PATRIOTIC, POLITICAL, OR SOCIAL
OPINIONS
44
. .
XII.
48
CONTENTS.
PAGE
XIII.
XIV.
MlNDFULNESS OF DEATH AS AN INCENTIVE TO RlGHT LIVING, HELPING OTHEBS, AND MAKING THE BEST ACTIVE USE OF LIFE
49
XV.
XVI.
XVII.
XVIII.
DEATH
AS " LOVE," OB
"
.
.52
TO
54
FREE
WILL
IN
REGARD
....
54
56
PART
III.
COINS, MEDALS,
AND MEDAL-LIKE TOKENS RELATING TO DEATH AND THE VARIOUS ASPECTS OF AND ATTITUDES TOWARDS DEATH
PART IV.
....
.
57
ENGRAVED GEMS, FINGER-RINGS, JEWELS, &c., RELATING TO DEATH AND THE VARIOUS ASPECTS OF OR ATTITUDES TOWARDS DEATH .113
. .
I.
113
II.
ADDITIONAL NOTES
INDEX
ASPECTS OF DEATH, AND THEIR EFFECTS ON THE LIVING, AS ILLUSTRATED BY MINOR WORKS OF ART, ESPECIALLY MEDALS, ENGRAVED GEMS, JEWELS, &C. 1
PART
I.
INTRODUCTION.
Since
DEATH is no unworthy subject for human consideration. men began to think, this subject is one that has
exercised their brains.
times, perhaps, be bliss, it can hardly be doubted that man's knowledge that every one must surely die has
1 A longer, but more correct, title would have been, " The mental attitudes towards the idea of death, and the various ways in which the
idea of death has, or may be supposed to have, affected the livingindividual (his mental and physical state, and especially the 'direction
and
by minor works
of art, especially
medals, engraved gems, jewels, &c." Naturally, I have not endeavoured to point out all the possible effects on the living of the various aspects It would, for instance, be quite of death as presented by medals, &c. unnecessary to explain that contemporary medals representing a decapitation for high treason might, at the time when they were issued, have exercised a deterrent influence on those who saw them. Vide the medals commemorating the execution of Monmouth and Argyle in 1685, The " toy-shop " with the inscription " Ambitio malesuada ruit." medals (described later on), issued in London on the loss of Minorca in 1756, may actually have played a part in bringing the unfortunate Admiral Byng to his death. In regard to the title, " Aspects of Death," it is scarcely necessary to add that "aspects" must not be regarded as " merely equivalent to representations." On the iconography of death,
see Dr.
Theodor Frimmel's
.
. .
;
Central-Commission
various
1890, vols. x.-xvi. " dances of
series of articles in Mittheilungen d. k. k. der Denkmale, Neue Polge, Vienna, 1884 to also the works on sepulchral monuments and the
death" referred
to later on.
helped to set the race a-thinking, and thinking on this subject has helped to make their lives throughout historic
times different to those of all other animals.
persons, nowadays,
Few
man
Spinoza (Ethic, iv. 67), that the proper study for a wise is not death, but how to live, since a wise man is
not guided by the fear of death, 2 but by his direct desire of the good. Yet, however little a man's everyday active life 3 may ordinarily be affected by knowledge of death
lies
thoughts altogether, if it were would be to kick down one of the chief ladders
such
its
present position.
!
How much, indeed, do we owe to the knowledge of death How many a good and usefully altruistic action would
never have been performed but for this knowledge and The Death's heads and the thoughts arising from it crosses and every lugubrious memento mori of the Middle
!
Ages have, indeed, had their use. The subject of the mere aspects of death may perhaps be likened to a timeworn skeleton, but when associated with their possible
effects
2
on the "Fear
p. 212), says
Cf.
Omnem
" Casca, in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, says, Why, he that cuts off twenty years of life, cuts off so many years of fearing death." In the case of some persons this would probably apply at the present day.
Even nowadays one may occasionally meet with a memento mori device or inscription scrawled up by a visitor or passer-by in some forum or public place, for instance, the saying, " Live as you would die."
3
INTRODUCTION.
flesh
beings towards death, the skeleton becomes clothed in and blood, possesses heart and mind and passions
else,
little
I shall not, of course, attempt to discuss the aspects of death such as actually present themselves to dying Fortunately, the near approach of natural persons. death is generally by no means so terrible to the dying
individual himself as
popularly supposed to be. The main ideas underlying the memento mori prinSeneca, ciple are well expressed by ancient authors.
it is
who
tries to
when
it
comes
is
not to
be regarded as a calamity, though it may appear to be one (" Mors inter ilia est, quae mala quidem non sunt, tamen habent mali speciem "), writes (Epist. Mor., lib.
xi. est,
Ep. 3
"
(82), 16)
:
quae facile neglegi possit magna exercitatione durandus est animus, ut conspectum ejus
est,
non tamen ea
accessumque patiatur."
frightened by
one,
as
its
He
may
not be
aspect or approach
in fact, he tells
:
(Epist., lib. i. 4, line 13) puts it crede diem tibi diluxisse supremum." 5 Any one following such advice literally might almost say " " Quocunque aspicio, nihil est nisi mortis imago (Ovid,
Horace
"
Omnem
See Dos Sterben, by Professor H. Nothnagel, whose own last illness, in 1905, was, however, a painful one (angina pectoris). 5 Cf. William Congreve, in his Letter (1729) to Sir Richard Temple,
4
Viscount
Cobham
rise."
Advice of this kind has not escaped the attention of Roman satirists (fragment of the Satyricon of Petronius) the seriousness, indeed, of Horace's words is much modified by the lines which end his epistle in
;
question.
11, 23).
:
Again he
"
viii.
Ep.
(as
nothing According to Socrates, as quoted by Cicero (Tusc. DisputaL, i. 30, 74), the whole life of philosophers is a studying of death; and according to
(70), 18)
i.
On
meditation so necessary
on death)."
Plato (PJiaedo, 64, A), They practise nothing else but " " to be ready to die." Let all live as they would die (George Herbert's Outlandish Proverbs, 1639). "Lebe,
"
wie
du, wenn du stirbst, Wiinschen wirst gelebt zu haben" (Christian Fiirchtegott Gellert, 1715-1769). 8 The main idea in Ecclesiasticus (ch. xxviii. 6) is of course
Remember thy end, and let enmity cease remember corruption and death, and abide in the commandments." So also in the 90th Psalm (ver. 12, after " Teach us to remember that we Luther's translation) must die, so that we may become wise." " The ancient writers console one for the " Charybdis
the same
:
"
which awaits
ments.
all alike
p. 202), in
(History of European Morals, 1905 edition, vol. i. " But regard to the Stoic philosophers, wrote as follows while it is certain that no philosophers expatiated upon death with a grander eloquence, or met it with a more placid courage, it can hardly be denied that their constant disquisitions forced it into an unhealthy prominence, and somewhat discoloured their whole view of life." He
:
W. E. H. Lecky
also quoted
from Francis Bacon's Essays : "Of Death " (the second " The Stoics bestowed too essay of the 1625 edition of the Essays) much cost upon death, and by their great preparations made it appear
:
more
7
fearful."
of
tion "
est meditatio
"
on the
8 Compare an inscription on a sixteenth-century sepulchral monument, attributed to the great French sculptor, Jean Goujon, in the
Church
of St. Gervais
and
"
Fay maintenant
Avoir
fait
ce que voudras
te
quand tu
mourras."
INTRODUCTION.
as necessary as birth
is
O
"
;
"
:
"
Nas-
Princicentes morimur, finisque ab origine pendet ; pium moriendi natale est." Cicero and Seneca offer
" "
much
"
10 Epicurus, in a letter to philosophic consolation. Menaeceus (Diog Laert.), wrote to the following effect
:
Accustom yourself
is
to the
is indif-
and
and
what
"
Similarly,
who designated Epicurus (on account of the which he thought his teaching had done) as a god, good and who in the De Rerum Natura profoundly studied
Lucretius,
Nee miserum
Differre
fieri qui non est posse, neque hilum anne ullo f uerit jam tempore natus, Mortalem vitam mors cum immortalis ademit." n
9 Lucan (PJiarsalia, vii. 470), however, speaks of death (mors), " quae cunctis poena paratur." 10 For much on the whole subject, see W. E. H. Lecky's History of
European Morals (first edition, 1869 new edition, 1877). 11 Munro's translation of this passage (Lucretius, De Rerum Naturd,
;
lib. iii.
866-869)
is
"
after death,
and that
sure that
we have nothing
to fear
not, cannot
it matters not a whit whether (a man) has been born into life at any time, when immortal death has taken away his mortal life." In
that
this connexion I shall quote the following three late Latin epitaphs, which seem to me to breathe the meaning of Lucretius
:
"
(1)
genitus,
:
egi
Mutus in aeternum sum cinis, ossa, nihil. Nee sum nee fueram genitus, tamen e nihilo sum
:
(2)
(3)
Mitte nee exprobres singula talis eris." " Olim non fuimus, nati sumus unde quieti Nunc sumus, ut fuimus cura relicta vale." "D I NON FVI PVI MEMINI NON SVM NON
;
: :
CVBO, &C.
M. Ausonii Burdtgalensis Opuscula, the Teubner edition, Leipzig, 1886, p. 419. The first of the three is attributed to Ausonius. This style of epitaph has to some extent been imitated in modern times for instance, the epitaph of a
All these three epitaphs are printed in D.
;
on Lucretius, 12 called by a says that the De Eerum Naturd has been " Poem of Death," and that, as a motto great critic the
in his essay
on the title-page, there might be written And, Death 13 once dead, there's no more dying then." In regard to the actual use of memento mori devices, we have the well-known passage in Herodotus (Hist.,
:
"
lib.
ii. 78), which informs us that at banquets given by wealthy persons in Egypt, it was the custom for some one to carry round the wooden image of a corpse, and tell
each guest to drink and enjoy himself, since after death he would be like that image. A similar custom existed
Eoman Imperial times, according to the account of the feast of Trimalchio (Petronius, Satyric., c. 34), and
in
certain miniature jointed skeletons made in bronze, preserved in various European museums (there is a specimen in the British Museum), are supposed to have been
employed in
The one this way at Roman banquets. introduced at Trimalchio's feast (at the end of the first course) was a jointed one of silver (" larva argentea "). What the original significance of such a custom may
have been we need here scarcely pause to discuss. On " " the one hand, it may have been the so-called Epicurean
ideal of
life,
namely, a
life
gentleman named Micah Hall (Castleton, Derbyshire), who died in 1804, contains the following " Quid eram, nescitis quid sum, nescitis Ubi
:
;
abii, nescitis
12
Valete."
Greece, Third
J. A.
Mr. W. Wroth has kindly ascertained for me that from Shakespeare's Sonnet, No. 146, which begins
13
this quotation is
"
Poor
my sinful
earth,"
and ends
" So shalt thou feed on Death, that feeds on men, And, Death once dead, there's no more dying then."
INTRODUCTION.
7
till
and garlands of
the
The gloomy unknown takes everything away. ancient Egyptians seem, indeed, to have taken what one
would now term a rather
Epicurean view of life. On the other hand, there are Plutarch (Sept. Sap. Conviv* 5 ) and Sir J. G-. Wilkinson (Rawlinson's History
"
"
14
2, p. 130), that the original purpose was to teach men " to love one another, and to avoid those evils which tend
who suggest
to
make them
too short."
consider life too long when in reality it is Analogously, in the 90th Psalm (ver. 12) and
we have passages (already quoted) advising mindfulness of death, so that men shall be wise and cease from enmity.
That a
times
is
well
degraded Epicureanism existed in Roman shown by certain gems (to which I shall
" " afterwards refer) engraved with skeleton and wine-jar devices, and likewise by the design on two magnificent
Boscoreale treasure
to
"
in the
and supposed
first
century of the
Christian era (see Fig. 1). These cups belong to a period when the philosophy of Epicurus was popularly supposed
to advocate devotion to sensual pleasures.
14 Vide A. E. P. Weigall, "The Temperament of the Ancient Egyptians," Blackwood's Magazine, July, 1908, p. 58. 13 Plutarch, in his Septem Sapientium Convivium (c. 2), says that the Egyptian custom of introducing a skeleton at their banquets and reminding their guests that they also would soon die, tended to incite them, not to drunkenness and sensual pleasure, but to mutual friendship, deterring them from wasting their short span of life in wickedness. In De Iside et Osiride (c. 17), Plutarch again refers to the same Egyptian custom. 18 For beautiful illustrations of these cups, see A. Heron de Villefosse, "Le Tresor de Boscoreale," Monuments et Memoirs (Fondation
EugAne
and
PI. viii.
They
17
and garlands of roses, and bear various inscriptions, of which urge the enjoyment of pleasure whilst yet
lasts,
some
life
is
possible
Eat,
FIG.
1.
in the
Silver cup forming part of the so-called Boscoreale treasure Louvre Museum at Paris, supposed to date from the first
century of the Christian era. Photograph from the facsimile in the Victoria and Albert Museum, showing the skeletons, or "shades," of the philosophers Epicurus and Zeno.
you can,
"
these cups represent the shades of Greek poets and philosophers, whose names are
17 I suppose that the skeleton in this sense would have been termed a "larva," or e?5a>A.oj>. It appears to represent what we might speak of as the " spirit " of the dead (philosopher or poet).
shade
for "
to-morrow you
"
spirit."
or
INTRODUCTION.
inscribed on the silver at their sides,
18 accompanied by a pig,
labelled as that of Epicurus himself. (that is to say, his skeleton) has a Epicurus " of the New Testament) philosopher's wallet (" scrip
is
slung from the left shoulder, and holds a long philosopher's staff in the left hand, whilst he lays his right
hand on what seems to be a large cake on a tripod table. The pig at his feet is likewise endeavouring to get at
Above the cake is the inscription, HAONH TO T6AOC ("Pleasure is the final object"). On the other side of the tripod stands the skeleton of Zeno (founder
the cake.
of the Stoic philosophy), with wallet attitude of disdain (see Fig. 1).
It seems, indeed, as if the devices
and
staff,
in
an
kinds
alike.
The
meaning would then be as follows: No matter whose philosophy you follow, you will have to die like the philosophers themselves, but whilst you live you can choose between seriousness and merely sensual pleasure. On the
cup on which Epicurus is represented is an inscription confirming this interpretation.
is
inscription in question a stage"), probably a proverbial saying of the time, which likewise forms part of
The
[<J]KHNH
o BIOC ("Life
is
18
What
was
came
the popular conception of so-called followers of Epicurus mind of the people Epicurus from the lines
"
Me pinguem et nitidum bene curata cute vises, Cum ridere voles, Epicuri de grege porcum."
(Hor., Epist.,
lib.
i.
refers to the Life of Epicurus, by Diogenes Laertius, in proof of his fine character and of the purity of the philosophy which he taught and of its misrepresentation by Roman so-called followers. Lecky
Lecky
admits, however, that Epicureanism, though logically compatible with a very high degree of virtue, tended practically towards vice.
10
Anthology
19
r;
[idOe irai%tiv
life
IS
ft
</>/o
rag o^vvag
("
All
either learn to play like a child, stage laying earnestness aside, or bear its griefs ").
:
and a game
Many
of the
20 give advice passages of the Greek Anthology carpe diem kind, and amongst Latin authors
this respect.
See,
for instance, his Ode, ii. 3, lines 13 to 16 " Hue vina et unguenta et nimiuua brevis
of
sentiments, showing also a tinge of learned " 21 Justifiable advice of the melancholy and pessimism. " " kind occurs in the Shih King of the Chinese.
"
"
Epicurean
The sentence
in
the
Apocrypha, "Let us
crown
19 "All Cf. the well-known passage in Shakespeare's As You Like It the world's a stage," &c. and somewhat similar passages, quoted by Steevens, Malone, and other Shakespeare critics, from various English writers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and from Petronius. 20 Compare J. W. Mackail's Select Epigrams from the Greek AnthoVerses on the subject of life, pp. 285, 286. The logy, London, 1906
:
epigram commencing 2,tcr]vo iras 6 &tos is given on page 301, No. xliv. 21 Dr. Oliver Codrington kindly tells me that Fitzgerald's English " translation imparts to the verses of the Rubaiyat a deeper " Epicurean tinge than they in reality possess. Omar was certainly familiar with Greek literature. In a contribution to the Royal Asiatic Society Journal (London, 1898, p. 349), to which Dr. Codrington has referred me, Dr. E. D. Boss quotes (p. 354) the following passage from Ibn-al-Kifty, who wrote in the seventh century of the Hejira Omar was " the most learned man of his day, was versed in the science of the Greeks. He
:
encouraged the search after the One Judge by means of the purification of the inclinations of the flesh for the sake of the elevation of the human
soul."
tion
It seems to me that a learned man with a Faust-like imaginacertain to have " Epicurean moods " at some period or other of his life, and such moods (frequently revealing a shade also of pessimism)
is
may
him
in poetry.
INTRODUCTION.
ourselves
11
with
rose-buds
before
ii.
(Wisdom
of Solomon, ch.
8),
And
Very
similar
Old time is still a-flying, this same flower that smiles to-day, To-morrow will be dying."
are
the
words of the
German popular
gliiht
Eh
The
"
sie verbliiht."
(quoted later on), commencing Gaudeamus igitur," is older. " Some of the so-called " Moralische Pfenninge of the
students'
song
town of Basel, which I shall afterwards describe, represent roses and Death's heads, with the inscription, "Heut " dead "), or rodt, Morgen dodt (" To-day red, to-morrow
Heut send (sind) wier rot und Morgen todt we are red and to-morrow dead ").
"
"
("
To-day
It was in Mediaeval Europe, under the auspices of the Catholic Church, that descriptions and representations of the terrors of death and hell began to take on
their
Thoughtful artists of late Mediaeval and later periods have delighted in contrasting
aspects.
22
most horrible
22
In this connexion it may be remarked that whilst some of the "parting scenes" on Greek sepulchral marble reliefs are sorrowful in a simple and beautiful way of their own, the mural paintings in Etruscan tombs invest the idea of death (and the parting scenes represented) with horrors equal to those conjured up by Mediaeval " " superstition and Mediaeval art. The brutal-looking Etruscan Charun with his hammer, and occasionally other malignant-looking demons, like Gorgons or Furies (though usually represented as males), sometimes holding snakes in their hands, play an important part in Etruscan death
so-called
12
how
it
and poor
kings and peasants, wise men and fools, good and bad, old and young, beautiful and ugly. As examples
we may refer to the various series of the "Dance of Death" ("Danse Macabre") made by various artists during The best-known the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. 23
designs,
i.e.
"Arms
of Death," repre-
senting a man and woman supporting a shield with a Death's head as armorial bearing. Albrecht Diirer's well-known engraving (1513), representing a knight on
horseback with Death (likewise on horseback) by his side and the devil behind him, is typical of this great artist's
work.
By
woodcut
Museum)
on a horse (perhaps emblematic of a spreading pestilence), with the inscription ME(M)ENTO MEl, and the date 1505;
Death swooping down upon a thrown from his horse (emblematic being In regard to Diirer's of sudden and unexpected death).
an
early drawing
of
rider,
who
is
23 Many illustrations from various series are given in E. Hollander's Karikatur und Satire in der Medicin, Stuttgart, 1905 but on the whole subject, see especially the elaborate work by E. H. Langlois, entitled, Essai historique, philosopliique, ct pittoresque sur les Danses des Morts, Rouen, 1851 also F. Douce's work on Holbein's Dance of Death, &c., London (Bohn's Illustrated Library), 1858. In spite, however, of the work of Langlois and others, there is still room for a book on what " might be termed the artistic philosophy of death," that is to say, on
; ;
philosophic thoughts and opinions regarding death, as illustrated by works of art (both great and small) of various ages and of various
countries.
INTRODUCTION.
"
13
Wappen
des Todes
seems to
me
that the
meaning
FIG.
2.
Wappen
des Todes
"
(engraving in the
British
Museum).
" " 24 Diirer, in his engraving termed Wappen des Todes (dated 1503), seems to me to have used the Death's head rather as an emblem of ruin and destruction than as a memento mori in the ordinary sense of the
term.
The hairy
satyr-like
man
(like
a "savage
man"
in heraldry)
14
and that
not merely a memento mori device like the latter. An engraving by the "Meister des Amsterdamer
"
represents Death (" Meister von 1480 ") (with toad and snake) warning a fashionably dressed youth. The subject of another engraving by the same
Kabinets
master is the story of the three living kings coming upon This thirteenth-century tale or legend three dead ones. " (" morality story) of three living men meeting three
dead
men
morts et
which
25 formed a favourite subject for various versions exist, artists, and probably inspired the preliminary versions of
who supports the shield of arms seems to be endeavouring to seduce a woman. Look first at the woman. She is the traditional lady of Mediaeval times, who is dreaming of a lover, a gallant knight he must
Then be, and one whose arms can rival others in antiquity and fame. look at the man, who approaches gently from behind, whispering into the lady's ear. The lady listens to his suggestions, but she has not yet turned her head to see his hideousness of person, and as yet she can only see his shield with the helmet and wings above it, which might
any lady's imagination. Perhaps Death himself, whose device the man bears, would be preferable to such a lover, for Death is at least a chevalier sans peur et sans reproche in so far as his armorial device, here pictured, is as ancient as the human race, and he himself
find favour in
has never yet been sullied by real defeat at human hands. One cannot " savage help thinking that Diirer, in this engraving, has employed a " man," not only as an ordinary heraldic supporter," but likewise to convey a hidden satire on the pursuits of some of the nobles of his time. Perhaps, however, the "savage man" and the "gentle lady"
were intended merely to represent Life, supporting the emblem of Death does in truth support death, for without life there could be no death. 25 " Le dit des trois morts et des trois vifs," and the doleful talk of the dead to the living, may well be contrasted with a story of the Chinese mystic, Chuang Tzu (Musings of a Chinese Mystic, London, 1906, p. 84), to which my attention was kindly drawn by Mr. John Allan One day the Chinese philosopher came upon a bleached human skull and (Hamlet-wise) mused as to what kind of a man it had once formed part of. In the night he dreamt that the skull appeared to him and told him that after death there were no troubles, that existence was bounded only by eternity, and that the happiness of a king among men did not exceed that enjoyed by the dead. Mediaeval " morality plays,"
;
life
analogous to morality
INTRODUCTION.
the
" "
15
Dance of Death (" Danse Macabre "), a subject which became so popular in the fifteenth and sixteenth
Three men (rarely women), generally wearing
centuries.
crowns, generally on horseback, and generally engaged in the pastime of hunting, are represented as being suddenly
corpses (being
early
eaten by worms
"
26
)
or skeletons.
An
M The idea of representing the decaying body as being occupied by " long worms, snakes, toads, &c. (i.e. as being eaten by worms," according to a phrase still in use in some countries), was doubtless chiefly " derived from Ecclesiasticus (ch. x. 11), For when a man is dead, he
An engraving of and worms." " " Meister mit about 1480, by the " Meister I. A. M. von Zwolle (the der Weberschiitze"), represents Moses with the tables of the ten commandments in an upper compartment, and a decaying corpse, being " eaten by worms," in a lower compartment. This design is evidently meant to illustrate another particular passage in Ecclesiasticus " Eemember corruption and death, and abide in the (ch. xxviii. 6)
shall inherit creeping things, beasts,
:
commandments."
a skeleton or
shriveled body in life-like attitude, the snakes and toads were sometimes not omitted. Thus, in a German fifteenth-century woodcut (by an unknown artist) of " Death in the Jaws of Hell " (reproduced in the
Catalogue of Early German and Flemish Woodcuts in the British Museum, by Campbell Dodgson, 1903, vol. i. PI. 2), Death, who is represented by a shriveled figure of skin and bones (in the mouth of a monster who is vomiting up flames), is accompanied by a snake, and has a toad in place of the conventional fig-leaf. So also, in the fifteenth-century " " Death engraving of warning a Youth," by the Meister des Amsterdamer Kabinets" (already referred to), the life-like shriveled figure representing Death is accompanied by a toad and snake. In this connexion one may well remember the lines of Edward Young (Night Thoughts, 1742) " The
knell, the shroud, the
vault, the darkness, and the These are the bugbears of a winter's eve, The terrors of the living, not the dead."
worm
itself.
and pomp of death may frighten more than death Bacon's Essays "Of Death," and his reference to a supposed on the terror of the pomp of death in Seneca's writings. passage
The
attributes
Of.
16
a representation of three kings, one of whom carries a Over the kings falcon, and three skeleton-like corpses.
ich se
are the following inscriptions " "
;
"
:
Ich
am afert
;
" "
Lo whet
Me thinketh
"
:
Over the
Such scheltou
story
be
" "
;
For Godes
love,
be wer by me."
The same
evidently suggested an early fourteenth-century mural " painting (with the inscription, Mors sceptra ligonibus
aequat ") which formerly existed at Battle Church, in 27 and also a mural painting in the church of Sussex,
28 The same story forms part of Ditchingham, Norfolk. " the Triumph of Death," a fresco doubtfully attributed
to
Campo Santo
;
Benozzo Gozzoli (1420-1497), preserved in the Louvre at " Paris and occurs in A. Verard's " Dance of Death series
29 published in 1492.
In the Pisan
fresco, a
party of
men
whom
represented as coming suddenly upon three open coffins, in each of which is a corpse or skeleton, one with a crown
on
i.e.
its
head.
the
St.
The "Dance
"
Macaber Dance
"
("
name
Macarius, an Egyptian anchorite, who is represented on the Pisan fresco pointing out the open coffins
from
Les trois morts are again met hunting party. with in an anti-Papal drawing of the school of Augsburg (early sixteenth century), which pictures the Pope and a
to the
"
"
some procession
whom
27 28
wears a crown.
29
See Journ. Archaeol. Assoc., London, 1847, vol. 2, p. 151. See Archaeological Journal, London, 1848, vol. 5, p. 69. See Paul Bicher's L'Art et la Medecine, Paris, 1902, pp. 525-531.
INTRODUCTION.
17
" " representations of Les trois morts et les trois vifs both the live men and the dead men generally bear the attri-
butes of worldly power and wealth was intended to point out may be
"
it
summed up
:
in the
dominus dives, non omni tempore vives Fac bona dum vivis, post mortem vivere si
;
vis."
ling (or rather, in a peculiar kind of way, suffocating) a Hans Sebald Beham lover, whose lady flees in terror.
(1522) shows Death approaching a woman on a couch, whose husband or lover lies dead on the floor of the room.
By the same artist is the engraving (1541) of Death accosting a lady with an hour-glass in her hands, who " is walking in a garden, with the inscription, Omnem
in
homine
venustatem
mors
abolet."
His
brother,
(1502-1540), engraved a memento mori of a baby, hour-glass, and human skulls there design are two varieties (with three and four skulls respectively),
Barthel
Beham
one
"
(that
with four
"
skulls)
30
Another engraving (Fig. 4) by the same master represents a mother giving her baby the breast (perhaps the Madonna and
(vide Fig. 3).
Infant Christ)
head and an hour-glass. Death is pictured on an engraving by Marcantonio Raimondi (early sixteenth century) as a skeleton with wings
and a scythe.
On an
"
The design better illustrates the oft-quoted line of Manilius " " Nascentes or, as a physiologist morimur, finisque ab origine pendet has expressed the same idea, " the first cry of the newly born child is
;
the
first
18
an aged woman with bent back, leaning on a staff and carrying a basket of sticks, approaches an open grave,
FIG.
3.
four skulls.
the British
Museum.
from which the hand of a skeleton holds out a winged 31 In an anonymous Dutch engraving of the hour-glass.
FIG.
4.
Mother and
child, with skull and hour-glass. Engraving by Barthel Beham, in the British Museum.
Ji There are other German, Flemish, or Italian engravings and paintings of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, representing fairly simple memento mori devices (such as a Death's head in an architectural setting
INTRODUCTION.
19
seventeenth century, Death is seen conducting a sick man to have his urine examined by a doctor, as in one
of Holbein's "
probably also
of
"
series,
himself.
In a " Dance In
Death
"
engraved by Zimmermann
in a Swiss almanac,
Death brings
an engraving of the Anatomical Theatre of Leiden in 1610, skeletons are represented holding up memento
" mori and kindred quotations, such as Mors ultima linea " " " rerum Nascentes morimur (Horace) (Manilius)
;
"
est
" "
; ;
Mors sceptra
ligo-
nibus aequat
Nosce
te
" "
ipsum
Pulvis et umbra
sumus"
(Horace).
probably for
These sayings were introduced less the benefit and instruction of the medical
noblemen, fashionable ladies and times used to visit the ana-
who
in former
and demonstrations.
What may
included
centuries,
be
termed
"
the 'memento
the
fifteenth,
sixteenth,
and
and the popularity of memento mori devices " " Dance of Death designs certainly culminated in the One must not forget that, of the sixteenth century.
owing to the prevalence
of,
To-day red, to-morrow epidemic diseases, the saying, dead," was still more applicable to human life then than
it
is
in
quite
modern
times.
20
occurred every where, on paintings and prints, on sepulchral monuments, as architectural ornaments, in books of
emblems, on
finger-rings),
all
on devotional objects (such as rosary beads in the form of Death's heads), and on medals. A monkish
life
of
contemplation
or
"
with
"
Innocentia
et "
memoria
Vita est
mortis,"
meditatio," as
life to lead,
as the ideal
even by those who themselves took a large and active share in the practical work of the world. To
illustrate this feeling
we need only quote Sir Thomas More, the patron of Holbein who was very familiar with the use of memento mori devices, and the friend of
Erasmus the great
scholar,
and favourite
seal,
we
shall
to.
When
imprisoned in
said to his
:
monks going
Thomas More
daughter, Margaret Roper, who was there beside him " Dost thou not see, Meg, that these blessed fathers be
now
to their marriages ?
see,
difference there
between such as have in effect spent all their days in a straight and penitential and painful life, religiously, and such as have in the world like worldly wretches (as
thy poor father hath done) consumed
pleasure and ease licentiously."
32
all their
time in
Roper's Life of Sir Thomas More. This contrast between the the religious recluse and an ordinary life of worldly pursuits is the same as that pictorially expressed in the famous " Triumph exactly of Death," a fresco of the fourteenth century (already referred to) in the
life of
32
W.
Campo Santo
of Pisa.
INTRODUCTION.
21
is
portrait (in
the
Munich Pinakothek)
FIG.
5.
with a figure of Death, holding a scythe, behind him, waiting for the hour-glass to run out. Sir Brian Tuke,
22
a contemporary of Sir Thomas More, was Secretary to Cardinal Wolsey, and afterwards Treasurer of the
Household
of learning,
to
He
was a patron
"father" of English antiquaries. On the picture in question he is pointing to a passage from the latin
Vulgate version of the Bible, signifying, small number of my days be soon ended
(See Fig.
5.)
"
?
(Job
x. 20).
English
literature.
One
of the
"
"
Bardolph
as
many a man
scene 3), Falstaff says to use of it (Bardolph's face) good doth of a death's head or a memento mori"
iii.
In the Second Part of Henry IF (act ii. scene 4), Falstaff " Peace, good Doll do not speak says to Doll Tearsheet
: !
like a death's
head
do not bid
me remember mine
end."
In Loves Labour's Lost (act v. scene 2). Biron compares the countenance of Holofernes to "a death's face in a
"
ring
Amongst many modern pictures bearing on the subject we may recall the " Pursuit of Fortune," by R. Henneberg
Fortune
(1826-1876), in which a knight riding his fatal race after is attended by Death in the guise of his squire.
INTRODUCTION.
of
23
33
G.
A.
Burger's
ballad
Leonore (1774).
Arnold
Boecklin (1827-1901), whose Isle of the Dead and Vita Somnium Breve are famous, has in a portrait (now in the National Gallery of Berlin) of himself in
in the
1872, represented Death as a fiddler behind him, much same way as in the sixteenth century Sir Brian
Tuke (as already stated) had himself painted by Holbein, with Death holding a scythe behind him waiting for the hour-glass to run out. Several designs by William Blake
(1757-1827)
may
But amongst modern artists Alfred Night Thoughts. Bethel is quite unsurpassed in his weird and powerful representations of Death, in respect of which he may be
ranked with Diirer and Holbein.
in 1848," showing
from the
year,
civil
how Death was the only real gainer war and barricade-fighting of that unsettled
is perhaps his masterpiece. The richness of his wonderful imagination is also well shown by his Death coming as a friend (at the peaceful end of an old man's
life),
and by
his representation of
Death breaking up a
from a story of the " Another conproduced in the
masked
temporary
of Death,"
turist,
Dance
of
is
Death
"
series,
nineteenth century,
by Thomas
with letterpress (1815-1816) by William Combe, the author of the Tours of Dr. Syntax. Like William
33 This poem is true enough to nature, if Leonore's ghastly ride be regarded as a nightmare dream or as a delusion during the delirium period of fever in the case of a person familiar with legends of vampires
and such-like.
24
Blake's designs already alluded to, so also some of the illustrations to Dante's Divina Commedia, and
Petrarch's Trionfi (the design of the triumphal car of death), have naturally a memento mori significance.
To the dreadful realism with which death and decay have sometimes been represented, as for instance by the Spanish artist, Juan de Valdes Leal (1630-1691), in his
" Finis Gloriae
at Seville,
Mundi
we may
"
34
(a distorted skull) in Holbein's picture (painted in 1533), known as " The Ambassadors," in the London National
In the latter picture the presence (on the floor Gallery. in the foreground) of a curious memento mori, namely, a
human
skull elongated almost beyond recognition, as it would appear if reflected from a cylindrical concave mirror, is accounted for by what is known about Jean de Dinteville,
of the
two
men
represented.
He
wears in his black bonnet a jewel formed of a silver skull set in gold, and there are reasons for supposing that at that time of his life (he was twenty-nine years of
age when the picture was painted) he thought much of death, and he had doubtless seen the so-called Holbein's
"
series.
designs, or similar designs in other This picture by Holbein, and Holbein's portrait of Sir Brian Tuke, to which I have already alluded, throw much light on the use of memento mori devices in the
of
35
34
Dance
Death
"
Murillo is said to have remarked of this picture that it was so forcibly painted that it was necessary to hold one's nose when looking at it. See Sir W. Stirling-Maxwell's Annals of the Artists of Spain, new edition, 1891, vol. 4, p. 1291. In regard to disagreeable realism in
art,
one^may
recall
Milan (seventeenth century) bearing the sculptor's proud inscription " Non me Praxiteles sed Marcus finxit Agrates."
See Holbein's Ambassadors, the Picture and the Men, by Hervey, London, 1900.
35
Mary
S.
INTRODUCTION.
25
I shall later on refer to the favourite sixteenth century. device of Erasmus, a terminal head with the legend
"
Cedo
nulli," or
"
Concedo
nulli," a device
medals and for the seal with which, in the house of Jerome Frobenius at Basel, he signed his last will, dated
12th February, 1536. It is almost needless to point out that the aspect of, or mental attitude towards, death must vary much with
the age, sex, temporary or permanent occupation (or want of occupation), past experiences, future prospects,
education, moral and religious surroundings, personal
principles
personal,
and religious
beliefs,
aspirations, ambition,
hereditary or racial temperament, and the temporary state of health and enjoyment in life. It
must, to some extent, vary from time to time according to the condition of the mind and body and the changing
moods
is
of the individual.
likely often to modify as well as to intensify the aspect in which the idea of death presents itself. own interest in memento mori medals dates from
My
Numismatic Chronicle (Third Series, Vol. XII. p. 253) on a curious seventeenth-century medalet in my collection, " bearing the inscription, As soone as wee to bee begunne,
We
of Manilius' line,
pendet."
likewise
acquired fine
medal by Giovanni Boldu, dated 1466, and of the large medal of Erasmus of " Rotterdam (151 9), with his favourite " terminus design
on the reverse.
26
PAET
II.
ARRANGEMENT.
IN order to avoid repetition, I shall first attempt to arrange the various possible aspects of death and mental attitudes towards the idea of death into groups numbered
by Roman numerals
in brackets, to the group or groups which I think each one illustrates. In regard to the engraved gems, fingerrings, jewelry, &c., considered in Part IV., I
have not
it
one of these
I.
In
this
group death
est
end of
linea
life,
rerum
(Horace, Epist.,
i.
Slightly
30 In the common memento mori inscription, " Respice finem," the Latin word "finis," like the Greek rf\os and the English "end," may perhaps be taken to mean the final object as well as the final event of " " If this were so, life. Respice finem would be almost equivalent to " Live to die." So also when death is described as the " ultima linea " " rerum," the word linea (doubtless used by Horace as the goal-line
may
signify either the limit (end) or the object (goal). In regard to the so-called " death " of
AKKANGEMENT.
more complicated expressions
are
"
:
27
of the
;
Lex non poena Principium moriendi natale est " " mors Nascentes morimur, finisque ab origine pendet ;" " " Media vita in morte sumus (Notker Balbulus, of
;
830-912), &c. The simple memento mori corresponding to these simple memento mori legends include such common emblems as the following a human skull; a human skull and crossed bones; a
St. Gall, A.D.
devices
human
a
skull
and hour-glass
;
human
skeleton holding
an hour-glass
tomb
of
human
line
88 a winged boy holding an inverted torch ; or sepulchral urn ; a baby or child resting on a skull. The last device specially illustrates the
Manilius
"
;
"Nascentes
that
is
morimur, finisque ab
origine pendet
expressed the same idea, "The first cry of the newly born child is the first step towards the grave."
or disease
Sudden death from injury (especially accidental injury) is expressed by such devices as a rose-bush and death's head, or a dead stag transfixed with an arrow,
and the English equivalent
" So far
is ought from lasting aye That tombes shal have ther dying day."
Both of these, together with several other memento mori sayings, are inscribed on a painted wooden memorial tablet of the year 1586 in Adderbury Church, Oxfordshire. Vide Proceedings of tJie Society of The line Antiquaries, London, 1905, 2nd Series, vol. 20, p. 221. " " Quandoquidem data sunt ipsis quoque fata sepulchris
is
from Juvenal
(Satire, x. 146),
C.
Badham,
in his translation of Juvenal (1831) " For fate hath fore-ordained its day of
doom
to the tenant only, but the tomb." " Mors etiam saxis nominibusque venit " (Ausonius). Compare also Cf. Propertius, Opera Omnia, lib. iii. 2, lines 19 et sec[. Death, like Labour
Not
and Love,
ss
is
said to
of
"genius
Eoman
sarcophagi.
28
and by such words as " Heut rodt, Mom todt (To-day " red, to-morrow dead "), as on certain so-called Moralische
"
Pfenninge
struck at Basel in the seventeenth century. forget that the terrible and devastating
pestilences of former times increased the significance of all memento mori tokens, which reminded people of every
man's
liability to
sudden death.
individual temperaments and circum-
According
to
may
exert
give rise to various mental attitudes, and may very different effects. They may favour vital
depression or excitation.
They may,
for instance,
modify
or
lasts.
ambition,
induce
remorse,
diminish
life
future
effort
life
stimulate to
make
while
According also to individual temperaments and circum" stances, the simple aspect of death may be as the king " Some of the of terrors or as the " prince of peace." " " expressions above referred to (e.g. Lex non poena mors ; " moriendi natale est ") may be regarded as Principium
a certain amount of consolation Heading VIII.) with them.
carrying
(cf.
under
II.
wafting to immortal
line 434).
those
who
believe in
personal immortality, including those who incline to the doctrine of a gradual evolution of souls (by metempsychosis) through the ages, analogous to Darwinic evolution
ARRANGEMENT.
in
29
of Glaleotto
the form and functions of the body. 39 A medal Marzi (fifteenth century) is inscribed with
"
:
Nascentes morimur,
ab origine pendet
"
;
memorial medal on Superata tellus sidera donat." the death of Sir John Hotham (1645) bears the inscription,
"
Mors mihi
Galvani.
vita
"
;
Quite
"
the
inscription,
(with the device of a phoenix rising from flames, as an emblem of the resurrection, or of the
survival of the soul after the death of the body) on one
of the so-called "Moralische
Moriar ut vivam
Pfenninge" (seventeenth phoenix, likewise as an century) of the town of Basel. emblem of the resurrection and of the immortality of the
soul, occurs on some fifteenth and sixteenth century Italian medals (Domenico Riccio, Tommaso Moro, and Cardinal Christofero Madruzzo), accompanied by inscriptions such
as,
Morieus revivisco (" Dying, I come to life again "). memorial medal of Adolph Occo III (1524-1606), a " physician of Augsburg, is inscribed, Vita mihi Christus,
"
"
mors
erit ipsa
lucrum
"
("
To me
to live is Christ,
and
to
die is gain," St. Paul's Epist. to the Philippians, ch. i. 21) ; and on another memorial medal of the same physician " " we read, Absorpta est mors in victoriam (" Death is
swallowed up in victory,"
Corinthians, ch. xv. 54).
the
Death's head ring (see later) on which was the inscription, " " 40 mors, ero mors tua (" death, I will be thy death ").
39 The idea of a "diffused immortality" of souls is not altogether opposed to the same aspect of death. 40 This inscription, apart from the religious interpretation (cf. the
30
inscription,
When
Christ
who
is
our
life
shal appeare,
we
him
in glory
"
(cf. St.
John,
xi.
25 and
All memorial medals with legends of the usual epitaph kind, relating to existence after death, may be
A memorial mourning ring is inscribed, " Heaven is my happyness;" and W. Lenthall (1591-1662), Speaker in the House of Commons, directed by will that the rings given " away at his funeral should be inscribed, Oritur non moritur." sixteenth-century memorial ring in the Victoria and Albert
Museum
later
;
Dye
to lyve."
somewhat
memorial locket bears a representation of the resurrection whilst an eighteenth-century mourning brooch has a picture of relatives mourning at a tomb, and comforts them with the inscription, " Heaven has in store what thou hast lost." Lady Evans possesses a small engraved metal plate of the seventeenth century in memory of a boy who, before he died, dreamt "that he had wings and flew to heaven." Needless to say, under the present heading can be included all
representations of the Christian ideas of the resurrection of the dead, the last judgment, angels, devils, heaven, hell, and
purgatory.
A medal
Battle of the Boyne (1690) bears on its edge the inscrip" Pro Some tion, religione et libertate mori, vivere est."
" Vive ut Cf. the motto, (postea) vivas," and the sixteenth-century epitaph (said to be on Joan Brodnax, 1592) " well and
Lyve
Dye
ARRANGEMENT.
31
be described afterwards), on the death of King Charles I of England, allude to a celestial crown as a reward for a
martyr's death. But such inscriptions and devices bring us to the subject of medals, &c., commemorating death
or
opinions,
martyrdom for religious, patriotic, political, or social and such medals (and other memorials) are best classed under Heading XI.
I
shall
subsequently allude to the supposed gemof Plato with butterfly wings attached to his
in
portraits
argument
for the
These are
minus."
all
Kome)
"
Ter-
as representing, not
Plato, but Hypnos. However, the gem-type of a philosopher, seated, reading from a scroll, with a human skull and a butterfly before him, evidently refers to thoughts on death and the soul, i.e. on the mortality of the body
(the skull)
butterfly).
after death
one
Imperial coins " " and " medallions with a representation of " Aeternitas on the reverse ; engraved gems and Roman Imperial
coins with peacocks or other symbols of immortality; certain antique coins (Eleusis in Attica) and engraved
gems, with devices relating to the Eleusinian Mysteries ; the scarabs and other amulets placed by the ancient Egyptians (down to Ptolemaic times) with mummies to
be of service to the deceased in his future
life antique with types referring to) Hermes in his character of ^U^OTTOJUTTOCJ the conductor of
;
(or
the souls or shades of deceased persons to the nether world; certain antique engraved gems with devices
32
trines,
possibly referring to the Pythagorean and Orphic docsupposed originally to have been derived from
; India, of a transmigration of souls (metempsychosis) " " the coins (" Charon's obolus or danace ") placed in the
41
mouth
little
of deceased persons in ancient Greece, and the embossed thin plates of gold ("gold
modern numismatists) which probably served a similar purpose. In spite of Lucian's ridicule, the custom of placing coins in the mouth, or between
the teeth, of corpses
in
survived from
ancient
Greece,
ages, to
modern times
certain
superstitions and customs connected with the belief in an existence after death, namely, the weird superstitions
" connected with the primitive " vampire tales of Eastern the Oriental and ancient customs of the sacriEurope
;
ficial
(the
Sutteeism
"
to
accompany
the idea
murdered
persons and suicides, who are able to haunt and worry the living, especially those who injured them during life; and (intimately allied to the last idea) the old
Chinese idea of the possibility of obtaining revenge by means of suicide, i.e. the idea that the spirit of the dead
are, course, many Buddhist works of art representing scenes from the " Jatakas," that is to say, incidents from supposed earlier existences of Buddha. Amongst such works of art is the series of sculptures in the British Museum from the Buddhist Tope at
fine coloured
Japanese
ARRANGEMENT.
found
little in
33
the
way
peculiar aspects of, and mental attitudes towards, death and the supposed life beyond it. The placing of a coin
or coin-like object in the
ever, at
mouth of corpses may, howone time have been associated with a belief in
"
vampires."
Medals commemorating executions come under Heading V., and those commemorating martyrdom for religious opinions come under Heading XI., but both these classes
are likewise connected with the present heading, since the cruel executions for heresy depended to a certain extent on the belief in a future existence. The Christian
inquisitors or other judges often really believed that they were benefiting their victims by mercilessly torturing
that, in fact,
ment
in the life to
in the
name
of
that the types of certain antique engraved gems possibly refer to human sacrifices. 43 The horrors of human sacrifices
rites (including
"
Sutteeism
") con-
nected with barbarous religious superstitions, were forcibly depicted and denounced by the Roman poet, Lucretius,
to part of "
words
in
whose De Rerum Natura might be prefixed the Religion what crimes have been committed
!
thy name
"
!
(altered from
the words
on Liberty
ascribed to
Madame Roland
prints or drawings representing the malevolent apparition of ghosts or skeletons. Another class of suicide for revenge has been reported from
to
certain parts of Africa. There a person whose acts have driven another commit suicide has himself to undergo a like fate. Vide E. Wester-
marck, Origin and Development of Moral Ideas, 1908, vol. ii. p. 233. 43 Of course some gem-types of the kind may merely depict mythoOn this question see A. Furtwangler, Die antiken logical incidents.
Gemmen,
iii.
34
III.
There
of course,
"
(Od.,
iii.
many medals
bearing on the
omnis moriar
third
30, 6),
book of Odes, and many men are said to have "immortalized" themselves by their writings or their
deeds.
An
Italian
scribed by Luckius, 44 represents Fame, with two trumpets, flying to left, and bears the inscription, "Mortalium " is a Latin immortalitas." " Vivit post funera Virtus which has been adopted as a motto by several saying
families.
On
the
monument
" Fui Caius. lege Chapel, Cambridge, is the inscription Vivit post funera Virtus. Obiit 1573, Mi. 63."
French commemorative bronze plaquette of Philippe de Girard, by L. E. Mouchon (1892), bears an allegorical
representation of posthumous fame.
Lecky, in his History of European Morals, writes
"
:
The
desire for reputation, and especially for posthumous reputation 45 assumed an extra'that last infirmity of noble mind' ordinary prominence among the springs of Roman heroism.
Marcus Aurelius, following an example that is ascribed made it a special object of mental discipline, by continually meditating on death and evoking, by an effort of the imagination, whole societies that had passed away, to acquire a realized sense of the vanity of posthumous fame." We shall see later on that the vanity of posthumous fame is well expressed on some engraved gems of Roman times. In one sense, of course, every one does survive in the minds A man's life may be obscure and of no of his successors.
.
. .
to Pythagoras,
44
p. 119,
45
Italiens,
2nd
ii.
Lecky compares this with the remark Etiam sapientibus cupido gloriae novissima fame is the last desire that is laid asicie even
by the wise
").
De
AEEANGEMENT.
35
obvious significance, or it may be sufficiently striking "to " point a moral or adorn a tale ; but every life must yet have some influence for good or for bad on the lives of others, and that influence, though diffused and apparently lost, like a ripple on the water, will be borne down the stream of time into the ocean of eternity.
IV.
"
death, acceptable
and unto him whose strength faileth, that is now in the last age, and is vexed with all things, and to him that
despaireth and hath lost patience " It is better to die
2)
;
"
once for
all
(Aeschylus, Prom. Vinct., lines 769, 770). In connexion with this aspect of, or attitude towards,
all
our days
"
death as giving freedom from pain, the comparison of death to a peaceful sleep 46 after the fatigue and turmoil of the day follows naturally. Compare A. Bethel's
beautiful design (1851) of "Death as a Friend," tolling the bell of the tower at the peaceful termination of the
aged
bell-ringer's life. " Be the day weary, or be the day long, At length it ringeth to Evensong."
is
"
Death
;
rest
from
labour
denied, to live
"
An
:
Of
may
Yet, as Sir
Lyon
Playfair (afterwards
Lord
Playfair)
pointed
merely poetry to call sleep the "twin-brother of death;" scientifically, sleep is rather the preserver of life and a sign of life
out, it is
than in any way analogous to death. Vide Sir A. Mitchell, Dreaming, Laughing, and Blushing, 1905, p. 10. But the heauty of Leonardo da " Si come une Vinci's apophthegm will always last giornata bene spesa da lieto dormire cosi una vita bene usata da lieto morire."
:
36
and trouble
Edward Young
lost,
(Night Thoughts, 1742) writes " Death gives us more than was in Eden
This king of terrors
is
V.
DEATH AS A MEANS OF PUNISHMENT, VENGEANCE, OE ATONEMENT. THE THREAT OF DEATH AS A MEANS OF EXCITING TERROR. POLITICAL MURDERS
AND POLITICAL EXECUTIONS.
Under
this
should be included, such as those struck on the execution of Monmouth and Argyle in 1685, with the inscription,
"
Ambitio malesuada
ruit,"
jettons of various countries commemorating executions (as just or unjust acts), some of the most notable were issued in the Low Countries during the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries.
is
On
threatened
as
a punishment or means
Thus, on two English medals (described later on) commemorating the loss of Minorca in 1756, the obverse
inscription
is,
"Brave Blakney
a
reward,
But
to
B.
cord."
These medals
47 and may belong to the popular ("toy-shop") class, really have helped in bringing the unfortunate Admiral
medals (mostly more or less political) known through the Admiral Vernon and Porto Bello medals of 1739, of which a great many varieties If English history had to he made out by the evidence of medals exist. only, then Admiral Vernon would perhaps figure as the most important " " medals served the purpose of political personage. These toy-shop
of the period
47
The popular
newspapers; they were, in fact, "medallic newspapers," if the expression is permitted. At the end of the century (about 1795), penny, halfpenny, and farthing tradesmen's tokens were sometimes made to serve
a similar political purpose.
ARRANGEMENT.
37
Byng
to his death.
halfpennies) of the last years of the eighteenth century, representing a man hanging from a gallows, with the " punning inscription, End of pain," though they did not
On a small
by the French sculptor, P. J. David d' Angers, commemorating the so-called " Massacres " of Gallicia (revolt in Austrian Poland) in 1846, the reverse bears the representation of a gallows and the names " of those who were regarded as responsible for the mas-
I do not know of any medals referring to the sacres." idea of death (voluntary or involuntary) as an act of atonement apart, of course, from religious medals. The unpleasant subject of the fancied terrors of death and hell
much more
illustrated
on engravings,
drawings, and paintings than on medals, engraved gems, &c. 48 Emblems of the Death's head class, when employed
to inspire terror in certain cases
be supposed to have exercised a panic-striking effect similar to that produced (according to stories of former
may
when pirates ran up their Death's head ensign, the hoisting of the flag causing doubtless an equivalent sinking of the blood-pressure and courage in some of those who looked at it. 49
days)
For convenience
48
all
medals,
memorial
rings,
&c.,
Certain satyrical medals might be mentioned here, especially the English political ones of the toy-shop class (see previous footnote), issued in 1741, representing the devil leading Sir Robert Walpole by a rope round his neck towards the open jaws of a monster (hell), with the
inscription:
MAKE
ROOM
FOR
SIR
ROBERT
NO
EXCISE.
49
Such
(See Medallic Illustrations, 1885, vol. ii. p. 561, Nos. 190-192.) a use of the symbols of death is analogous to the employment
during warfare of war-paint (and terrifying devices of all kinds) by savage tribes, in former times by aboriginal races of North America, &c.
38
commemorating political executions and political murders, may be included under this heading, though some of them (e.g. medals commemorating the death of John van Olden Barneveldt in 1619, and of the brothers De Witt
far as
might also be classed under Heading XL in so they commemorate a kind of martyrdom for political principles. Memorials of this class, owing to their number,
in 1672)
all
cannot
may
instance the
Eoman
Caesar
;
denarius commemorating the murder of Julius certain coins of Athens bearing a representation
(the statue of
them by
commemorating the Pazzi conspiracy (1478) at Florence and the assassination of Giuliano de' Medici the medal on the murder of Alexander de' Medici, the first Duke of Florence, by his kinsman Lorenzino de' Medici, the
;
"
King Charles
I of
England, and on the execution of Louis XVI of France also memorial medals on the and Marie Antoinette
;
great French Revolution, and of various other revolutions in France and other countries.
VI.
WAR.
Death's heads have been used as military devices in The device was Germany, France, and England. " Black apparently first adopted by the Prussian who were brought into existence by Frederick Hussars," the Great in 1741. Death's head instead of a cockade.
wickers," raised in 1809
They wore a black uniform and a The " Black Brunsby Friedrich Wilhelm, Duke of
ARRANGEMENT.
39
Brunswick-Oels, were likewise given a black uniform with a Death's head as their badge, partly, it is said, as
a token of mourning for the previous duke, who was mortally wounded at the battle of Auerstadt (October 14,
50 little bronze 1806), in the war against Napoleon. Death's head, worn by the Black Hussars on their shakos during the war of 1815 against Napoleon, is illustrated
stituted
the badge of the 9th Eegiment of Hussars, which was formed in March, 1793, out of the second
corps of "hussards
noirs
du nord."
apparently
copied
from
FIG.
Bronze death's-head 6. badge (actual size), worn on the shakos of the Prussian Black Hussars in 1815.
PIG.
7.
Hussars.
their head-dress
or
glory
The
("Death
which was
introduced at the suggestion of Lieutenant-Colonel John Hale in 1759 (who was Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant
50 The German regiments which at the present day represent the Black Brunswickers and the Black Hussars, continue to wear a Death's head device.
40
of the newly formed corps), was to create emulation, and to commemorate the glorious death of General Wolfe at Quebec (1759). 51 Victorious fighting and life are more
valuable in a war than martyr-like death, and so it is " Pro patria not really surprising that words such as, " " Dulce et decorum est mori, vivere est (cf. Horace's pro
" " Pro religione mori or Pro libertate vivere est," not found favour on military mori, have^ Sentences of this kind do indeed appear on badges. " patria mori "), or
some medals and medalets, which, however, as they commemorate patriotic deeds, should be classed under Heading XI.
VII.
In regard to the skull and bones as an emblem of danger, destruction, and ruin, there are satyrical medals,
as there are satyrical prints, especially political cartoons,
customs, occupations, or enterprises. Thus, on the occasion of a fete given in 1875, when Samuel Plimsoll
(1824-1898), "the
sailors' friend,"
was elected
Member
with Plimsoll's portrait on the obverse, and one of the " so-called coffin-ships," a species of death-trap which he
helped to get rid of, on the reverse. The ship is represented sinking on one of its sails is pictured a Death's head with crossed bones in the exergue are the words
; ;
COFFIN SHIP.
51 Vide Major J. H. Lawrence Archer, The British Army ; its Regimental Records, Badges, Devices, c., London, 1888, p. 77. I am indebted to Mr. L. Forrer for this reference.
ARRANGEMENT.
41
scribed, representing
Valour
("
Virtus ")
by which
was possibly intended to signify that threatening peril and ruin in an enterprise, or imminent defeat and death in war, might sometimes be successfully resisted
device
it
VIII.
"
and
all
turn
Death awaits all alike and makes all equal. wealth, beauty, and Glory, " Mors pride of birth make no difference in the end. " " Mors sceptra ligonibus omnibus communis est
to dust again
(Ecclesiastes, ch.
20).
Pallida mors aequo pulsat pede pauperum " tabernas Eegumque turres (Horace, Od., i. 4, 13). This
"
aequat
52
"
aspect
is
illustrated
Finis gloriae
mundi
" "
;
medal of
the seventeenth century, by Christian Maler, has on the obverse a lady's portrait, and on the reverse a skeleton
"
53
52 This sentence, said to be a quotation from Lucan, was inscribed over a fourteenth-century mural painting (representing " les trois morts et les trois vifs"), which formerly existed at Battle Church, Sussex.
An
and
"
Must tumble down, And in the dust be equal made With the poor crooked scythe and
43
spade."
Compare H.
lady, abolet."
Beham's engraving (dated 1541) of Death and a with the inscription, " Omnem in nomine venustatem mors
S.
42
The type of this medal was apparently copied from a Danish medal dated 1634 (to be afterwards described),
which on the obverse bears a similar lady's portrait and " words signifying, I am beautiful," whilst on the reverse
is
"I was
beautiful."
to a certain class of
monuments
Archbishop
Chichele, which will be referred to later on) representing the deceased with all the attributes of worldly wealth
eaten
may be partly accounted for by the discontent of the lower classes under the feudal system of the period " " levellers of Germany, (cf. the history of the Anabaptist
turies
1521-1525). Such pictures reminded the peasants that at death rank and social distinctions would disappear, peasant and nobleman, poor and rich, would fare alike. The fact that death is the common lot of all mankind (" For
dust thou
ch.
iii.
art,
19) could be distorted into a socialistic argument comparable with that suggested by the fourteenth-century
rhyme
"
When Adam
Who
on which John Ball preached at Blackheath (1381) during Wat Tyler's rebellion. The consideration that death is a natural consequence of birth, and common to
all living creatures, offers a
ARRANGEMENT.
one.
43
is
therefore, to
some extent,
IX.
"
DEATH.
THE
Nee
silet inors
Society of
London on
it
foundation in 1846.
Death,
causes, will
often, if properly
and prevention of a
which
is
and more beautiful of the two, on the inscription, " Mors vivis salus."
beautiful Fothergillian medal of the Royal Society (London) may likewise be mentioned in this connexion, since a specimen struck in gold, now in the British
The equally
Humane
in 1845 to Sir John Erichsen for his Experimental Enquiry into the Pathology and Treatment of Asphyxia." No medals have as yet been designed referring to death from the standpoint of the doctrine of the immor-
tality of
X. MEDICAL AND SOCIAL ATTITUDE TOWARDS DEATH. THE PREVENTION OF UNNECESSARY DEATH.
Various commemorative medals of medical
their life-work,
men and
and medals relating to sanitation and public health, illustrate to some extent this attitude
towards death.
Certain coins of Selinus in Sicily (of
the period circa 466-415 B.C.) may likewise be referred to in the same connexion, since their types commemorate the freeing of Selinus from a pestilence of some kind (malaria ?) by the drainage of the neighbouring marshlands.
44
They therefore illustrate a grand and public-spirited "hygienic" attitude towards preventible death from endemic infectious disease in the fifth century B.C.
A
is
not uncommon device which specially belongs here that of a skeleton-like figure (representing death or
of hygienic
work or medical
skill
and devotion
for
instance, the obverse design on the military-like medals awarded to all those who helped in sanitary work, &c.,
Heading XL
personal risk are best grouped under " Aliis for the ordinary medical man " " Aliis is surely as good a motto as inserviendo vivo " " " or inserviendo morior consumer (the motto of Tul-
But
pius,
art has
made
54
familiar).
XL DEATH
FOR THE GOOD OF OTHERS, OR FOR THE SAKE OF ORDINARY DUTY OR HONOUR. MARTYRDOM FOR KELIGIOUS, PATRIOTIC, POLITICAL, OR
SOCIAL OPINIONS.
medals com-
As
attempted lifesaving, might be included, as well as the various medals and decorations awarded to those who have risked their
34 This aspect of death, like No. XIV., may be termed an " altruistic " aspect of death. Strictly speaking, all coins and medals with representations or symbols of the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ might be placed under this heading. (Of. especially the so-called " Wittenberger Pestthalers" of the sixteenth century, with Moses' brazen serpent on the obverse and the Crucifixion on the reverse. Cf also the fine sixteenth.
century medals by Hans Beinhard of Leipzig, representing tne CruciTo a certain extent the aspect of death from the so-called fixion.) " " Epicurean point of view (No. XII.) may be contrasted as egoistic.
ARRANGEMENT.
lives in defence of, or in helping, others.
45
(In this con-
nexion, however,
death of the is necessary for the progress of the race, the natural death of every one may, in a kind of way, be regarded as a sacrifice or " involuntary "
martyrdom
if
Intimately allied
the term be permitted for posterity.) is the subject of death for the sake
is
rightly or
wrongly supposed to be honour. King Francis I of France, after the battle of Pavia (1525), is said to have
written
"
:
Tout
"
)
"
("
All
is lost
except honour
remained.
When
but in reality life, and with it hope, honour is all that is saved, there is
the tale, no hand to write
it,
and no
artist to celebrate it
on a medal.
sixteenth-
and legend
signifying: "It
one's self
by
an inscription having " a similar significance Prius mori qua(m) turpari." With these might be compared the reverse inscription on two other medals " Potius mori quam animo immuItalian medals of about 1500 bear
: :
tari," if
the change of mind referred to were intended to imply cowardice. sixteenth-century finger-ring, " referred to later on, has the inscription, Rather death
than
to a
fals
"
55 The actual passage in his letter was " De toutes choses ne m'est demour6 que 1'honneur et la vie qui est saulve " (J. A. Dulaure, Histoire
physique,
56
civile et
Of. Tacitus,
morale de Paris, 4th edition, Paris, 1829, vol. " Honesta mors Vita xxxiii.
Agricolae,
:
iv. p. 85).
"
turpi vita
Cf.
potior
("
An honourable
"
:
death
is
life ").
the motto
46
"
Mieu mori que change ma foi (" Better to die than " Muchange my faith "). Compare the family mottoes
:
Mutare vel timere sperno." Under this heading should belong all medals (and similar memorials) on the death of those who have under;
" "
gone martyrdom
or social opinions.
We may
death of John Huss in 1415, of French Huguenots in 1572 and 1685, of Archbishop Afire at Paris in 1848,
John van Olden Barneveldt (political) in 1619, and of the brothers De Witt (political) in 1672. For convenience, however, medals commemorating political
of
executions like that of Barneveldt, and political murders like that of the De Witts, whether there be an element
of
under Heading V.
Strictly speaking, all medals and similar memorials connected with patriotism may likewise be admitted
have risked or
It is the real or fancied interests of their country. remarkable how few numismatic memorials there are of
the great patriotic heroes of Greek and Roman history and legend, though patriotism in ancient Greece and
57 In regard to devices which have been supposed to relate to martyrdom, a curious instance of Mediaeval misinterpretation of an antique
gem-type
may
be mentioned.
An
antique engraved
gem
in the British
as representing the
Muse
Thalia, seated,
contemplating a comic mask, with a young faun balancing himself on a pedestal before her, was (King thinks) in Mediaeval times supposed to represent Herodias gloating over the severed head of St. John the Baptist, whilst her daughter Salome practised her steps. The Mediaeval silver setting of this antique gem bears the inscription, IE SVI SEL DE AMVR LEL ("I am the seal of loyal love"). See C. W. King, Handbook of Engraved Gems, second edition, 1885, PI. xxxv. No. 1 but is King correct as to the Mediaeval interpretation ?
;
AKKANGEMENT.
47
all virtues.
Eome was
The legendary patriotism and good faith of M. Atilius Regulus is not commemorated on any of the coins of the Eoman Eepublic struck by members of the gens Atilia. So, also, we look in vain to (genuine) coins for representations of M. Curtius, Horatius Codes, and other
legendary heroes of Roman patriotism. A silver denarius struck by L. Manlius Torquatus (who was quaestor in
104
B.C.)
This is an rounding the head of the goddess Roma. allusion to the famous exploit of T. Manlius Imperiosus Torquatus, who, in the war against the Gauls (361 B.C.),
Gaul in single combat, and obtained the surname of Torquatus from wearing the torque taken from the dead body of his adversary. Here, however, we touch upon the large class of medals commemorating
killed a gigantic
Such medals
are, of
numerous
to be included here.
In regard to coins of certain Greek towns bearing the portrait of the deified Antinous it should be noted under
the present heading that, according to some accounts, Antinous gave up his life for the sake of the Emperor Hadrian.
Amongst medals commemorating deaths for patriotism and military duty in relatively modern times there are those of James Wolfe and the capture of Quebec (1759),
Nelson and the battle of Trafalgar (1805), and Sir John Moore at Corunna (1809), and a vast number of medals
and jettons of the military and naval heroes of all A medal on the death of Marshal Schomberg countries.
at the battle of the Boyne (1690) has on its edge the " Pro religione et libertate mori, vivere est." inscription
:
Bronze
medallions,
plaques,
engraved
Roman
48
common-sense
An
century, figured in
Thomas Wright's
introduction to Fairholt's Miscellanea Graphica (London, 1856, p. 75), from the Londesborough Collection, bears
breast, doubtless
XII.
followers of
Epicurus in Horn an times has been already alluded to, and Koman gems exist engraved with memento mori
plainly advocating present enjoyment of the sensual pleasures of life. "Eat, drink, and enjoy life " or, as Philip Dodto-day, for to-morrow you may die ;
devices,
dridge (in part of his epigram on the motto attached to " Dum vivimus vivamus ") has put it " Live while you live,' the epicure would say,
And
"
68
Londesborough
ring, notes
an
allusion by Shakespeare (Twelfth Night, act ii. scene 5) to the use of a signet representing Lucretia. Malvolio, opening a letter which he
thinks is from his mistress, says, "By your leave, wax Soft! and the impressure her Lucrece, with which she uses to seal." Representations of Lucretia were popular in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries as emblems of chastity and honour. An Italian engraving (sixteenth century) of Lucretia, by Marcantonio Raimondi, bears the
inscription, "A^eivoj/ dnrodcV'csii' tf ojtrxpws fiv ("Better to die than to live disgracefully "). There exist many Italian silver finger-rings and pendants of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, ornamented with a
conventional female portrait in niello almost exactly like that on the above-described Londesborough ring, but without the dagger. In all probability these conventional portraits, though without the dagger, and often of careless workmanship, were accepted at the time as
" Lucretias " (of. the above-quoted passage
Night), that is to say, as emblems of chastity and honour. In some of these niello portraits the place of the hand and dagger is taken by a
floral
ornament.
AKEANGEMENT.
49
XIII. MlNDFULNESS
A life of contemplation and quiet study in a cloister, withdrawn from worldly passions and ambitions, calmly awaiting and ever mindful of the coming of death, was
a monkish ideal of former times.
The
contrast between
the
life of
life is
the religious recluse and an ordinary worldly pictorially expressed in the well-known fresco of
the fourteenth century (already alluded to) known as " " the Triumph of Death in the Campo Santo of Pisa.
reverse of an Italian
century, by Giovanni Boldu, the design of a marble medallion apparently suggested which I have seen on the facade of the famous Church
of the Carthusian Monastery (Certosa) near Pa via, though " the legend, Innocentia et memoria mortis," was substituted for that on the medal (" lo son fine "). " Mors omnibus aequa" and "Vita inscriptions,
The
est
meditatio," on a Danish
memorial medal of George were obviously meant to suggest that a Hojer (1670),
contemplative
life
is
for,
XIV. MlNDFULNESS OF DEATH AS AN INCENTIVE TO EIGHT LIVING, HELPING OTHERS, AND MAKING THE BEST ACTIVE USE OF LIFE.
"
Teach us
to
die, so that
we
may become
tion)
;
wise
(Psalm
do
remember thy
last end,
and
thou
never
amiss"
(Ecclesiasticus,
Eevised
50
Version, ch.
from enmity
Eemember thy last end, and cease Eevised Version, ch. xxxviii. 6) "Whatsoever thy hand flndeth to do, do it with thy might for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge,
36)
;
"
"
(ibid.,
nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest (EccleThe above-mentioned quotation siastes, ch. ix. 10).
"
may
well
be regarded as a period during which man should make the best use he can of his strength, his light, and his free will (however little the last may be), before the
darkness of death overtakes him.
This attitude towards
worldly cares and temptations (XIII.) or that suggest It tends to a life devoted to sensual pleasure (XII.). induce a life, not of selfish idleness or sensual pleasure,
but of activity and utility. 59 As illustrating the particular aspect (of life) and death under consideration, we may refer to medals and medalets
of physicians or medical
societies,
:
SE
E. H. Lecky (History of European Morals, 1905 edition, vol. i. wrote " A life of active duty is the best preparation for the end, and so large a part of the evil of death lies in its anticipation, that an attempt to deprive it of its terrors by constant meditation almost necessarily defeats its object, while at the same time it forms an unnaturally tense, feverish, and tragical character, annihilates the ambition and enthusiasm that are essential to human progress, and not unfrequently casts a chill and a deadness over the affections." Living a life of activity and utility, such as that referred to under XIV., might be called "the best form of Epicureanism," were it not that the word " " Epicureanism in this connexion might be supposed to signify that the attainment of pleasure is the prime motive, rather than merely a frequent and agreeable consequence or accompaniment, of the active life. (" Non dux, sed comes voluptas.")
p. 203)
:
W.
ARRANGEMENT.
51
(as
of the Medical Association of Warsaw, 1809), or its Latin " " Ars longa, vita brevis (as on a medal of translation,
J.
on another of Dr. C. Gr. B. Daubeny, 1795-1867, of Oxford). A memorial medal of the reign of Christian III of
Denmark
("
old sun-dials,
bears an inscription similar to those seen on "Bedenck das Endt und die Stunde"
Remember
61
that
is
to say,
do
Thomas
et quia
11).
Memento semper finis, Kempis (1380-1471) non redit tempus" (Book I. ch. 25. perditum
:
little
gold
enamelled
coffin-shaped
"
British
"
i.e.
Museum
you may live (properly in this " " Live to die world, and thus obtain everlasting life)." is one of many similar inscriptions to be found on old
of dying, that
Think
memorial finger-rings. The thought of death as an inducement to help others is well illustrated by many " medals to the " pious memory of founders of, and donors
to,
colleges,
hospitals,
and
other
philanthropic
and
charitable institutions. 62
" 00 " Art is long, and time is fleeting (Longfellow's Psalm of Life) Ach Gott die Kunst ist lang, und kurz ist unser Leben " (Goethe's. The Latin form occurs in Seneca's De Brevitate Vitae. Faust). 61 Under the present heading (XIV.) the familiar " Respice finem "
; !
"
" " might be replaced by Respice vitam." It is not so much Think of the end," as " Think of the shortness of life, and make active use of the time you have," or, as Benjamin Franklin (Pennsylvania Almanac, " Dost thou love life ? Then do not squander time, for that 1758) said,
is
the stuff
(?)
62
life is
made
I.
of."
said
Napoleon
to
:
some extent
illustrated
by
the;
following much-quoted epitaph lines " That I spent, that I had That I gave, that I have
That
52
XV. DEATH AS
Somewhere
or
has been angel of death who in the gloom a human soul, pictured conducting away transformed from recognizes the face of the messenger, One has to acknowledge that of death to that of love.
other the
that deaths, like births, are both necessary and beneficial Therefore, in a kind for the progress of the human race. be regarded as a manifestation natural death of
way,
may
It seems as if death and decay are as necessary for life and growth as life and as the existence of pain growth are for death and decay, and sadness is for pleasure and gladness, grief for joy,
63 for valour, misery for happiness, evil for good, opposition
non omni tempore vives; Fac bona dum vivis, post mortem " vivere si vis." Lyve Compare the following epitaph- advice (1592) " also the more ordinary well and Dye never, Dye well and Live ever;
dives,
:
" " mottoes, Vive ut vivas in vitam aeternam," Vive ut postea vivas." 63 The motto, " Marcet sine adversario virtus," appears on the reverse
of three
vide A.
vol.
ii.
medals which have been published as of the fifteenth century, Armand, Lcs MAdailleurs Italiens, 2nd edition, Paris, 1883, pp. 51, 74, 85. Mr. G. F. Hill has, however, kindly pointed out
that only the last of these is genuine, namely, the medal by (see H. de la Tour, Revue Numismatique, Paris, 1894,
to
me
Jean de Candida
3rd
series, vol. xii. p. 327, and pi. viii.), of his friend and patron, Robert Briconnet, French statesman and Archbishop of Reims, who died in 1497. I have been able to examine one of the supposed medals of
loc. cit.,
vol.
ii.
p. 51).
In the production
of that piece probably a plaster cast of the medal of Robert Briconnet served as the foundation. In the plaster cast the portrait on the obverse could have been slightly altered, the legend changed to FRAN
ACCOLTIVS ARET and the date (1455) added (incuse) below the bust. From the plaster cast thus altered a sand-casting in bronze could easily be obtained. To some extent the medal of Bric,onnet may be taken as suggesting the doctrine of progress by struggle. Resting
,
ARRANGEMENT.
53
darkness for light, negative electricity for positive eleca consideration which throws some light on the tricity
;
of pain, misery, and death. It is difficult to believe that anything necessary and beneficial for the race would not appear kind and beneficial to the indi-
"
"
mystery
vidual also
if
thing about
it.
medal
Of
course, to those
especially to those
natural death (but rarely if ever suicide) may sometimes appear as a reward for troubles bravely borne, in fact, " as the " crown of life (Edward Young, Night Thoughts, the latter expression is usually applied 1742); though
to
events
of
of
life
other
"
than
its
termination.
"
(cf.
The
certain
idea
the
martyr's
celestial
crown
memorial
England,
to
medals, rings, &c., of King Charles I of be described later on) is, of course, a
all eternity," he also asked, "to rest in?" By the laws of evolution the only alternative to idleness with regression is activity with progression. Practically no middle course is possible. Amongst expressions and such as " No roses withthe dualistic idea of
relating to
evil, good " out thorns," is " Nulla sine merore [maerore] voluptas (" No pleasure without sadness "), which appears as the motto of Georg Gisze (a Basel " merchant " of the Steelyard in London) on his magnificent portrait, dated 1532, by Holbein, now in the Picture Gallery of the Old Museum Leonardo da Vinci (Note-books, rendered into English by at Berlin. " Pleasure and Pain are E. McCurdy) wrote represented as twins, as though they were joined together, for there is never the one without are made with their backs turned to each other, the other. They because they are contrary the one to the other. They are made growout of the same trunk, because they have one and the same ing
: . .
.
foundation."
54
W. E. Henley
(1849-1903)
how
How
I
am I am
the captain of
my
soul."
Death may sometimes be successfully resisted by determined action, and a plaque, already referred to,
representing Death in an attitude of fear or submission before Valour (or Virtue), was perhaps intended to express
this idea.
IV.,
mistic views).
A
in
:
pessimistic
attitude
towards
life
is
well expressed
jiiev
fj.r)
(f>vva.L eTrt^^ovt'otcrtv
apicrrov,
M^S'
ecrtSetv
8'
tyvvTa.
Treprjcrai
Kat
KfitrOat TroXXrjv
In the Oedipus Coloneus of Sophocles a very similar passage (line 1225) forms part of a song of the Chorus, which Professor K. C. Jebb has thus translated:
"
Not
to be born
man hath
is, past all prizing, best ; but, when a seen the light, this is next best by far, that
ARRANGEMENT.
with
all
55
come."
in
The same opinion has been expressed or quoted the writings of Alexis, Cicero, and Ausonius. Epi-
curus, in a letter to Menaeceus (transcribed by Diogenes Laertius in the Lives of the Philosophers), asked why the author of such opinions, if he seriously held them, did
not himself voluntarily depart from this world. However, individuals may be subject to temporary "pessi" mistic moods without killing themselves such persons
;
and doubtless
existed long before the days of Epicurus. An old English memorial finger-ring is inscribed " Breath paine, Death
:
gaine."
Sir
pessimist,
Lucan
" Victuros dei celant ut vivere durent, " Felix esse mori ;
and
himself
left,
wrote
that,
"
:
There
it
is,
therefore,
but
one
be in the power of the weakest arm to take away life, it is not in the strongest " to deprive us of death (compare Heading IV.).
comfort
though
Several seals, medals, &c., having a pessimistic cance will be described later on.
signifi-
On
to a soap-bubble.
a medal figured in Part IV. human life is likened That is a rather pessimistic view, but
life," life's
some there may be who wish that the " bubble of the gift of Nature to her children, consisting of
hopes and aspirations and even its illusions, its mirage, and its dreams will never burst, at all events, not till death has overtaken them. The death of hope, which
represented on a bronze plaquette (" L'Esperance morte," 1892) by the modem French artist, L. E. Mouchon.
56
rings,
devices, and " shall memorial medals with such inscriptions as not look upon his like again" (after Shakespeare's
"
mourning
We
Thus, a memorial medal (a specimen of which was formerly in my collection) of a certain Bartholomew Johnson, who died at Scarborough on February 7,
Hamlet}.
1814,
bears on the reverse the inscription, "He was a man, take shall not look upon his like him for all in all.
We
again." Charles
memorial medal by the Belgian medallist, Wiener, of Jonas Webb, 1862, a celebrated
breeder of sheep in Cambridgeshire (whose statue stands close to the Market Place at Cambridge), has around the
bust on the obverse the inscription
"
:
We
upon
A medal of Ferdinand (afterwards the German Emperor Ferdinand I), brother of the Emperor Charles V, struck in 1547, on the death of his wife Anna, has on the reverse the letter A over a death's head and a bone, with the inscription
:
to God "). This medal makes one think of a bell for tolling at funerals, with " " Mortuos the words plango inscribed on it. The " parting scenes " on Greek and Etruscan sepulchral
("
We bewail
it
of the present work, but will be alluded to in Part IV. Some eighteenth-century mourning finger-rings, brooches, <fcc., have inscriptions intended to comfort the survivors, such as "Not lost, but gone before," and " Heaven has in store what thou has lost." But I have not seen it suggested on any mourning or memorial medals, jewelry, &c., that too long mourning for the dead is a useless waste of life, and therefore Cf. Ecclesiasticus xxxviii. 21: "Thou shalt not do wrong. him good, but hurt thyself;" one of William Blake's illustra:
Edward Young's Night Thoughts might have also served as an illustration to this passage in Ecclesiasticus.
tions to
PAET
COINS, MEDALS,
III.
AND MEDAL-LIKE TOKENS EELATING TO DEATH AND THE VAKIOUS ASPECTS OP AND ATTITUDES TOWARDS DEATH.
of these pieces fall
:
MOST
classes
known
Some
of these, like
certain
of Church dignitaries sepulchral monuments and other persons of the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seven-
64
teenth centuries, and like certain mourning finger-rings (described later on), have been designed to serve as a
(C) Memorial medalets made, like some memorial and " " mourning finger-rings, to be distributed in memoriam
at funerals.
Some
of these, like
preceding class, have been designed so to serve the double purpose of a memorial of the dead and a memento
04 The sepulchral monument of Archbishop Chichele (died 1443) will be referred to later on in connexion with some of these medals.
58
medical guilds
(Delft
and Middelburg),
According to Bergs0e
medical students of the Copenhagen University as badges " The on their caps. In Holbein's picture, known as
Ambassadors" (1535), in the National Gallery, London, one of the two young men, Jean de Dinteville, Lord of Polisy, is represented wearing a little silver death's head
mounted
haps an outward sign of the wearer's mental attitude, indicated likewise by the (" hidden ") skull at his feet.
Needless to say, the death's heads worn as cap-badges by some regiments in the German and English armies have
a very different significance.
(E) Medals bearing memento mori devices designed to " have a " moral significance, and to be used as gifts
or "
rewards
on
special
"
occasions,
like
the
so-called
Moralische Pfenninge of the town of Basel. These may be compared to memento mori finger-rings and jewels used for devotional purposes, &c.
"
In regard to the persons represented on the medals, the selection I have made cannot be regarded as a
collection of medals of famous
almost
unknown
individuals are
household words
amongst the educated classes of the whole world. The same may be said of almost every collection of portraits, 65
65
In regard,
for instance, to
collections
of
medals
of
"famous"
physicians and naturalists, Billroth (1829-1894), the great surgeon, once remarked to Dr. J. Brettauer of Trieste (who died in 1905), that the
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
59
very
many beautifully painted or sculptured portraits, the name of the person represented has been irretriev-
ably lost. In the present paper I have not attempted to describe every medal, coin, medallic token, or badge bearing a
device or inscription relating to death, but those that I have selected include characteristic examples of various
periods.
The
order followed
is
the large
Roman numerals
which
illustrate.
attitude
(X.) Greek coins illustrating a medical and hygienic towards preventible death in the fifth cenB.C.
tury
The following
silver coins of
B.C.,
and commemorate the freeing 66 of Selinus from a pestilence of some kind (malaria ?)
from about 466-415
by the drainage
Obv.
Apollo and Artemis standing side by side in a slowly moving quadriga, the former discharging arrows from his bow.
known, but
naturalists.
chiefly, not of distinguished and wellof forgotten, obscure, or absolutely unknown physicians and
86 In regard to the question of malaria, it seems to have been at about the same period (in the fifth century B.C.) that Greece proper first began to suffer severely from malaria, a disease which appears ultimately to have taken an important place among the causes of Greek national decadence. Vide W. H. S. Jones, Malaria and Greek History, Man-
chester, 1909.
60
R el
The
river-god Selinus, naked, with short horns, at holding patera and lustral branch, sacrificing an altar of Asklepios (Aesculapius), in front of
FIG.
8.
which
leaf.
is
a cock.
figure of a bull,
Inscription
2EAINONTION.
Museum
Sicily,
(Fig. 8.)
Silver
tetradrachm.
Catalogue of the
p. 148) here regarded as the healing god (aXt^iKaKo^ who, with his radiant arrows, slays Artemis stands the pestilence as he slew the Python.
B. V.
Head
(Historia "
:
Apollo
behind him in her capacity of tlXfiOvia or aoM&va, for the oWt KOI plague had fallen heavily on the women too
:
roc ywaiKas ^varoKiiv (Diogenes Laertius, lib. viii. 2, Life of Empedocles, 70). On the reverse the river-god
himself makes formal libation to the god of health, in gratitude for the cleansing of his waters, whilst the image
of the bull symbolizes the sacrifice which was offered the occasion."
Obv.
on
Heracles contending with a wild bull, which he seizes by the horn, and is about to slay with his
club
Inscription:
5EAINONTIOX.
sacrificing before
Bt'f.
The
river-god
Hypsas
an
altar,
He
holds a
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
61
In the field, a selinon (stork) is seen departing. leaf. Inscription HYVA2. (Fig. 9.)
in
Silver didrachm. Catalogue of the Greek Coins the British Museum 1878, Sicily, London, p. 141.
Head (loc. cit.) says of this piece " Here, instead of Apollo, it is the sun-god Herakles, who is shown struggling with the destructive powers of moisture symbolized by
:
the place of the river Selinus. The marsh-bird is seen retreating, for she can no longer find a congenial home
on the banks of the Hypsas now that Empedocles has It seems that the philosopher drained the lands."
Empedocles, who at that time was at the height of his fame, put a stop to the plague by turning two neighbouring streams into one, KOI Karafii^avra yXvKavai TO. The Seluntines ptv/mara (Diogenes Laertius, loo. cit.).
above-described coins
conferred divine honours upon Empedocles, and their still exist as a wonderful monu-
(II.)
Greek coins
of Eleusis in Attica,
commemorating
the Eleusinian Mysteries. The Eleusinian Mysteries were supposed to have offered a comforting view in regard to death and a
62
future existence.
They
are
commemorated on
certain
bronze coins of Eleusis, supposed to date from the fourth century B.C., which represent Triptolemos in a winged
FIG. 10.
and car drawn by serpents (dragons) on the obverse a pig on a pine-torch, or encircled with a wreath of corn, on the reverse, with the inscription EAEYSI (Fig. 10). Another bronze coin of Eleusis, also referring to the
;
Eleusinian Mysteries, has the head of Demeter or Perse" " phone on the obverse and a plemochoe on a pedestal
;
EAEYS.
Attica,
Catalogue
Museum
London,
the introduction of these mysteries into Italy and Rome, see A. Furtwangler, Die Antiken Gemmen, 1900, vol.* 3,
pp. 208, 253,
339
see also
C.
W.
The murder
denarius commemorating the murder of Caesar, struck (according to the evidence of the historian Dion Cassius 67 ) by actual order of one of his murderers, M. Junius Brutus.
67
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
right.
63
:
Obv
Bare head
of
Brutus to
IMP. L
PLAET
Inscription
BR VT
Cap or pileus (as the emblem of liberty) between two daggers. Below, inscription EID MAR
:
(Eidibus Martis).
(Fig. 11.)
FIG. 11.
Of this rare Paris, 1886, vol. ii. p. 119, No. 52. silver denarius antique plated copies likewise The piece was doubtless struck in the occur.
East some time between
assassinated)
tion
is
B.C. 44 (when Caesar was and the battle of Philippi (B.C. 42). Of the moneyer L. Plaetorius Cestianus no men-
made
in history.
the murder of Caesar, have the head of Liberty on the obverse, with the inscription, LIBEETAS or
LEIBEETAS.
During the interregnum which followed the death of Nero (A.D. 68), denarii were struck with the head of Liberty on the obverse and with the old type of the pileus between two daggers on the reverse, the obverse
and reverse inscriptions reading
:
LIBEETAS
Eomani
P. E.
EESTITVTA
(Libertas
populi
restituta).
the two daggers on the reverse signify the joint shares of Brutus and Cassius in the murder. See also Eckhel, Doctrina Numorum Veterum,
vol. vi. (1796), p. 24.
64
(Fig. 12.)
The type
of the
"
cap of liberty
"
occurs again on the reverse of a medal (described later on) commemorating the murder of Alexander de' Medici,
the
first
Duke
of Florence, in "
Lorenzino."
Martyrdom
of
John
Huss,
the
Bohemian
on
the
Keformer, 1415.
sixteenth-century
memorial
medals
by
Hohenauer's monogram was mistaken by Adolf Erman, before Fiala's work on the subject, for that of Hieronymus
Vide L. Ferrer's Biographical Dictionary of Medallists ; Eduard Fiala's note on Michael Hohenauer in the Numismatische Zeitschrift, Vienna, 1890, vol. 22, and E. Weil, "Die Medaille auf Johannes Hus," p. 258
Magdeburger.
Zeitschrift
p. 125.
fur
Numisinatik,
Berlin,
1887,
vol.
14,
Here it may be mentioned, by the way, that a few Byzantine and other relatively early Christian medalets,
commemorating Christian martyrs. Amongst the martyrs most frequently portrayed are St. Lawrence,
&c., exist,
St.
Agnes, and
St.
Menas of Alexandria
on
from Egypt).
On
an
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
65
early Christian leaden medalet with loop for suspension, figured by F. X. Kraus (Geschichte der Christlichen Kunst,
Freiburg im Breisgau, 18.96, vol. i. p. 126), the soul of the martyred St. Lawrence is represented as a draped
(female ?) figure, in the attitude of an of the martyr's roasting body.
"
(I.
FIG. 13 (reduced).
Obv.
Bust
of Boldu,
Eev.
A young
man, nude, sitting on a rock, to right, hiding his face with his hands ; on the right a winged child is seated, resting his right arm on a skull and holding a torch in his left. Legend OPVS.
:
VENETI.
13.)
Diameter, 3-35 inches ; cast in bronze. A. Armand, Les Medailleurs Italiens, second edition, A. Heiss, Les Medail1883, vol. i. p. 36, No. 1. leurs de la Renaissance, Paris, 1887, vol. i. (Venetian Medals), PL ii. No. 2.
66
translated
the winged child on the reverse of this medal is copied from the cupid on the reverse of a medal of the Marquis
Lodovico Gonzaga of Mantua (Armand, op. cit., vol. i. p. 27) made by the medallist, Pietro da Fano, about
1452-1457.
I
have
little
type, above described (as well as that of another medal by Boldu, to which I shall refer in Part IV.), was
intended to represent a rather pessimistic aspect of human life, reminding one of Goethe's lines com"
mencing,
child
race,
is
Wer
nie sein
into
ass."
The
in
its
thrust
life
to
join
with
;
its trials
and
troubles, its
rewards
him
at the end.
third medal,
FIG. 14 (reduced).
The
reverse
is
similar
that of the
first-described
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
67
I
medal, but
it
am the
op.
ii.
MCCCCLXVI.
Diameter, 3-6 inches; cast in bronze. Armand, vol. i. p. 37, No. 4. Heiss, op. cit., vol. i. PI.
3.
No.
The reverse type of this medal has apparently suggested the design for one of the marble medallions which I have noticed on the facade of the famous Certosa di
Pavia (Carthusian Monastery, near Pavia), but instead of the legend, 10. SON. FINE, the marble medallion has the legend INNOCENTIA. E. MEMORIA. MOETIS.
:
(V.) Lorenzo
and Giuliano
de'
conspiracy (1478).
The Pazzi conspiracy (1478) was formed by members by Francesco Salviati, titular of Pisa. The conspirators decided to assassiArchbishop nate the two brothers whilst they were attending Mass
of the Pazzi family, assisted in the
Duomo
of Florence.
Lorenzo escaped and took vengeance on the assassins. The following medal was formerly attributed to Antonio
del Pollajuolo, owing to a statement of Vasari, but has
recently
been assigned by W. Bode to Bertoldo di Giovanni, the Florentine sculptor (died 1492).
Obv.
An
octagonal scaffolding representing the pillars of the Duomo. Above, the head of Lorenzo de' Medici
to right.
Below, priests ministering at an altar. Outside the enclosure, conspirators with swords drawn, and others, Lorenzo escaping. Inscription
:
LAVRENTIVS MEDICES
with the head of Giuliano being
and
SALVS
PVBLICA.
Itev.
similar
left)
scene,
it;
above
slain,
68
and
LVC-
Diameter, 2-5 inches ; cast in bronze. C. F. Keary, Italian Medals exhibited in the British Museum, 1881, p. 16, No. 34. C. von Fabriczy, Italian Medals, English edition by Mrs. Hamilton,
medal of Giuliano
reverse
with the inscription IVLIANVS. MEDICES. On the is a figure of Nemesis, with the inscription,
:
NEMESIS.
A. Armand, Les
1887, p. 27.
(II.)
Medal
of
Domenico
Biccio, a
Dominican monk
(circa 1498).
Obv.
Bust, to left, in monastic dress, the head covered by a hood. DOMINICVS EICCIVS. Inscription
:
Eev.
Phoenix (emblem of the resurrection of the body and immortality of the soul) under the sun. Inscription MORTE. VITA. HYEME. AESTATE. PROPE. LONGE.
:
Diameter, 2 8 inches.
Italiens, second edition, Paris, 1883, vol. also vol. iii. (1887), p. 185.
p.
77
According to G-. Milanesi (quoted by Armand), this Domenico Eiccio was Fra Domenico da Pescia, Savonarola's disciple and companion, who was executed with him in 1498.
(I.)
Inscription
GALEOTTVS. MAR-
MATHEMATICVS.
ORATOR.
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
ReVt
Two
MORIMVR.
shelves of books, those in one upright, in the other lying flat. Inscription: NASCENTES. ORIGINE. FINIS. Q. AB. PENDET. [Manilius, Astronomicon, iv. 16.]
Italian fifteenth-century H'edailleurs Italiens,
vol.
ii.
Armand, Les
p. 35,
No. 25.
He
was
King
of
Hungary.
There
is
inches) with the same design and legend on the reverse, but with a somewhat younger portrait on the obverse
(Armand,
(XI.)
op.
tit.,
vol.
ii.
p. 35,
No.
of
26).
Two
Italian
medals
medallist
termed
by Armand,
" le
PEIVS.
MORI. QVA(M). TVEPAKI (" Bather to die than be defiled "). On the obverse of one of these medals is
the portrait of Lodovico Lucio, of Sienna (A. Armand, Les Medailleurs Italiens, second edition, Paris, 1883,
vol.
i.
p. 98,
No.
2).
On
is
the portrait of Allessandro Yecchietti (1472-1532) of Florence (Armand, op. cit., vol. i. p. 99, No. 4).
Italian portrait
(I.)
medal
(said to be of about
to left.
1500
:
?).
Obv.
Head
of
a young
man
Inscription
PAN-
Human
skull
in ; the Victoria and Albert Museum was obtained from the Piot sale at Paris, in 1864.
70
The passage
in
man, whose portrait in the 28th year of his age is represented on the obverse, is apparently unknown, and the legend seems to be blundered. I am indebted for information
about this medal to Mr. A. Richmond and Mr.
Watts, of the Victoria and Albert Museum.
The
identity of the
W. W.
Italian bronze
:
plaques of the early part of the sixteenth century the bust of Lucretia with a dagger in her hand by Moderno,
and a larger representation of Lucretia by Andrea Briosco, surnamed Eiccio. Moderno likewise represented
on a circular plaque (diameter,
tradition of the self-sacrifice of
1-3 inches) the
Koman
back and fully armed, was said to have leaped into a chasm which had appeared in the forum.
(I.)
Bust of Erasmus in
profile to left.
In the
").
.
field
ER.
:
ROT.
(" Erasmus
of
.
Rotterdam
Legend
KPEITTO TA 2YITPAMMATA AEIHis image modelled to the living features. His writings will represent it better "). Below the
EEI
("
is
THN
bust
Eev.
man's head to
inscribed,
TERMIN VS.
yield
NVLLI
("I
MOES VLTIMA
Legend:
OPA
Spa. re'Aos
According to the story narrated by Plutarch in his Life of Solon, paxpov piov was the substance of the advice given by Solon to
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
("Keep
is
71
LTNEA RERYM
of a long
life.
Death
(Fig. 15.)
FIG. 15 (reduced).
From
Croesus,
King
when
defeated and a
Greek equivalent of the Latin " Respice finem " and like Tv>6i <rta.\n6v it is included amongst the wise sayings of the seven wise men of Greece.
;
"Opa
TS'AOS is
the ordinary
t
72
cast.
There are two very similar but smaller medals, both One (an obverse only) bears the same date 1519
;
Simonis, op.
cit.,
PI.
ii.
No. 4)
'
inscription,
EE.ASMVS
around the portrait of Erasmus. The other, the smallest of the three, is dated 1531 (diameter, 1'35
'
EOTEEO
;
Simonis, op. cit., PI. ii. No. 5), and very much resembles the largest medal in type and legends, but the features of Erasmus are slightly more sharply cut.
inches
to Diirer,
and
it
interesting that Diirer 's signed engraving of Erasmus (see Fig. 16), dated 1526, bears a very similar inscription
to that on the obverse of the medal.
On
Diirer's en-
graving, however, the head of Erasmus is not quite in profile, and his features are much more sharply expressed
than on the
medal.
medal
is
now supposed
Erasmus himself wrote that Quentin Metsys made a portrait of him, cast in metal. According to Julien Simonis (op. cit., pp. 80-88), one of the aboveQuentin Metsys.
described medals was the work of the medallist Jean
it from a medallion by Quentin Metsys now lost. 1 do not see why the obverse of the large medal should not be the work of Quentin Metsys himself. The largest and the smallest of these medals of Erasmus
figured in the Museum Mazzuchellianum, Venice, 1761, vol. i. PI. 45 and PI. 46. In that work it " " is Terminus explained that the (terminal head) on the reverse is an allusion, not to the great value of the
are likewise
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
73
writings of Erasmus, as some have supposed, but to death, the common goal of all, i.e., as the medal itself
IMAGO' ERASAM-ROTERODA
FIG. 16.
tells us,
"
"
(Horace, Epist.,
Book
i.
74
CONCEDO NVLLI
or
CEDO NVLLI,
In the Museum of
Basel is an original sketch, which I have seen, showing a rendering of this device, by Holbein (No. 122 of the sketches in the Museum), and there is likewise a fine
woodcut by Holbein, designed for a title-page to the works of Erasmus, representing Erasmus standing under
a highly decorative Renaissance arch, with his right hand " Hermes "), resting on the head of a terminal figure (or
on which
is
the inscription,
TERMINVS.
On
a seal,
which Erasmus had specially engraved for himself, the man's head on the boundary stone was represented facing,
not (as on the medals) in profile, and the legend was CEDO NVLLI, not (as on the medals) CONCEDO
NVLLI. 69
on,
With
this seal,
last will,
which
he sealed his
Jerome Frobenius, TERMINVS " on this seal was enlarged copy of the placed by his heirs over the tablet where he was buried
of
in
the
Cathedral
his Life
of
Basel
(cf.
E.
B.
Drummond,
Erasmus,
and Character, London, 1873). The " Terminus " device of Erasmus might be regarded " " " " as a masked," disguised," or softened memento mori,
analogous to the elongated death's head which is represented on Holbein's famous picture (to which I have
already
alluded) painted in 1533, known as Ambassadors," in the London National Gallery.
60
"The
This seal is figured by J. J. Jortin, together with an antique intaglio representing a terminal bust (or " Hermes "), without any in-
from which Erasmus apparently derived his idea of adopting a terminal figure as his memento mori device. See J. Jortin, Life of Erasmus, London, 1808, vol. iii. (specimens of the handwriting of
scription,
1).
In Part IV.
shall
COINS, MEDALS,
(I.)
AND TOKENS.
of Pietro
75
Balanzano, of
Memento
mori
medal
Head
BALANZANO.
Rev.^A human
skull.
in high relief to
left.
Inscription
PETRO
REis
DENCIO
(that
NVLA
no
bronze Italian medal Diameter, 2-3 inches. of the first quarter of the sixteenth century, in
the
Victoria
and
ii.
Albert
p.
Museum,
vol.
iii.
London.
(1887),
Italiens,
second edition,
1883, vol.
128; and
205.
(II.)
of Venice, Prefect of
Verona 1527.
Obv.
Bust to
right.
Inscription
THOMAS MAVRVS
Phoenix in flames, an emblem of the resurrection of the body and the immortality of the soul. Inscription
IO.
Diameter, 2-0 inches. Bronze medal by Pomeof Verona. Armand, Les Medailleurs Italiens, second edition, Paris, 1883, vol. i. p. 128, No. 11.
dello (II.)
EEVIXIT,
occurs
Madruzzo, Prince-Bishop of Trento (died in 1578), by Lorenzo Parmigiano (Armand, op. eit., vol. i. p. 278,
No.
1).
(V.)
The murder
first
Duke
of Florence, 1537.
of liberty,
Alexander de' Medici was assassinated, in the name by his kinsman Lorenzo de' Medici, called
76
The following medal (which is not very rare, and for some information about which I am indebted to Mr. W. Wroth) is described by A. Armand, Medailleurs Italiens,
second edition, Paris, vol.
ii.
p.
151, No.
3.
FIG. 17.
Obv.
Bare head
RENTIVS MEDICES.
Rev.
of Lorenzino, to right.
Inscription
LAV-
Cap
Roman
VIII ID
The
reverse device
is
Roman
denarius of Brutus (which I have already referred to) commemorating the murder of Julius Caesar on the
Ides of March, 44
liberty
B.C.,
on
the
Italian
medal
is
of course
different.
"
After the murder Lorenzino fled to Venice, where Filippo " Strozzi (called the younger ") greeted him as the
Tuscan Brutus."
is
of the size of a
Roman
less
made
at Padua, perhaps
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
77
plaque, of about 1530-1540. a circular plaque (1-8 inches in diameter) of white metal, possibly the reverse for a medal, representing
(I)
German
is
There
a lady, in the costume of the time, seated in the interior of a room, offering the breast to a baby ; on the table is a death's head and on the window-sill an hour-glass.
is
It
good workmanship, and signed L.E., apparently by Lorenz Eosenbaum, a goldsmith and a medallist of Schaffhausen. There are specimens in both the British
of
Museum
(see
Fig.
18)
PIG. 18.
From an
original in
Museum.
The design is taken from a well-known engraving (already alluded to in Part I. see Fig. 4) by Barthel Beham (1502-1540), which, though it may be intended to represent the Madonna and Child, seems
Museum.
:
likewise to suggest thoughts of the beginning and the inevitable end of life. Anyhow, two other engravings by
B.
engravings there are three, in the other four skulls) and a baby with an hour-glass were certainly meant to suggest such thoughts and illustrate the line of Manilius
:
78
The first cry of the a physiologist has expressed it, newly born child is its first step towards the grave."
(II. or III.)
pendet
or, as
Here we may
for
convenience mention a
by Lorenz Rosenbaum, dated 1531, the portrait (bare head to right) being apparently that
of the artist himself.
The
inscription is
VT MORTVVS
Signed
VIVEEEM
L.K.
1531.
VIVO
HIC
is
MORITVRVS.
1'75 inches), is described and figured by E. Merzbacher, "Beitrage zur Kritik der deutschen Kunstmedaillen," Mittlieilungen der Bayerischen Numismatischen Gesellschaft,
Munchen, 1900,
vol. 19, p. 8,
and
PI.
i.
Fig. 4.
am
Lorenz
Rosenbaum, probably a son of the goldsmith Conrad Rosenbaum, was born at Schaffhausen, but from 1539 to 1546 worked as a goldsmith in Augsburg. The meaning
of the legend
is
either "
i.e.
"
:
"
This
I live "
;
"Ut mortuus
might
about to die
viverem," "(I
made
live after
death
"
or else
prepared for death) so that I may live " after death but in the latter case one would have
(i.e.
;
Of. the expected "vivam" instead of "viverem." mottoes " Vive ut vivas," and " Vive ut postea vivas."
:
(II.
of
Denmark (mother
Obv.
head
:
of
tion
Queen Dorothea
to right.
Inscrip-
Rev.
Inscrip-
STVNDE.
Diameter,
(Fig. 19.)
inches; silver
gilt.
DansJce Mynter
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
79
og Medailler i den Kongelige Samling, Copenhagen, The meaning 1791, p. 212, No. 4, PI. xii. No. 5. of the reverse inscription, which is similar to some inscriptions engraved on old-fashioned sundials, is doubtless that of Thomas a Kempis in
FIG. 19.
(I.)
Medal
of Onophrius Korn(1562).
left,
Obv.
His bust, to
with inscription.
Eev.
Male
or
is
holding hour-glass, leaning on an altar is a death's head) inscribed RESPICE FINEM. The whole reverse device
figure,
is
This medal, by a German artist signing himself S. W., figured by A. Erman, Deutsche Medailleure, Berlin,
vii.
1884, PI.
No.
3.
(XI.)
Ofcu.
Inscription
IOFREDVS FRANCVS.
of
Artist's signature, P. P. R.
Eev.
the sea, holding a rod in his left hand, his right foot resting on a skull. Inscription POTIVS. MORI. QVAM. ANIMO. (" Rather death than change one's mind ").
IMMVTARI
80
The same
medal of Alberto
Litta,
same artist (Galeotti), though not bearing any signature (Armand, Les Medailleurs Italiens, Paris, vol. iii. (1887),
p. 112).
(I.
(about 1571).
Obv.
His bust to
.
right,
:
Inscription
SEBASTIAN
ZAH
ANNO
AET XXXXV.
man
:
(Artist's signature)
AN. AB.
Rev.
Inscription
RESPICE FINEM.
Diameter, 1*6 inches. By Antonio Abondio, the younger (1538-1591). Armand, Les Medailleurs Italiens, second edition, Paris, 1883, vol. i. p. 274, No. 34.
The medal
of
Bonzagna, called
Obv.
in
AN
Rev.
Legend
'
GREGORIVS
Below the bust,
dead,
XIII
PONT MAX
and and
artist's signature,
F. P.
cross
;
wounded,
STRAGES
Diameter,
gilt.
Legend:
1572.
VGONOTTORVM
Italiens,
flying
edition,
1883,
vol.
i.
p.
226,
Many
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
81
the modern English copies, of a somewhat larger size, being those most unlike the originals.
The Massacre
of the
Huguenots
is
commemorated
in
the same spirit by Vasari's fresco in the Sala Regia of the Vatican at Rome, though the inscription under the painting has been obliterated. Two French medals of Charles
inscription
refer
:
to
the
See
Medailles
Francises
Paris,
dont
les coins
sont conserves
au Musee Monetaire,
1892, p.
exist.
10,
Many
restruck specimens
(I.)
Medal
of Gabrielle
Fiamma,
of Venice,
Bishop of
Chioggia in 1584.
Obv.
front, a
human
skull.
MEMINISSE IVVABIT.
Inscrip-
Eev.
Diameter, 3-2 inches ; a bronze cast medal of the second half of the sixteenth century, by Andrea
Cambi,
called
" II
ii.
Bombarda,"
Italiens,
;
of
vol.
Cremona.
iii.
second edition,
(1887),
227
and
The
to
may be intended
as a
memento
Fiamma's passing
"
:
of life
these happenings
"
i.
203).
of
(XI.) Medal of Faustina Sforza, wife of the Marquis Caravaggio Muzio (second half of the sixteenth
century).
82
Obv.
MARCH CARAVAGII.
FOEDARI
"
Eev.
An
a dog.
ermine-like animal pursued by a huntsman and POTIVS Inscription: ("Better to die than be defiled;"
QVAM
.
ture
incuse
letters
PETRVS PAVLVS
.
").
Artist's signa-
ROM.
3'0 Medal by Pietro inches. Diameter, Paolo Galeotti, called "Romano." Armand, Les Medailleurs Italiens, second edition, Paris, vol. i. p. 234, No. 35. 1883,
of
The reverse design on this medal refers to the power " some of the " mustelidae (e.g. the skunk) to save their
by ejecting a
fluid of intolerable odour,
lives
which com-
The meaning pels their pursuers to abandon the chase. " of the reverse is therefore, It is preferable to die than
self by committing a disgraceful " Honesta mors turpi vita potior (Tacitus, Vita " Mors potius macula." Agricolae, xxxiii.)
to
dishonour one's
" "
;
action
(I.)
for
a medal,
by the
FIG. 20.
teenth
Wolff (second half of the sixin A. Erman's Deutsche Medailleure, Berlin, 1884, p. 69. A naked child, holding a
century),
is
figured
COINS, MEDALS,
flower, seated
AND TOKENS.
;
83
in the back-
ground, a tree with a withered leafless branch and a vigorous branch rich in leaves. Inscription: SIT
NOMEN
DOMINI BENEDICTVM.
which bears the
artist's
The design obviously " Nasquoted line of Manilius centes morimur, finisque ab origine pendet." It also
with an obverse of
:
much
new
life
springing
from the
old.
(II.,
to
Valour
'
FIG. 21.
In the Ashmolean
Museum
at
Oxford there
;
is
a six-
teenth-century plaque of white metal (circular diameter, 2*8 inches) with figures of Death and Valour (or Virtue)
in very low relief.
Death (on the left) is represented by a skeleton, crowned and holding a scythe, standing in an attitude of fear or submission before a fully armed
Minerva-like female figure approaching (on the right).
84
Above the skeleton is the word MORS above the armed Death may here represent destruction figure, VIRTVS. and ruin in an enterprise, or merely imminent defeat and
death in warfare, which can sometimes be prevented by The device may, however, be an allegorical courage. " " representation of death being swallowed up in victory
virtue.
a sense, being overcome by "Vivit post funera Virtus" is a Latin saying which has been adopted as a motto by several families,
(St. Paul), that is to say, in
is inscribed on the monument of Dr. Caius (died 1573) in Caius College Chapel, Cambridge. For permission to illustrate this plaque, I am indebted to Mr.
and
Bell, of the
me
1606), a physician of Augsburg, has the following inscription on the reverse: VITA MIHI CHRISTVS
MORS
(" To me
to live is Christ,
and to
Philippians, chapter i. C. A. Rudolphi, Numismata Virorum de Rebus verse 21). Medicis, &c., Duisburg's edition of 1862, p. 110.
(II.)
gain"
St.
PaulsEpist.
to the
communicated
Another memorial medal of the same physician, to me by Dr. H. R. Storer, has the
:
ABSORPTA EST
is
MORS IN VICTORIAM
victory
("Death
Epistle
swallowed up in
the
"$.
Pauls
First
;
to
Corinthians,
chapter
to
xv. verse
54)
and IPSE
IVBET MORTIS
lib.
ii.
Martial, Epigram,
Compare Psalm
70
"
Frange
toros, pete vina, rosas cape, tinguere nardo Ipse jubet mortis te meminisse deus."
COINS, MEDALS,
(II.)
AND TOKENS.
85
ham
(1618
the founders of
Wadham
College, Oxford.
Obv.
Bust of Nicholas Wadham, three-quarters, to right, head bare, in ruff and plain cloak. Inscription CHRIST IS OVR LIFE
:
WHEN
SHAL APPEARE.
JRev.
WHO
Bust of Dorothy Wadham, three-quarters, to left, in damasked gown, stiff ruff, and broad-brimmed
hat.
Inscription
WE SHAL APPEARE
by a skull at each and at each end, forms a border on both sides. Oval medal, consisting of two plates or
inches.
i.
soldered together. Diameter, 2-15 x 1'8 Medallic Illustrations, London, 1885, p. 220, No. 73.
Nicholas
Wadham,
Somersetshire, died in
of 84 years.
Dorothy Wadham, his wife, died in 1618, at the age She was a daughter of Sir William Petre,
Principal Secretary of State to Queen Elizabeth. The stone of Wadham College was laid on July 31. 1610.
first
26
In regard to the legend on this medal, cf. St. John xi. 25, " also the motto Mors Christi, mors mortis mihi."
;
:
(V.
Grand Pensionary
des Pays-Bas,
French
pp. 109-111.
(II.
(1634).
86
Obv.
").
FIG. 22.
Rev.
Skull and crossed bones, with hour-glass (surmounted by a ball to represent human life) and ears of DIG corn. Inscription: DIN (" Wherever you wend, Death is your end "). In the field, the date 1634. (Fig. 22.)
ER D0DEN
.
HVOR DV ENDE
.
WENDE
Diameter, I'O inch; copper gilt; in the Royal DansJce Mynter og at Copenhagen. Medailler i den Kongelige Samling, Copenhagen, 1791, p. 331, No. 842, PI. xxii. No. 12.
Collection
I do
not
ears of corn
associated
New
and the
who
are to be separated
from the bad (the tares) on the judgment day. Corn occurs again associated with a skull on a Danish memorial medal of George Hojer, 1670 (described later on).
(II.
Obv.
Inscription
:)
LERE
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
87
OS AT BETENCKE
BLTFE (and in inner circle :) D0E AT PSAL 90 (" Teach us to remember that we must die, so that we may become wise," Psalm xc. verse 12, after Luther's translation). In the field
to right
:
AT WI SKTJLLE WI MA
IEG EE SKI0N
(" I
am
beautiful
").
Rev.
Skeleton standing by a table resting left hand on an hour-glass. Inscription (in outer circle :) MINE
:
DAGE HAFFE VERIT SNARERE END EN L0BERE (and in inner circle DE FLYDE BORT OCH HAFFE INTET IOB
.
:)
days are swifter than a post they flee away, they see no good" Job, chapter ix. verse 25). In the field, below the table IEG SKI0N 1634 (" I was beautiful, 1634 "). (Fig. 23.)
9 ("
:
:
My
WAR
Diameter,
Collection
Medailler,
1*75
inches;
p.
at
loc.
Copenhagen.
cit.,
gold;
No.
11.
These
Sir H.
last
my
father,
Weber, kindly examined during a recent visit to Copenhagen) are said to have been struck on the
death of
Christian
Christina
Anna IV
King
wife,
Munk (or
(born
(or Kantzau),
88
Governor of the Eoyal Palace, when the latter was (apin the moat of the Koyal parently accidentally) drowned Palace of Kosenborg in 1632. She is supposed to have Vide F. C. in the following year (1633). died of
grief
letzte
German
p. 211.
translation,
The
last described
am
FIG. 24.
may be compared
to serve as a
to certain sepulchral
monuments designed
living as well as a
memento mori
to the
As a
typical
fine
one in Canterbury Cathedral of Henry Chichele (died 1443), Archbishop of Canterbury, and founder of All
Souls' College, Oxford.
On
a recumbent figure, representing the Archbishop during life in full canonicals. On a slab below the table an emaciated dead body (wrongly described as
canopy,
is
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
89
71 is represented Bound the (see Fig. 24). verge at the bottom of the monument is the jingling memento mori inscription
a skeleton)
"
Tu quod
Omnibus
eris
With
this
inscription
may
be compared that on an
analogous
monument
"Ista figura docet nos omnes meditari " Qualiter ipsa nocet mors quando venit dominari
;
and also the following from a sepulchral monument in the Church of the Celestines at Herverle, near Louvain
Many putredo terrae et cibus verminorum." 72 are referred to in sepulchral monuments of the kind
Richard Gough's Sepulchral Momiments of Great Britain, London, 1786-1796, vol. i. pp. cx.-cxii., and vol. ii.
"
Nunc
Compare also T. J. Pettigrew's Chronicles " of the Tombs, London, 1857, pp. 62-68 Admonitory
pp. cxviii.-cxx.
:
Epitaphs."
(II.
1634.
Obv.
Bust
of a
to
right.
71
72
With
sepulchral
monuments
with their simple (and in the best examples, very beautiful) so-called "parting scenes" may be contrasted. But on the mural paintings of Etruscan tombs, the representation of the brutal-looking Etruscan " Charun " (as the messenger of death), and sometimes other horrible " demons," holding snakes, &c., invest death and the Gorgon-like parting scenes depicted with horrors equal to those suggested by Mediaeval art and legends.
90
VIDEBIS ("Who
reverse
.
am you
table,
will
see
on the
").
Skeleton standing
by a
resting left
:
hand
:
on
an
hour-glass.
Inscription
SIC
field
NVNC
").
In the
:
below the
(Fig. 25.)
C.M.
FIG. 25.
1'5 X 1'2 inches; illustrated in Biographical Dictionary of Medallists, London, vol. iii. p. 542.
Oval medal,
Forrer's
The German
added the words
as
medallist,
Christian Maler,
generally
"cum
privil." to
he has done on the reverse of this medal, because he held the Imperial permission to strike medals in his own house. The designs of obverse and reverse are evidently as Mr. C. F. Gebert of Nurnberg kindly pointed copied,
out to me, from those on the medal last described, which
is
Anna
Cathrina,
Christian
IV
:
of
Denmark.
The
may
on memorial
rings, &c.,
sum
"
eris,"
I have to thank
Mr. L. Forrer for the kind loan of the blocks for the
illustration (Fig. 25). Another reverse with the obverse will be described in Part IV.
same
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
91
(I.) A badge of the guild of physicians and surgeons at Delft (1635) bears on the obverse a skull and crossed MOKI and bones, with the inscriptions
:
MEMENTO
DELPHENS.
CHIBUBGr.
in question.
S(igillum) COLLEGII MEDIC & The device is that on the seal of the guild
(II.)
Memorial medal on
(1645).
the death
of
Sir
John
Hotham
Obv.
Bust of Hotham to right behind his neck, a minute surmounted by a crown. skull, Inscription
;
:
MORS MIHI
of
his
fifth
VITA.
wife,
Rev.
cast
and
chased
i.
p.
in 314.
Sir
of
Hull, but became dissatisfied with the proceedings of the Parliamentary party, and was with his son suspected of
treason.
Tower
Hill.
(II.
left.
Legend
CAROLVS
it,
it,
Rev.
C. R.; over
;
label V ANITAS. Legend BEATAM ET ETERNAM SPLENDIDAM AT GRAVEM. The legend signifies
.
:
GLORIA
below
a celestial an earthly
"
(I receive)
(I
92
Floral
Oval medal diameter, O8 by 0'7 inch ; cast and chased in silver. Medallic Illustrations, 1885,
;
vol.
i.
p.
344.
reverse
is
illustrated
by the
" I shall not following passage in the Icon Basilike : want the heavy and envyed crownes of this world, when
my God
his graces
hath mercifully Crowned and Consummated with Glory, and exchanged the shadows of
my
that
earthly
Heavenly Kingdome with himselfe." The device on one of the memorial rings (described in Part IV.) on
the King's death medal.
is
The following four pieces belong to the class of so" called " Moralische Pfenninge struck at Basel in the seventeenth century. They were apparently designed to
be given as presents, sometimes probably in connexion with funerals. The medallist, whose signature on these
pieces
is
his family (F. F. standing either for Friedrich Fechter or for "Fechter fecit"). In connexion with memento mori
medalets of this
class, it must not be forgotten that the devastating epidemics of disease in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries gave them an increased significance at the time when they were issued.
(I.
and VIII.)
Basilisk, with leaf-like wings, holding shield bearing the arms of Basel.
Obv.
Eev.
worm
it.
Inscription
HEUT
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
("
93
red,
To-day
to-morrow
In
and
the
FIG. 26.
struck in silver.
R.
S.
Poole, Descriptive Catalogue of the Siviss Coins in the South Kensington Museum (the Townshend Collection of Swiss Coins), London, 1878, p. 45,
No. 15.
(I.
and VIII.)
FIG. 27.
Obv.
View
Bev.
beneath,
hour-glass.
("To-day red, to-morrow dead"). (Fig. 27.) Diameter, 0*8 inch ; struck in silver. R. Poole, op. cit., p. 45, No. 16.
S.
(I.
and VIII.)
Branch with three
roses.
Obv.
WIER ROT
we
are red
").
("
Heut
To-day
94
Bev.
Dead
trees.
FIG. 28.
Diameter,
Poole, op.
cit.,
O6
inch
struck in
silver.
R.
S.
p. 45,
No. 17.
PIG. 29.
Obv.
View
Eev.
Phoenix in burning nest (emblem of the resurrection of the body, and the immortality of the soul).
Inscription that I may live
:
will die
(Fig. 29.)
;
struck in silver.
R. S.
p. 46,
No. 20.
(I.)
An
English seventeenth-century
memento mori
medalet
Obv.
(circa 1650).
on the ground, leaning on a skull. a flower. In. the background, a building with spires, apparently meant to represent a church. The whole type surrounded No by a serpent with its tail in its mouth.
child seated
On
either
side,
legend.
COINS, MEDALS,
Rev.
AND TOKENS.
95
:
Legend
.
in
two
.
circles
AS SOONE AS
:
WEE
TO
BEE
BEGVNNE
(and
in
inner
circle:)
FIG. 30.
WE
A
(Fig. 30.)
struck in bronze.
to
specimen, which
afterwards presented
the
British
Museum
by me
in the
Numismatic Chronicle,lSQ2 (Third Series, Vol. XII. p. 253), where I alluded to its resemblance in style of workmanship and in certain details of execution to the medal
trial in
1649 (Medallic
3).
1885, vol.
i.
p.
385, No.
die,
similar
piece, possibly
from another
but with
the same
legend, was described by J. Atkins (The Coins and Tokens of the Possessions and Colonies of the British Empire,
London, 1889, p. 250) as a jeton or token supposed to have been issued by Sir Walter Raleigh for the Settle-
in Virginia, 1584.
another variety (see Fig. 31) with a slight difference in the legend, a specimen of which was kindly
shown me by the
belonged.
late
Sir
It is of decidedly
workmanship, somewhat smaller (diameter, 1*15 inches), and reading (in outer circle :) AS SOONE AS
:
WEE
96
. .
TO BEE BEGVNN (and in inner circle:) WE DID BEGIN TO BE VNDONN. This variety is
.
figured
in
the
Catalogue
of
the
Fonrobert
Col-
FIG. 81.
lection,
by
Adolph
Weyl
(Berlin,
1878,
p.
336,
to be
FIG. 32.
distributed at funerals.
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
97
1635, folio, p. 45) ; and the legend is an English render" Nascentes ing of the well-known Latin hexameter line " morimur finisque ab origine pendet (Manilius, AstronoWither may have derived the idea of micon, iv. 16).
:
the child leaning on the skull from one of Giovanni Boldu's medals already referred to, or from one of
of
is
new
which
is
decaying,
Cf. Ecclesiit
astes
i.
4. As Schiller ( WilMm Tell, 1804) puts " Das Alte stiirzt, es andert sich die Zeit, Und neues Leben bluht aus den Ruinen."
(I.)
Briercliffe,
PIG. 33.
Ofa
Rev.
John Brearcliffe
in
Halifax
skull
RESPICE FINEM,
.
and crossed bones, with the inscription on a label above the skull.
:
(Fig. 33.)
bronze.
Diameter, 0-8 inch ; struck in copper or G. C. Williamson's edition of Boyne's Trade Tokens, London, 1891, vol. ii. p. 1317, No. 104.
98
John
Brearcliffe
Halifax, where he died in 1682, at the age of sixty-three The device on the reverse of this token is one of years.
the commonest and simplest memento mori devices of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Shakespeare
refers to a similar device,
Henry IV
(act
ii.
scene
do not bid
me remember
mine end."
(XIII.) Memorial medal on the death of George Hojer
(1670).
Obv.
Skull,
lamp,
and
:
the
inscription
CIOIOCLXX.
Rev.
C18S Doctsg Viri Inscription in six lines Georgii Hojer Commissarii Regis Daniae VITA EST MEDITATIO ("To the pious memory of the most illustrious and learned man, George Hojer, Commissary of the King of Denmark. Life is Meditation ").
Oval, 2*1 by 1'85 inches.
Illustrated in DansTce
Mynter og Medailler i den Kongelige Samling, and Medals of 1791 Copenhagen, (Coins Christian V), PI. 62, No. 3.
this
The corn with the skull and lamp on the obverse of medal evidently has the same signification as that associated with the death's head and hour-glass on a Danish medal of 1634, already described and illustrated
(see Fig. 22).
De
Murder
of the brothers
the
De
Witts.
COINS, MEDALS,
Gr.
AND TOKENS.
99
The largest edition, 1732, vol. 3, pp. 81-85. of these medals (diameter, 2-75 inches), signed by a " " " " 73 medallist, Aury or Avry (signature AVRY F.), bears on the obverse the portraits of the two De Witts
French
:
facing each other; the reverse design represents their murder by the populace in the guise of a many -headed monster. There is a fine specimen of this medal struck
in
Museum
Collection.
On
the
and
II.)
Eldred (1678).
Obv.
Armorial
shield.
OF
10
31
THE
Rev.
Legend ANNE THE WIFE ELDRED ESQ. DIED MAR 1678 AGED 72.
:
veiled female
skull,
figure
seated,
facing,
holding
and resting her head upon her hand supported by a pedestal, on which stands an urn. BVILDETH HER Legend A WISE
:
WOMAN
HOVSE.
Diameter,
and chased
vol.
i.
coarse workmanship.
p.
571
Fourth
this
medal was
the wife of John Eldred (who died November 16, 1682), of Olivers, in Essex, and was the daughter and co-heir of
Thomas G-odman,
73
of Leatherhead, Surrey.
For further
On comparing this medal with a medal of the French Jesuit statesman, Michel Le Tellier, dated 1679, and signed AVBY F., I agree with Miss Agnes Baldwin that both of them are the work of the same medallist, who was probably a Frenchman, or resided in France, not in the Netherlands.
100
details, see
of
Anne
(I.)
(1683-84).
Obv.
IN NICOLSON.
legend:
death's heads.
REMEMBRANCE OF
The
legend
is
left,
with the
IOSIAS
by four
divided
Rev.
MEMENTO MORI.
(incuse)
what
vol.
i.
made of two plates of ; in high relief and of somerude workmanship. IT the collection of the
and chased,
late Sir
p.
John Evans.
597.
is
In regard to what
known about
article in the
241),
medal
is
well illustrated.
(I.)
of
England
Obv.
Time seated
Eev.
TOMB ALL Legend TO THE COLD HEADS MVST COME. Inscription: KING CHARLES THE SECOND AETAT 55 OBIIT FEBRV 6 ANNO
:
to right, on a tomb, with one foot on a skull, holding in one hand a scythe and hourglass, and extending a laurel wreath in the other.
DOM
1684.
(The date
is
style.)
Diameter, 1 -55 inches ; struck in silver and Medallic Illustrations, 1885, vol. i. p. copper. 601. There are two varieties, differing from each other only in the arrangement of the legend on the obverse.
COINS,
101
and
Only the actions of the just Smell sweet, and blossom in their dustl"
Museum
erased,
inscription
and another inscription engraved in its place, commemorating the death, in 1702, of Bartholomew
Specimens, thus altered, Gidley, of Gidley, in Devon. were probably distributed at the funeral of Bartholomew
Gidley.
(VIII.) Memorial medal on the death of II of England (1685).
King Charles
O^.Bust of Charles II to
D.
Rev.
G., etc.
right.
Legend
CAKOLUS
II
Sea, with
sun. Legend OMNI A OUT In exergue, MDCLXXXV. Diameter, l 95 inches ; struck in silver or (as in a specimen which belonged to me) in white
OCCIDUNT.
setting
-
metal.
i.
p. 601.
The reverse legend, referring to the dissolution of all created things, is derived from Sallust, Jugurtha, 2, and
with
The
Ecclesiastes, chapter i. verses 4, 5 passeth away, and another generation sun also ariseth and the sun goeth
:
(1685).
titles,
Bust
of
King James II
with his
&c.
102
Eev.A
AMBITIO MALESTJADA
on the pedestal, Justice, trampling on a serpent, weighs three crowns against the sword, the torch, and the serpent of discord. At her feet lie the bodies of Monmouth and Argyle IACOBUS their heads are on blocks inscribed
;
:
RUIT
On one side, lightning darting against troops at Sedgenaoor. On the other side, fixed over the gates of the Tower of
Above, the sun.
struck in silver and Diameter, 2'4 inches white metal. Medallic Illustrations, London, 1885,
;
vol.
i.
p.
This medal
list,
of the
light.
obverse, and, on the reverse, his head spouting blood, with the legend: LIBO
HUNG SANGUINEM
DEO
LIBERATOEI.
(XI.) Revocation of the Edict of Nantes,
by Louis
XIV, 1685. Persecution and Martyrdom of Huguenots. A medal commemorating the Revocation of the Edict
of
seated on the beast with seven heads, holding the keys in his left hand and wielding a thunderbolt with his
On the reverse is a scene representing the execution and persecution of Protestants in France, with the inscription: MARTYRIIS PALMA'E. Diaright hand.
EX
;
struck in silver.
This and two other medals on the same subject are described and figured by G. van Loon, in his Histoire
COINS, MEDALS,
metallique des
p. 312,
AND TOKENS.
103
Pays-Bas (French
Nos. 1-3.
(II.)
(1688).
design on which
oval,
measuring 1'75 by
J
2*0 inches.
On
a shield-shaped comis
"
engraved
James
Son of Ben Warren and Mary Denew ob: 22 d March 168 aged 5 years. Dreamed 48 hours before he dyed
that he had
to
HEAUEN." Above
(II.
Schomberg
Obv.
Boyne
(1690).
Marshal Schomberg, three-quarters, to right. Bust FRIDERICUS MARESCHALCUS Legend: SCHOMBERG, &c. Artist's signature on truncation, P. H. M. (Philipp Heinrich Muller).
Schomberg, in Roman dress, resting on a shield ornamented with the Christian monogram, plants, like another Hercules, his club, which takes root
Bev.
and
flourishes as
an
olive-tree,
<feo.
silver,
&c.,
p.
717,
is
said to
first
medallist in
Germany
to strike
medals
104
(V.) Execution of
Grandval (1692).
There are several medals commemorating the execution of Barthelemi de Lignieres, Chevalier de Grandval,
on account of his share in the plot to assassinate William III of England. He was hung, drawn, and
quartered,
poles bearing his head and quarters are represented. Medattic Illustrations, 1885, vol. ii. pp. 75-78, Nos.
287-290.
(I.)
One
of
See H. E.
Storer,
Amer.
Journ. Num., July, 1901, p. 17, Nos. 1636-1639. (I.) Various entrance tickets to the Medical Garden
of
devices,
such as a
skeleton with scythe, hour-glass, and tomb. I suppose they began to be used in the second half of the
seventeenth century.
p. 19,
(IX.) Memorial of the death of William Cheselden, the surgeon (1752). The Cheselden prize-medal of
St.
for
practical
surgery
Bust
of
known
Rev.
William Cheselden (1688-1752), the wellsurgeon, to right. Legend WYON SC. MINT.
:
CHESELDEN.
Below, W.
The body
of a man laid out for dissection. In the back-ground, on a table decorated with the arms of St. Thomas's Hospital, are a skull, book and vases; above is a human leg which has been
COINS, MEDALS,
dissected.
AND TOKENS.
:
105
In
s.
Legend
:
the exergue
MINT.
ST.
THOMAS'S HOSPITAL.
WYON
struck.
Medallic
Illus-
1885, vol.
ii.
p. 668.
George Vaughan.
(IX.)
Hospital,
here.
of
St.
Thomas's
may be mentioned
for
convenience
On the obverse is the profile head to left of Dr. John Syer Bristowe (1827-1895), a well-known physician of the hospital. The reverse represents the interior of
a pathological laboratory, with a young man seated to The medal is awarded right, examining a human heart.
(XIV.)
A medal of J.
is
physician of Bologna,
theHippocratic aphorism, VITA BEE VIS AES LONGA. C. A. Eudolphi, Numismata Virorum de Rebus Medicis, &c.,
Duisburg's edition of 1862,
p. 28.
AES
LONGA
Amer. Journ. Num., July, 1893, p. 12, No. 630. (XIV.) A medal commemorating the foundation of
the
Hippocratic aphorism,
106
MAKPH,
other founders.
and the names of Dr. A. F. von Wolff and the C. A. Kudolphi, Numismata Virorum
de Rebus Medieis, &c., Duisburg's edition of 1862, p. 193. Dr. H. K. Storer has kindly furnished me with
descriptions of medals on which this famous aphorism occurs. Besides the medals of Pozzi
of Hippocrates
and Daubeny and of the Warsaw Medical Association, already mentioned, it occurs in Latin on medalets of
medical societies, including the Societe Medicale (founded 1796), the Societe Medico-Philanthropique (1806), and the Societe Medico-Pratique (1808).
various Paris
(V.)
loss of
Minorca in 1756.
Half-length figure of General Blakeney, facing, holding the British flag on one side is a ship, on the other a fort firing cannon. Inscription
;
:
Obv.
(in exergue:)
Eev.
a ship.
BY B
Inscription:
(in exergue
:)
Diameter, 1'4 inches ; struck in brass or bronze. Medallic Illustrations, London, 1885, vol. ii. p. 679, No. 394. There is likewise a slightly smaller variety of this medal with a relatively larger
figure
of
Byng
(Medallic Illustrations,
loc.
cit.,
No. 395).
The
to
the
is
Due de
one of
Eichelieu, on
June
27,
1756.
This medal
the toy-shop or popular kind, like those struck to commemorate the taking of Porto Bello by Admiral Vernon
in
1739; and
it
means
Admiral
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
107
Byng. On condemned,
his return
and
shot
Satyrical
tokens
threatening
Thomas Paine
(1793-1797).
There are many halfpenny and farthing tokens of the end of the eighteenth century, representing on the obverse a man hanging from a gallows, with the inscription
END OF
is
type a demon
pipe.
Amongst
:
On one variety of this the gallows, smoking a the reverse-types of this series are the
PAIN".
seated on
following
JANY
(a)
An
21 1793.
(6) Inscription:
CLCTBS
(c)
A man
the inscription
WE DANCE
leg,
with
PAIN SWINGS.
number of combustibles, intermixed with labels, (d) The labels issuing from a globe inscribed FRATERNITY. are inscribed REGICIDE, FALSITY, REQUI:
ROBBERY,
1797.
SITION,
FRENCH REFORMS
374,
his Rights of
Man
London, 1790-1792, and, after migrating to France in 1792, was given the title of French citizen
in
and elected a member of the Convention. His Age of Reason was published in 1793, and made him still more
unpopular in England.
The
"
satyrical halfpenny
108
the people against him. Such political tokens doubtless served the purpose of cheap political newspapers, just as " " some of the toy-shop medals (such as those of Admiral
Vernon) did
century.
(II.)
1798),
A memorial medal of Aloisio Galvani (1737by Mercandetti (1803), bears on the reverse the
:
inscription
MORS MIHI
VITA,
(Virgil,
726).
Medicis,
of the
Royal
Humane
Obv.
Rev.
TILLVLA
MUNERE
MDCCCX.
Legend:
LATEAT
:
SCIN-
Artist's signature
;
w.
WYON
R.A.
occasions since
This medal has been awarded in gold on about four it was founded, for the best treatise on
life.
methods of saving
The
British
Museum now
possesses the specimen struck in gold awarded to the late Sir John Erichsen, the surgeon, in 1845, for his
Experimental Enquiry into the Pathology and Treatment of Asphyxia. Amongst others who received the medal
method of drowned" was adopted by the Royal Humane Society in 1861. The beautiful
restoring persons apparently
COINS, MEDALS,
AND TOKENS.
109
reverse design occurs likewise on the ordinary medals awarded by the Society for gallantry in saving life.
It constitutes
(X.) Epidemic of cholera in Paris (1832). French medal, by E. Kogat (1832), has on the
obverse a figure of Aesculapius feeling the pulse of a sick woman with his left hand, and warding off a figure of death with his right hand. Diameter, 3'3 inches.
Figured in Pestilentia in Nummis, by L. Pfeiffer and C. Ruland, Tubingen, 1882, No. 450.
(V.) Indignation against the so-called
-Glallicia" in
"
Massacres of
connexion with
CKATIE FRANCAISE.
artist's signature,
Inscription
(incuse)
DEMOis
the
Rev.
gallows. Inscription (incuse): MASSACEES DE GALLICIE (and in the field below the gallows:) METTERNICH BRENDT VOUES A L'EXECRATION DE LA POSTERITE.
relief.
Diameter, 1*6 inches; cast in bronze, very low specimen was formerly in my collection.
It is the
work of
(or
sculptor, P. J.
David
whose extensive
series
known.
is
medallion (diameter, 15'75 inches), by the same artist, and commemorating the same historical episode. It
110
represents Liberty inscribing on a gallows the names of the leaders who were regarded by the French and Poles
as
"massacres" (Catalogue of
the
Musee David, by H. Jouin, Angers, 1881, p. 222, No. 210). The same museum contains a design for the head of
Liberty on the obverse of the above-described medal.
David d'Angers, like his friend and patron, Louis David, the painter, was much concerned in the political movements of
taken up.
(XI.) Death of Denis Auguste Afire, Archbishop of
Paris (1848).
his time,
and
was
to the position
he had
commemorating
trait
his martyr-like death, having his poron the obverse and various devices on the reverse^
:
reverse the inscription is MOET MAETYE DE SON HEEOIQUE DEVOUEMENT 27 IUIN A contemporary rough medalet, cast in white 1848.
On one
metal,
is
No.
6.
Archbishop Affre was shot on the barricades in Paris, whilst endeavouring to prevent bloodshed between the
Parisian insurgents (red republicans), who were defending the barricades, and the tricoloured soldiery who were attacking them. He had been warned by General
He was replied that his life was of small consequence. removed to his palace, where he died on 27th June, 1848.
(VII.)
Medal
of
Samuel
Plimsoll,
"the
Sailors'
Friend "(1875).
COINS, MEDALS,
Obv.
AND TOKENS.
;
Ill
neck and
His head
to
left,
wearing spectacles
Inscription: S.
.shoulders clothed.
PLIMSOLL.
HOUSE OF COMMONS
LONDON.
CHEVALIER.
Rev.
Signed
on
JULY
Ship at sea, sinking. On a sail is pictured a death's head with crossed bones. In exergue are the words, COFFIN SHIP. Diameter, 1*4 inches ; struck in bronze or brass, with loop for suspension.
" termed death-traps Plimsoll greatly helped in
"
which Mr.
These or similar smaller medalets were abolishing. made by A. Chevalier, an engraver (of Paris), and were worn by those present at a fete given in 1875, when Mr.
Plimsoll was elected
Member of Parliament
of
for Liverpool.
(X.)
Commemorative medal
the
International
Medical Congress held in London (1881). This medal has on the obverse the crowned head of
Queen
Victoria to
left,
design by Sir John Tenniel (executed by Leonard C. Wyon, son of W. Wyon, E.A.), representing Aesculapius standing in front of a globe before him a mother,
;
holding her sick child, and two sufferers, seek his aid ; behind him a figure of death is represented floating in the air. Diameter, 2'8 inches; struck in bronze, &c.
From
is
unfortu-
pestaccording to Bergs0e, certain tokens" (1889), bearing on the obverse a skull and crossed bones, with or without the inscription, MEMENare,
There
"
DEN EB
Vilhelin
112
Bergs0e, Danske Medailler og Jetons, Copenhagen, 1893, Nos. 989, 990. p. 141,
commemorative bronze plaquette (4'5 (III.) A cast X 3'25 inches) of Philippe de Girard, by the modern French artist, Louis Eugene Mouchon (1892), bears an
of allegorical representation
posthumous fame.
speci-
is
exhibited in the
Luxembourg
Philippe de Girard, the inventor of the flax-spinning machine, was born in 1775 at the village of Lourmarin,
in
During
his
He died in 1845. the department of Vaucluse. his life he never received due recognition for
varied talents,
it
his
restless
till
work, and
his
useful
inventions;
was not
Hong-Kong
Obv.
(1894).
Sick
Chinaman on a bed, partly supported by a European man, who with his left arm presses
back a figure of death floating in the air and aiming a spear at the sick man. On the other side of the bed stands a European sick-nurse. In the field, on the left, Chinese characters signifying On the right, A. WYON so. In Hong-Kong.
exergue the date, 1894.
Bev.
PRESENTED BY THE HONG KONG COMMUNITY (and in the centre) FOR SERVICES RENDERED DURING THE PLAGUE OF
1894.
Diameter, 1*4 inches; struck in silver and gold. This medal is by Allan Wyon, the obverse being from a design by Frank Bowcher. Illustrated in
PI.
vol.
i.
PAET
IV.
ENGRAVED GEMS, FINGER-RINGS, JEWELS, &C., RELATING TO DEATH AND THE VARIOUS ASPECTS OF OR ATTITUDES TOWARDS DEATH.
be no antique gems engraved with make one suppose that they had served the purpose of memorial tokens of deceased friends
to
THERE seem
modern
"
parting scenes occur on gems, such as are found on some beautiful Greek sepulchral marbles, reminding one of the famous lines of Lucretius, commencing
"
Jam jam non domus accipiet te laeta neque uxor Optima, nee dulces occurrent oscula nati " Praeripere et tacita pectus dulcedine tangent ;
"
and of Horace's
Linquenda tellus et domus et placens Uxor neque harum quas colis arborum
and
later
Koman
Thus
74
C.
W.
114
of figure (a kind
Kornan sarcophagi) is represented (Fig. 34) holding a " " He also figures torch downwards (an inverted torch). 75 on which a intaglio of Eoman Empire style,
peridot
Charon
Mercury (that
FIG. 34.
death.
genius of
FIG. 35.
a soul
(After King.)
is to say,
psychopompos," see later on) (Fig. 35). Several Eoman gems " (intagli) are engraved with figures of skeletons (" larvae
or
"
shades "). Some at least of these designs seem to suggest the popular conception of Epicurean advice, namely, to seek pleasure, to eat, drink, and enjoy life
to-day, since
death
may come
to-morrow. 76
Thus, an
1885, PL xliii. No. 2. In regard to the representation of a "genius" of sleep, with or without wings, on Roman tombs, see G. E. Lessing's famous controversial essay, Wie die Alien den Tod gebildet (1769).
" " 75 King, loc. cit., PI. lii. No. 6. A so-called gryllus of human faces combined with a death's head might also be mentioned here, but the significance of the device is uncertain, though Venuti and Borioni (1763), who figured it, thought it was meant to represent the ages of
human
76
.
life.
Cf Horace's ode
"
Hue
Flores
sororum
"
;
115
occasional subject (Fig. 36) is a skeleton with a large 77 or two skeletons with a wine-jar (amphora) wine-jar
between them.
FIG. 36.
type.
(After King.)
On
one
gem
by the
side of
and plucking
and similar passages already quoted, and likewise the well-known students' song ( ? of the eighteenth century)
" Gaudeamus igitur, juvenes dum sumus, Post jucundam juventutem, Post molestam senectutem, Nos habebit humus."
This portion, at least, of the words of the famous students' song older than J. M. Usteri's (1793)
" Freut euch des Lebens, Weil noch das Lampchen gliiht Pfliicket die Rose,
is
Eh
77
sie verbliiht."
C.
p. 431),
W. King, in 1869 (Horatii Opera, illustrated from Antique Gems, described the device on a gem of this kind as follows " Skeleton,
:
the received
against an pensable accompaniment of every Grecian burial. These two vessels held the wine and oil, the libations poured upon the funeral pile." But in the second edition of his Handbook of Engraved Gems, 1885 (p. 226), he describes the same device (i.e. the device on the identical gem) as an " Larva, ghost, leaning upon a tall wine-jar, and Epicurean device holding forth an unguentarium an Epicurean hint to enjoy life whilst can." In connexion with the skeleton and wine-jar devices on one engraved gems, it is interesting to note that a figure of a skeleton in the posture of a drunken or dancing man occurs on a Hellenistic vase in
:
:
of depicting a larva, or ghost, leaning pensively amphora, and holding out the lecythus, oil-flask, that indis-
mode
116
C. W. King 78 a branch from a palm-tree (Fig. 37). "a alludes to this device as allegory of the speaking
be held reaping of posthumous fame." It may, perhaps, to express the emptiness of posthumous fame, and to illustrate the lines of Persius (Sat. 5, line 229, Dryden's
FIG. 37.
(After King.)
translation)
for
death will
make
us all a name, a nothing but an old wife's tale." It is, however, not quite certain that any "Epicurean" sug-
On the contrary, as gestion was implied by the device. expressing the vanity of posthumous fame, the gem may possibly have belonged to a Roman philosopher of the
the Schliemann Collection of the Ethnographical Museum at Berlin. The vase is illustrated in E. Hollander's Die Karikatur und Satire in
of the
der Medicin, Stuttgart, 1905. This brings one to the uncertain subject meaning of dancing skeletons in Roman times. On a sculptured
sarcophagus, found in 1810 near the site of Cumae, three such dancing skeletons were represented, and skeletons in similar attitudes have been described on a Roman lamp and on a painting at Pompeii (F. Douce).
dancing skeleton on an antique gem will be referred to later Perhaps such devices were intended to imply that what happened after death was by no means necessarily unpleasant. Possibly there was some superstitious significance connected with the repreon.
influence
Handbook
of
117
type of Marcus Aurelius, who made it a special object of mental discipline, by continually meditating on death,
societies
and evoking, by an effort of the imagination, whole that had passed away, to acquire a realized
79
Another gem 80 represents Cupid throwing the light of a torch into a large vessel (crater), from which issue a
FIG. 38.
(After King.)
may
skeleton and a laurel-branch (Fig. 38). This device signify the driving out of an evil spirit (i.e. one of
the Larvae, as opposed to the Lares) by Love, or it may have been meant to convey the " Epicurean " hint that
of the
A
78
p. 186.
See Lecky's History of European Morals, edition of 1905, vol. i. Lecky says (lac. cit., p. 185) that the desire for reputation, " assumed an extraordinary proespecially for posthumous reputation, minence among the springs of Roman heroism."
No.
King, Handbook of Engraved Gems, edition of 1885, PI. Ixxv. first edition of the Handbook (Bohn's Illustrated Library, 1866, p. 364) King says that on this gem it is clear that the " lar" ossea skeleton represents a ghost Ovid's larva," and Seneca's varum nudis ossibus cohaerentium figuras." Larvae, he says, was the name given to the shades of the wicked those of the good, on the contrary, became Lares, or domestic deities. But even amongst the
80
C.
W.
3.
In the
Romans themselves
to
118
Certain terminal Hellenistic bearded heads (in the style " Hermes " or " Terminus of a so-called ") engraved in
the ear have often profile with butterfly wings above been described as portraits of Plato 81 (Fig. 39). This 82 who explanation was apparently due to Winckelmann,
FIG. 39.
(After King.)
regarded the butterfly's wings as an allusion to Plato's 83 argument for the immortality of the soul. Furtwangler
speaks of
all such heads as representing Hypnos, the Greek god or personification of sleep, who on a fine bronze head of the fourth century B.C. (from Civitella
d'Arno, near Perugia), now in the British Museum, is 84 and youthful, with the wings of represented beardless
King, Handbook of Engraved Gems, edition of 1885, PI. Ixix. H. Smith's Catalogue of Engraved Gems in the British Museum, 1888, PL i. No. 1512. Similar heads are figured by A. Furtwangler amongst Hellenistic and early Eoman intagli. See Furtwangler, Die antiken Gemmen, Leipzig, 1900, vol. i. PI. xxvi. Nos. 41, 42, and PI. xxx. Nos. 24-26. Below the bust on one of those pictured on PI. xxx. (No. 24) is a caduceus (K^VKSIOV of Hermes), thus bringing the gem in question into connexion with the Greek Hermes-busts.
81
C.
W.
No. 3
A.
Winckelmann, quoted by A. H. Smith, loc. cit., p. 170. On an antique gem at Paris, evidently representing portraits of Socrates and Plato facing, that of Plato is without the wings. See King, Handbook
82
of Engraved Gems, edition of 1885, PL xlix. No. 2. 83 A. Furtwangler, loc. cit., vol. iii. pp. 209, 292.
84
There
is
a marble statue of
at Vienna.
Hypnos at Madrid and a bronze statuette youthful beardless figure of Sleep, with butterfly wings
119
a night-hawk attached to his temples (the wing on the left side has been broken off). An almost
certain
to the
doctrine of the immortality of the soul is, however, furnished by an early Roman in(Fig. 40) representing a bearded (philosopher) seated, reading from a scroll ; on the scrinium before him is a
taglio
man
human
skull
(emblem
symbol of Psyche, or the human soul. The butterfly was, indeed, as Furtwangler has pointed
out, employed at a still earlier period to indicate the soul, and Furtwangler figures an Etruscan scarabaeus of the fifth century B.C. (to which I shall again refer), on which Hermes, in his character of
on his back, and with horns (containing balm ?) in his hands, occurs also on gems, if C. W. King's interpretation is correct (Antique Gems, 1872, On an PI. xxxvi. No. 1, and Handbook, 1885, PI. Ixxvi. No. 3).
engraved gem, figured by A. Furtwangler (loc. cit., vol. i. PI. xxx. No. 53), Hypnos is represented as a bearded figure (King has
described this figure as Death cf. footnote 95 in regard to the possible confusion of representations of Death with representations of Sleep) with wings on his back, coming to the relief of the tired Heracles and on two other antique gems (Furtwangler, loc. cit., vol. i. PL xviii. No. 28, and PI. xxxvi. No. 20) he is represented in the same form, but behind the figure, not of Heracles, but of a sleepy or sleeping woman. The
;
supposed thunderbolts on a gem of this type (King, Handbook of Engraved Gems, edition of 1885, PL Ixxv. No. 4), which, according to Furtwangler, are really ants, made King describe it as representing " Jupiter descending in a shower of thunderbolts upon the dying Semele." The early and archaistic representation of Hypnos with a beard may be compared with that of Hermes in the early and archaistic bearded types, so different from the figures of the Roman Mercury. It is, of course, quite natural that male figures should be more frequently represented with a beard in archaic (and therefore also archaistic) than
in later art.
8S This type was more Furtwangler, loc. cit., vol. i. PL xxx. No. 45. probably intended to represent Pythagoras than Plato.
120
is
shoulder. 86
At any rate, Psyche herself is frequently accompanied or symbolized by a butterfly on Roman gems, and a butterfly as the symbol of Psyche is often associated with a figure of Cupid. Sometimes a Cupid is represented burning a butterfly with a torch or at a flaming altar, or the butterfly is represented burning itself over a torch or flaming altar. 87 It seems as if the butterfly on Roman gems, though often symbolical of the immortality of the soul (freed from its chrysalis-like imprisonment in the body), yet may sometimes signify sexual love or the consuming passion of love, as if Psyche herself were consumed with love ; and so indeed she was in the beautiful tale of Cupid and Psyche, as handed down to us in the Romance (" Asinus Aureus") of Appuleius. Psyche may thus have been regarded as a kind of " female Cupid," that is to say, as personifying the more receptive, female, element in love, whilst Cupid personified the more active, male, element Psyche would then be the passion of love ready to be ignited, and Cupid would be the flame which sets it on tire. I believe that the Roman gem-device of a torch burning a butterfly is symbolical of Cupid and Psyche, in fact, that the torch signifies Cupid (who burns with his torch after wounding with his arrows) igniting the passion of love in Psyche sometimes the butterfly (Cupid's victim) is being burned not with a torch, but at the flaming Hymenaeal altar. I am inclined to think that the latter explanation is generally the correct one, though in some cases both explanations are possible. Thus, on a 88 gem figured by Furtwangler, a skull is depicted with a butterfly above it (Fig. 41). This may be taken as an emblematical representation of mortality (the skull) and immorF talitv ( the butterfly), that is to say, of the w?th Gutter* survival of the soul (the butterfly) after death fly above "it" Furt(After (the skull), or else as an Epicurean hint conwangler.) trasting love (the butterfly) with death (the skull), just as on the gems previously mentioned the wine-jar and the Cupid were contrasted with the skeleton.
;
88
used as a symbol
of the soul, see Furtwangler, loc. cit., vol. iii. pp. 202, 203. *7 Catalogue of Gems in the British Museum, 1888, Nos. 832, 833. 88 A. Furtwangler, loc. cit., vol. i. PL xxix. No. 48.
121
On
is
accompanied
jar,
another intaglio the upright figure of a skeleton by the following symbols a wineThis device a wreath, a ball, and a butterfly.
may
life
human
temporary sensual enjoyment (the wine-jar and the wreath) with the immortality of the soul (the butterfly) after death (the skeleton), but
to contrast
and
is
much more probably intended to convey the Epicurean advice that since human life is uncertain and fleeting
(the ball),
and since
no pleasure
is
no opportunity of enjoying wine and feasting (the wine-jar and wreath) and love
possible, it is better to lose
(the butterfly).
a
Furtwangler
refers likewise to a
gem
89
skeleton and a butterfly with a torch representing below the latter, and thinks that this device is meant
to signify that the soul is
body, that,
as Lucretius
in
teach,
it
perishes
with the body. But I have already endeavoured to show that the torch burning the butterfly on Koman gems
signifies
so that the
Cupid igniting the passion of love in Psyche whole device on the gem in question would
;
meaning
however, quite likely that amongst the Romans (i.e. sexual love) was often blended with
idea of the
human
soul,
whether the
latter
was
89
Furtwangler,
loc.
cit.,
vol.
iii.
p.
297.
This
gem
(a
carnelian
intaglio) is depicted in
Borioni (Collect. various symbols associated with the skeleton, in addition to the skull and butterfly, is a wheel, evidently referring to the uncertainty and fleeting nature of human life.
an absurdly magnified form by B. Venuti and Antiq. Roman., Rome, 1736, PL Ixxx.). Amongst the
122
regarded as mortal or immortal. It appears, then, natural that Psyche (or her butterfly) should be employed as a
symbol both of sexual love and of the soul (see p. 128), though the soul was doubtless regarded by some as
mortal and by others as immortal.
the story of Cupid and Psyche was adopted by Christians as typifying the purification of the soul, early just as that of Orpheus charming the wild beasts was
The
regarded as symbolical of the work of Christ. In regard to the doctrines of metempsychosis and
the question
bodily
life,
of a spiritual
I
shall
for
Graeco-Scythian gold finger-ring (about the first century B.C.) found in the tomb of a woman at Kertch (the
Panticapaeum), and presented by Dr. C. W. Siemens to the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford. Accordancient
ing to the description exhibited in the Museum, the facing head engraved in intaglio
moon-god (I)eus Lunus of later Eome), and the figure of the bee above the head
a
Graeco-
is
of
the symbol of the moon as the abode s P irits ( Fi g- 42 >In t he old Persian
religion (according to the same account) represents the cosmic bull from whose carcase bees, typical of the vital principle in souls, swarmed to earth. 90 Thus, in Mithraism the moon itself came to
the
moon
be
110
known
as
the
Bee
(cf.
Porphyrius,
De Antro
Compare Virgil's description (Georg., iv.) of a method, said to have been practised in Egypt, of raising a stock of bees from the putrefying carcase of a steer. Compare also the story of Samson and the swarm of bees in the lion's carcase In reference to (Jiidges, ch. xiv. ver. 8). Virgil's mistaken belief, Mr. S. G. Shattock has drawn attention to the striking resemblance to bees and wasps (mimicry) observed in certain
123
For permission to illustrate the ring in question I am indebted to Mr. D. G-. Hogarth, Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, who kindly sent me an
impression.
must
There are several antique gem-types to which we still allude. In the first place, Hermes has some-
FIG. 43.
,
Hermes Psychopompos.
FIG. 44.
(After Furtwiingler.)
wangler.)
of the
Particularly interesting
baeus,
91
on which (Fig. 43) Hermes is seen standing with petasos slung at the back of his neck, holding a diminutive human figure (evidently intended to signify
a human soul or shade) on his left arm, whilst in his right hand is the kerykeion (caduceus) ; the Acheruntian water of the nether world is indicated at his feet on the
right.
On
species of the family Syrphidae, the maggots of which are found in decaying matter. J. H. and A. B. Comstock (A Manual for the Study
of Insects, p. 471) say that a common representative of this family, Eristalis tenax (the "Drone-fly"), is often mistaken for a male
honey-bee. M Furtwangler, Die antiken Gemmen, vol. i. PI. 92 Furtwangler, loc. ciL, vol. i. PL xvi. No. 54.
xviii.
No.
12.
124
century
B.C.,
Hermes,
how
interesting
it is
human
soul or Psyche. 94
"
Charun," armed It is noteworthy that the Etruscan with his long hammer, seems never to occur on Etruscan From gems, nor (it is supposed) on Etruscan mirrors.
the representations on the mural paintings of Etruscan
tombs, on Etruscan sarcophagi, on painted vases, &c., we know that he was imagined as the inflexible and
brutal-looking messenger of Death, who conducted the soul or shade (a'SwAov of the Greeks, probably the
"hinthial"
of
the
Etruscans)
of
the
deceased
to
corresponds more to the Hermes Psychopompos than to the Charon of the Greeks, and was evidently supposed to be in attendance in order to
He
separate the soul from the body (this is probably why he holds the long formidable-looking hammer or hammerlike
instrument) at the
winged bearded deity appearing to fatigued Heracles, on an early antique intaglio, which was supposed by C. W.
King
to
is
ancient art there should have been occasional confusion between Death and Sleep, " twin-brothers " as Homer calls them, when they carry off
125
is
Etruscan Charun
occasionally represented (see Fig. 45) accompanied by various Gorgon-like or Fury-like demons, sometimes
in their hands, including the Greek Thanatos (OaWoc). 96 probably
holding
snakes
"Vanth,"
A somewhat
" FIG. 45. An Etruscan " parting scene," with the Etruscan " Charun holding hammer and a winged demon holding snakes. Prom a painted vase (after Dennis).
similar
gem
a
to
representing a winged figure bending forwards, holding an urn in both hands and apparently
Furtwangler,
98
the body of Sarpedon, slain by Patroclus, to Lycia Iliad, book xvi. line 671 ne/uire 8e fuv iro^iroiffiv apa Kpaiirvolffi <f>fpeff8at, "Tiri/y ical avdry SiSv^aoffiv. Sleeping is, in a sense, "living without life," and dying during sleep has been poetically alluded to by the poet-laureate, Thomas War ton the younger, as dying without death " sic sine morte mori." Thus, indeed, would many like to die. See also footnotes 74 and 84,
concerning representations of Death and Sleep. 98 See G. Dennis, Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria, London, third
edition, 1883. 97 C. W. King,
PI. xlv.
98
Handbook
No.
6.
loc. cit., vol. i. PI.
Furtwangler,
No.
68.
126
about to lay
this
it
down
(Fig. 46).
winged figure
may
represent the
Certain representations of
are thought
by Furtwangler
100
"
Pythagorean
and Orphic
transmigration of souls doctrines probably originally deriyed (metempsychosis), from India and the East. Thus, on a carnelian Etruscan
doctrines
of a
scarabaeus
101
(Fig.
47),
Hermes with
his
kerykeion
summoning
lower
a world.
(After Furtwangler.)
(caduceus) seems to be summoning a soul from the On another earth (or rather, from the lower world).
Etruscan scarabaeus (of calcedony), 102 Hermes seems to be calling up a soul from a large jar (pithos) a bearded
;
head
seen emerging from the jar. which is perhaps intended to represent an exit from the lower world
is
(Fig.
48).
Italian
99
intagli,
Furtwangler likewise figures several early 103 on which Hermes (mostly with his
Furtwangler, loc. cit., vol. iii. pp. 202, 255 el seq. In regard to the Orphic doctrines of an existence after death, see especially the account of Orphic inscribed tablets of thin gold, found in tombs of Lower Italy, &c., in Miss J. E. Harrison's Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion, 2nd edition, Cambridge, 1908, pp. 572 et seq., and the Critical Appendix by Mr. G. Murray. Numerous representations of the Orpheus legend occur in antique and later art in Christian
100
;
102 103
i.
i.
PL
i.
PI. xx.
No.
32.
vol.
C.
W. King
(Handbook of Engraved Gems, edition of 1885, PL Ixxv. No. 1) describes a similar gem- type as " Mercury, by the magic power of his caduceus, drawing up a soul from the Shades."
:
127
human
souls or spirits out represented raising the soul or spirit being indicated by a head (Fig. 49), or by a head and upper portion of
earth,
"
"
FIG. 48.
soul.
Hermes
i
On
FIG. 49.
the body.
to be placing a human head on the body of a swan or bird of some kind (Figs. 50 and 51). Furtwangler
FIG. 50.
a bird.
Hermes
human head on
FIG. 51.
a bird.
human head on
Hermes placing a
the body of
(After Furtwangler.)
(After Furtwangler.)
thinks that these gems do not refer to mere magic or socalled "necromancy" (veKjOOjuavraa), that is to say, the
of ghosts or shades of magical invocation or raising the dead (for the purpose of obtaining information about
" "
the future), as believed in by the credulous of many ages He supposes that the idea of and many countries.
metempsychosis
live again
is
indicated,
105
represented calling up
souls from
on
earth.
peacock, thought by Furtwangler to signify everIt is lasting life, occurs not rarely on Roman intagli.
104 105
Furtwangler, Furtwangler,
i.
PL
xix.
128
somerepresented alone or together with other birds; 106 times at a fountain or basin of water, or with a thyrsus.
It
may be accompanied by
a butterfly, 107 or
;
may be
108 and in one case a apparently standing on a butterfly " " of Priapus, and a butterfly are all a hermes peacock, 109 represented on the same gem.
Roman gems
the
butterfly, especially the burning- butterfly, appears rather to be an emblem of sexual love than an emblem of the soul. It
and immortality, were closely united. And this is not surprising when one remembers that, even nowadays, youthful, ecstatic love, jealous of time and space, in poetry and real life, often believes itself immortal and fondly refuses to acknowledge any bounds but those of eternity.
soul,
if
in
ideas
of
love
human
In Imperial Koman times the peacock, as the special bird of Juno," was sometimes placed on the reverse of " " consecratio coins of the kind, commemorating the
" "
deification
"
or
"
"
immortality
eagle, the special bird of Jupiter, was placed on similar ("consecratio") coins commemorating the deification of
an Emperor. By the early Christians the peacock was adopted as a symbol of immortality, because it renews its
tail-feathers every year, or for
some imaginary
reason.
We may
Roman
"
aeternitas."
Imperial coins with reverse types symbolic of Eternity was represented in various ways
:
by a veiled figure, standing, holding the heads of the Sun and the Moon in her hands, with an altar at her feet by a figure of Ceres in a chariot &c. The phoenix,
often
;
106
60
Furtwangler, loc. cit., PL Ixiv. Nos. 51, 52. Furtwangler, Furtwangler, Furtwangler,
vol.
i.
PI. xxix.
107 los
i.
i.
PI. xxix.
109
i.
129
as a symbol of eternity, appears on pieces of Constantine the Great and his children; and, needless to say, this fabulous bird has been much employed in Christian
antique
gem
on
engraved a man (countryman, peasant ?) seated on a stone, with his right foot resting on a globe he is
which
is
piping on a double
grotesquely.
flute,
Is this device
meant
FIG. 52.
man
seated piping.
is not unpleasant or terrifying to the poor peasant, whose life in the country may be supposed to be a quiet and natural one, and who is therefore thought to
idea of death
be able, calmly, without anxiety, to meditate on and be or does the skeleton signify the inmost
;
part or essence of the man, namely, his innocent mind or " " soul, dancing in harmony with Nature's best music,
110
Gori,
Museum
vol.
i.
PI. 91,
No.
3.
130
On the whole, the music of a pure and happy life? however, I think the skeleton was more probably meant to represent a malevolent ghost or spirit (one of the
"
of Ovid), and the device of the piping man was intended to show that any one leading a natural life with innocent pleasures had no occasion
larvae,"
an
"
ossea larva
"
to fear the apparition or malignant interference of ghosts On the other hand, a contrast was possibly or evil spirits.
intended, the
ful of
man
all,
with the appearance of the skeleton. All this is, after mere guessing, and I do not know any certain interpretation of the gem, which may also have been used as
to protect
Furtwangler
figures
intagli representing one or two peasants (rustics) standing by a skull, on which there is sometimes a butterfly.
It is possible that this type refers to the calm meditation supposed to be associated with a country life. In this connexion one should, however, note the exist-
many gems representing one or more persons looking at a human head. Superficially some of them resemble those just mentioned (representing a man
ence of
standing by a
human
skull),
evidently speaking or prophesying (sometimes the mouth is open), and a man is writing down the
is
head
(prophetic?)
words
uttered.
Furtwangler
112
figures
111 Furtwangler, loc. cit., vol. iii. p. 252; and vol. i. PI. xxii. Nos. 12, 15; and PI. xxx. Nos. 46-48. Needless to say, the word " Italian" is not usually employed in England in the sense in which Furtwangler uses it in his description of antique gems.
112
Furtwangler,
loc.
cit.,
vol.
iii.
pp. 245-252;
and
vol.
i.
PI. xxii.
131
of the finest style, the others early Italian intagli of the kind immediately succeeding the Etruscan scarabaeus.
He thinks that the type may relate to Orpheus legends. C. W. King described a gem of the kind as representing
an Etruscan sorcerer raising a ghost in order to give On the gems on responses to those consulting him.
which two or more persons are looking at (and listening to) the head, one of them has a stick or wand in his
hand, and either points out the head to the others and explains what it is saying, or else is a magician who has
"raised" the head from the infernal regions so that it may reveal the future to his clients (ordinary necromancy,
In regard to superstitions connected with death and the idea of a future existence, we may here mention that
there are several antique
to represent
to
human
sacrifices,
generally difficult
also
refer
to
Egyptian amulets, not rarely cut. in gem-stones, that have been found with mummies. They were placed
either on the
mummy
mummified body itself or between the swathings, and were intended to help the
(dating from early Egyptian civilization to Ptolemaic times) of this class exhibited in the British Museum
are
:
scarabs,
or
beetles,
representing
new
life
and
Nos. 1-9, 13, 14 (all in early Italian style immediately succeeding the Etruscan scarabaeus) and PL Ixi. No. 51 (an Etruscan scarabaeus of the finest style). 113 See Furtwangler, loc. cit., vol. iii. pp. 229, 260.
;
132
resurrection; heart-amulets to protect the heart (to the protectiou of which chapters xxvii.-xxx.B of the Book of the Dead are devoted) ; the serpent's head, protecting
its
tomb
wearer against the attacks of worms and snakes in the the human-headed hawk, assuring to the deceased
;
the power of uniting his body, soul and spirit, at will ; the ladder, representing the ladder by which Osiris
the two-finger amulet ; the fingers (index and middle fingers) which representing Horus used when he helped his father Osiris up the ladder
of the throne of Osiris, and obtaining for the wearer " exaltation to and in heaven ; the buckle or girdle of " Isis ; the pillow or head-rest (usually made of haematite)
;
&c.
In
connexion also
be alluded
to.
the
subject
of
"
Charon's
money
coin,
may
such as an obolus or
;
"
it
charm
(see p. 152) or as Charon's fee for ferrying the shade of the departed across the rivers of the lower world. Certain very thin circular embossed plates of
of modern numismatists) were gold bracteates likewise buried with corpses, doubtless to serve a similar
"
gold
("
purpose, or in some
future
life
way
to
in the world below. I had two such gold " " bracteates in my collection, one with a simple rosette
pattern, the other with a figure of Triptolemos seated in
his
The
winged car ("dragon-chariot") drawn by serpents. latter was apparently made by pressing a thin sheet
of gold over the obverse of a bronze coin of Eleusis in Attica of the type which I have already described in
133
"
is
The use
of Charon's obolus or
"
danace
alluded to
by several ancient authors (e.g. Pollux, ix. 82), and Lucian (De Luctu, 10) ridiculed the custom, asking how
people
knew whether
Attic, Macedonian, or
Aeginetan
obols passed as current coin in the infernal world. In spite, however, of Lucian's ridicule, the custom of placing
coins in the
mouth
Greece, through Roman and Byzantine ages, to modern times in Eumelia and Anatolia. 114 The worthless nature
of the coins or coin-like objects
employed
in this
way
is
apparently indicated by certain passages of Pherecrates and Hesychius,and reminds one of the tinsel-like character
of jewelry and ornaments manufactured exclusively for
sepulchral purposes.
FiNGER-RiNGS,
115
JEWELS, &c.
death's head occasionally formed the bezel of a so" called decade ring," that is to say, a finger-ring with ten projections to serve the devotional purpose of a rosary. In
some
Museum
(seventeenth century?), the death's head is enamelled white and attached to the ring by a swivel mounting. Eings decorated with death's heads, skeletons, and suchlike,
same
For information concerning memorial rings that I have not seen myself, I am greatly indebted to Sir John Evans's pamphlet on Posy Rings (London, 1892), to the chapter on "Memorial and Mortuary " Rings in Mr. W. Jones's Finger-Ring Lore (London, edition of 1898), and to the section entitled " Facts about Finger-Rings," in Mr. F. W. Fairholt's Rambles of an Archaeologist (London, 1871). There are many memorial and mourning rings in our great London Museums, and Sir John Evans kindly showed me those in his collection.
134
way as in Holbein's picture, already referred to, known as "The Ambassadors," Jean de Dinteville, Lord of
Polisy,
is
represented wearing
(a silver death's
head
Martin Luther
have worn a gold finger-ring with a small death's head in enamel, and the words,
is
said to
Think often
"
:
of death ")
round
"
("
").
Eev.
W.
ring of the
Grand
John
of Jerusalem (Malta),
with skeleton, scythe, and hour-glass in enamel, on the bezel, and with death's head and crossed bones on the
Kings with a death's head are said to have been in favour amongst the English Puritans. 117 A gold ring engraved with a death's head, the words
shoulders.
"
Memento
116
initials J.B.,
was found in
life
and whosoever
is
Cf. St. John, chap. xi. 25, 26: "I am the resurrection and the he that believeth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live liveth and believeth in Me shall never die." Compare
: :
" Death also St. Paul's First Epistle to the Corinthians, chap. xv. 54 swallowed up in victory "i.e. " Mors Christi, mors mortis mihi."
117
W.
Jones
(loc. cit., p.
551) says:
"By
Queen Elizabeth's time usually wore a ring with a death's Memento mori.' " it, and probably with the common motto, He quotes John Marston, who, in The Dutch Courtezan (1605), says "As for their (loose women's) death, how can it be bad, since their wickedness is always before their eyes, and a death's head most com" E.G. Brewer (Dictionary of Phrase monly on their middle finger ? and Fable, 1904 edition, p. 338), in support of a similar statement, a passage in Massinger's play, The Old Law (act iv. scene 1) quotes " Sell some of my cloaths to buy thee a death's head, and put upon thy middle finger. Your least considering bawds do so much." However, as Mr. C. H. Read tells me, it seems primd facie improbable that such a custom should really have existed. Is the true explanation to be found in the probable fact that some procuresses, &c., of the time wore death's-head rings in order to give themselves the appearance of leading a religious and meditative life, just as some criminals of modern
procuresses of
head upon
135
1765 amongst the ruins of the North Gate House on Bedford Bridge, and has been supposed to have belonged
John Bunyan (1628-1688), who was imprisoned there. 118 skull and skeleton decorations According to Fairholt, for rings and similar memento mori devices on jewelry came into regular fashion at the Court of France when Diane de Poitiers, who was then in widow's mourning,
to
became mistress
of
King Henry
II.
Shakespeare, in his Love's Labour's Lost (act v. scene 2), makes Biron compare the countenance of Holofernes
to
"
"
;
(with inscriptions such as Memento mori," or Kespice finem") are likewise alluded to by Beaumont and Fletcher
in
I'll keep it as they keep death's heads in rings, to cry Memento to me." Shakespeare may have been thinking of a similar kind of memento mori ring, when in the First Part of Henry IV (act iii.
The Chances :
"
scene 3) he makes Falstaff say to Bardolph, "I make as good use of it (Bardolph 's face) as many a man doth " of a death's head or a memento mori ; and again in the
(act
ii.
scene
4)
when
!
Peace, good Doll do not speak like a death's head do not bid me remember mine end."
;
"
Memento mori devices and inscriptions were more frequently adopted for memorial rings and mourning
rings,
bequeathed or given away at funerals. Many such memorial rings were designed to serve the double purpose of a memorial of the dead and a memento mori
for
the living.
Many
of
them have a
death's
head
an
136
more elaborate and delicate workmanship, the bezel itself is in the form of a minute skull, enamelled white in others again the skull is engraved in cameo on a
;
gem-stone mounted in the bezel in the less expensive rings the death's head was occasionally of mother-of;
pearl, &c.
Some have
In the British Museum there is an English enamelled ring of the seventeenth century, the bezel gold of which consists of a small case, made to open on a
bones, &c.
hinge, and containing a minute death's head in white enamel. Fairholt illustrates a gold enamelled ring now in the British Museum, formed by two figures of
of which
skeletons supporting a miniature sarcophagus, the lid was made to slide off so as to show a tiny
carried a coffin-shaped crystal engraved with the figure " " of a skeleton. Skull-decorations were also sometimes
Middle Ages (English edition by Sir W. Armstrong, 135, Fig. 139). In some memorial rings an actual piece
human bone) has been inserted in the gold, behind the bezel or elsewhere. Memorial and mourning rings bear such inscriptions
of bone (presumably
as
"
:
Memento mori
"
;
"
Eemember death
"
;
die
" "
;
Dye
to live
" "
;
the collection of the late Sir John Evans) " As I am, " " Hodie you must bee (" Quod es fui, quod sum eris ")
;
the
U9
British
(on a seventeenth-century specimen in " " Death Museum) (on a sy myn eritag
;
"
137
"
gold ring)
" Nosse te
ypsum
12
"Prudenter aspice finem;" "Behold "Prepare the ende;" "Oritur non moritur;" "Prepare to follow
for death;"
E.
" Prepared be to follow me (on two memorial rings of King Charles I of England, " in the British Museum) Eram non sum ; " " Heaven is " " Not lost, but gone before " (eighteenth my happyness century); "Fallen to rise" (eighteenth century) ; "Omnia
J.
;
" "
am gone before
;
" "
vanitas" (eighteenth century). Mr. W. T. Eeady tells me of a finely made old German memorial ring, which he has seen, bearing a Latin inscription signifying, "Death opens the gate of
life.""
sixteenth-century gold ring exhibited in the Victoria and Albert Museum has a hexagonal bezel
it
and the
;
Nosse te ypsum
is
"
("
inscription,
Know
thyself ")
on the edge of
the bezel
a second inscription,
DYE TO LYVE.
Another sixteenth-century gold ring to be seen in the same Museum has a death's head in enamel on its
" hexagonal bezel surrounded by the inscription, Behold " on the edge of the bezel is another inthe ende
;
scription,
120
fals fayth."
121
large
Know thyself "), the " HeavenTviaQi fffavr6if (" Nosce teipsum," " sent words (vide Juvenal, Sat. 11, 27) inscribed over the portico of the
great temple of Apollo, at Delphi, though they have not actually a memento mori significance, are frequently associated with memento mori sentences, the idea being that those who learn to know themselves are
ready for death whenever death comes. The Greek saying has been enlarged in the Arabian: "Who knows himself knows his God" (see Abhandlung ilber die Siegel der Araber, d~c., by Freiherr Hammer" " Nosce Purgstall, 1848, p. 49, note). teipsum perhaps suggested the " See yourself as you are" on Solario's painting (dated 1505) of Giov. Cristoforo Longono, of Milan, now in the London National Gallery
:
"
Ignorans qualis
121
138
gold ring found in 1780 by the sexton of Southwell Church, and supposed to have belonged to one of the
Knights Hospitallers of Winckbourne, bore the following motto deeply cut on the inside 4- MIEV 4- MOEI +
:
("
Better
to
die
family motto,
"Mutare
Some
England
of the
are of curious
that belonged to Horace Walpole has the King's head in miniature, with a death's head between the letters
Prepared be to follow me." Another has a death's head, with an earthly crown below above the it, and the word VANITAS (on one side)
C.E. in front, and the motto,
;
"
death's head
is
GLORIA
miniature portrait
and is inscribed, Gloria Angl. Emigravit," with the date (old style) of the King's execution. Two other rings bear the King's portrait and the inscription,
of the King,
Sic transit gloria mundi." Another gold ring had the King's portrait in a little case (forming the bezel), on the outside of which the four cardinal virtues were
"
represented in enamel on the inner side of the skull and crossed bones were enamelled.
;
lid,
139
Love my Memory, I. W., obiit and on one for the Bishop of Winchester, "A mite for a million, I.W., " obiit and on those for other friends, " A friend's fare;
well,
rings. "
In all he bequeathed about forty Speaker Lenthall (1591-1662) directed by will " that Oritur non moritur should be inscribed on fifty to be given away in his family at his death gold rings and Sir Henry Wotton (1568-1639) left to each of the Fellows of Eton College a gold black-enamelled ring
I.W., obiit."
;
"Amor
unit omnia."
W.
Jones
:
quotes the following clause from a will dated 1648 "Also I do will and appoint ten rings of gold to be
made
ready for inscriptions to be engraved on them as required. Memento mori devices have occasionally been adopted
for seals,
shanks and other parts of finger-rings were sometimes chiselled in memento mori fashion (" skullas the
decorations,"
seal of
123
&c.).
(a
man's head, facing, on a boundary stone or terminus, with the inscription, CEDO NVLLI) with which he sealed his last will, dated at Basel, 1536
;
Erasmus
and I now picture it (Fig. 53) from the figure in Jortin's Life of Erasmus, together with an antique intaglio which belonged to Erasmus. The latter forms part of
a finger-ring, and represents a bearded terminal head, or "Hermes," possibly the Indian Bacchus, in Hellenistic style,
123 One such signet is figured in Paul Lacroix's Arts in the Middle Ages, English edition, by Sir W. Armstrong, p. 135, Fig. 139.
140
apparently derived his idea of taking a terminal figure as a memento mori device (Fig. 54). The seal of the
PIG. 53.
Seal of
Erasmus with
(After Jortin.)
Guild of Physicians and Surgeons at Delft was a skull with crossed bones, and the inscription,
MEMENTO
MORI.
FIG. 54.
Finger-ring with an antique intaglio, from which apparently Erasmus derived the idea of his "terminus"
(After Jortin.)
device.
Inscriptions referring to death occur on a few Oriental seals. 124 Thus on a seal of Chosroes I (Nushirvan), the Great, of Persia (531-579 A.D.), there is said to
reversed as in a seal.
and are likewise used for talismans in the latter case the incuse inscription is sometimes filled in with white enamel. Such carnelian seals, owing to the red colour of the stone, have been likened by poets to red wine and red lips, and kissing has therefore been playfully likened to sealing, and a kiss to the device known as " Solomon's seal."
141
"
:
Ecclesiastes) signifying
The way
is
One
is
me ?
the seal of Moawiyah II (683 A.D.), the third of Arabia of the Ommiad dynasty, there are Caliph said to have been words meaning, " The world is
"
On
vanity."
On
the seal of Walid I (705-715 A.D.), the "O Walid, thou art
:
On
the seal of
Walid II (743-744 A.D.), the eleventh Caliph of the same dynasty " O Walid, take heed of death." 125 An Arab seal of the Blacas Collection 126 bears an inscrip" tion signifying Khalil, remember death, and put That will be sufficient." For contrast trust in God. thy
: :
with these seal-inscriptions a rather different memento mori idea may be quoted from one of the tales of the
the Caliph his treasures, amongst which, on a throne of gold, the embalmed figure of their first owner is seated,
"
:
Whosoever
shall see
me
;
in, let
him open
.
. .
his eyes
once was living like himself, and that he will one day die like me. Let him make use of it (the treasure) to acquire friends and to lead an
reflect that I
him
agreeable
life
for
come,
all
when the hour appointed for him is not save him from the
See Abhandlung ilber die Siegel der Araber, <&c., by Freiherr Hammer-Purgstall, 1848, pp. 6, 8, 9. I am indebted to Dr. Oliver Codrington for reference to this paper. 126 J. T. Eeinaud, Description des Monuments Musulmans du Cabinet de M. le Due de Blacas, Paris, 1828, vol. ii. p. 292, and PI. iv. No. 128. For this reference I am indebted to the kindness of Mr. J. Allan.
125
142
common
("
life (see
Kismet
Part
II.,
seal
which
signifies
Memento mori death's heads (sometimes pierced for use as rosary beads or for suspension in various ways) are In met with in ivory, rock-crystal, amber, silver, &c.
the British
Museum
is
is
to say, a
and polished
if
in the shape of a human skull. It is nearly not quite as large as an average adult skull, and is referred to by G-. F. Kunz in his Gems and Precious
who
says
in the
Blake Collection
(United States National Museum), the Douglas Collection (New York), and the Trocadero Museum (Paris). A
much
is
in the possession of
-
G. H. Sisson of
New
(;
inches in
length, 15| inches in width, and 15} inches in height. Kunz (loc. cit., p. 286) adds that the making of these
rock-crystal skulls
skulls, incrusted
may have been suggested by the real with torquoise, &c., such as the Christy specimen now in the British Museum. The actual purpose, however, for which the Mexican rock-crystal skulls were made appears to be unknown. It seems to me
quite possible that they were in some with Aztec religious observances. One
descriptions of the
"
way connected
may
recall the
teocallis
"
or temples of Ancient
rites practised
by the
i.
priests,
J. T.
Beinaud,
No.
8.
143
as they appeared to the Spanish conquerors. Cortes and his companions, on their arrival in the city of Mexico,
sacrifices to
very frequent occurrence, and saw human hearts which had evidently quite recently been torn out of the bodies
of unfortunate victims.
teocalli
From
"
Emperor," Montezuma II, conducted them, they could enjoy the fine view over the surrounding country, but at the shrines the loathsome
Jean de Dinteville, Lord of Polisy, as represented in " Holbein's picture (1533) known as The Ambassadors," wore a hat-jewel formed of a silver skull set in gold.
The enamelled gold hat-medallion (sixteenth century) in the British Museum, with the original owner's name,
Carolus von Sternsee, bears an elaborate allegorical device (relating to the fickleness of fortune and the uncertainty
of
human
life,
flesh,
the devil,
life,
"
"
is
beasts,
and worms."
the British
Museum
are
several
memento mori
mostly made as beads, or for suspension. One represents a human head and a human skull back to back the
;
144
eaten by
visible
;
worms
"
;
in the
mouth
."
point de devant a
Another of these ivories represents on one half a lady's head and on the other her skull, below which is a pair of scales. 129 Another has on one side
the head of a
woman
ELLAS NEST ? IL POINT POSSIBLE TAN ECHAPER; below: MEcentury), with the inscription
( )
MENTO
of a skeleton. 180
An
on one side the head of a moribund person, on whose " " forehead is a band inscribed, dura et aspera on the
;
other side
labels
worms below are two gold enamelled with INRI and MARIA; from the
is
a skull with
base hangs a small gold enamelled pendant representing two hearts crowned at the top a small chain is attached
;
Museum
(Mr. Pierpont Morgan's collection in the Loan Court) are exhibited some similar carved ivories (of the sixteenth
century).
skull. 132
and
on the other side the upper part of a skeleton, with the Another has on one side inscription, COGITA MORI.
the portrait of a woman, and on the other side the upper
128
Era in
the British
Museum, London,
129
130
131 132
crystal bead in his collection, representing and on the other side a skull.
Mr. Henry Oppenheimer has kindly shown me a similar rockon one side a human face
145
V. QVOT (?) ("See what you will be"). Another represents the portraits of husband and wife, and on the other side
EEIS
(back to back with them), a skeleton with worms. Here one may mention certain jewels, small bronzes, &c., bearing devices referring in one way or another to the
subject of death.
Mr.
W.
T.
me an
FIG. 55.
German
tury German
diameter, and
time.
shell-cameo, which
Tl inch
in
mounted
It represents a nude man and a nude woman seated facing, with a figure of Death, holding a scythe, standing between them in the background. The woman
whom
is
being seized
by Death. Before the man is an anvil, on which he is hammering a child, whilst he grasps another child
This device 133 appears to tightly between his knees. me to represent a somewhat pessimistic view of life
(man, woman, and children) and death.
The
child
is
IBS ijjjg arra ngement of the device may have been suggested by some group representing Venus in the workshop of Vulcan.
146
thrust naked into the world to take part in the trials and penalties and pains of life, whether he wishes or not ;
death stands by, awaiting him, and often seizes him, not
during his troubles, when he is being hammered on the anvil, but when he is happy and contented with
and does not wish to die. I would further explain the device by the help of the type on the medals (dated respectively 1458 and 1466), already described and
life
figured (Figs. 13 and 14) in Part III., by Giovanni Boldu of Venice, representing a nude man seated, hiding
his face with his hands, with a
before him.
cap. xiii.)
Brod mit Thriineii ass, kummervollen Niichte Auf seinem Bette weinend sass, Der kennt euch nicht, ihr hirnrnlischen Machte.
nie sein
nie die
fiihrt ins
Wer Wer
"Ihr
Leben uns
hinein,
Dann Denn
Armen
alle
1458,
In this connexion another medal, made by Boldu in may likewise be referred to. It represents the
bust on the obverse, with inscription in Greek On the reverse (Fig. 56) is a young man,
left,
artist's
and Hebrew.
nude, seated to
Under him is a skull, and behind him an old woman is In front of him is a winged striking him with a whip. angel, holding a cup, evidently an allusion to Christ's
agony
is
:
in the
Garden
&e.).
(cf.
Giovanni Bellini,
-
Above
MCCCCLVIII.
147
Fro. 56.
FIG. 57.
?),
representing an
148
in diameter,
Italiens,
is
Armand
i.
(Les Medailleurs
36,
2nd
p.
No. 2) and
A. Heiss (Les Medailleurs de la Renaissance, Paris, 1887, vol. i., Venetian medals, pi. ii. No. 1).
I will here likewise refer to a little Italian bronze
which
am
statuette (5'5 x 5 x 2'15 inches) represents a naked boy seated on the ground in a meditative attitude, leaning
with his
left elbow on an hour-glass, and with hand supporting a skull on his right knee
his right
;
a snake
issuing from the skull is coiled round the boy's arm. The base of the statuette is inscribed
IL TEMPO PASSA E LA MORTO (sic) V(I)EN. GVAEITO (?) LVI (?) CHI NON FA BEN FAC(CI)AMO MAL E SPEE(I)AMO I(L) BE(N) IL TEMPO P(A)SSA E LA MO(RTE) V(I)E(N)
. -
The
for
actual appearance of the part of the inscription " " which the words guarito lui are suggested is
:
PRTO LM
This inscription
those
is
who
view of
life,
suggesting that when death comes it comes Mr. A. M. Hind has life.
kindly directed my attention to a somewhat similar design in a Florentine woodcut by an unknown master of the
fifteenth century, reproduced
in their
work on
Plate 31). The woodcut represents a naked boy leaning on a skull with an hour-glass on the trunk of a tree at
his
LHOEA PASSA.
149
A German medal of about 1634 by Christian Maler, which I omitted to describe in its proper place in
Part
III.,
may
pessimistic type of its reverse, which likens human life to soap-bubbles, and might have been inspired by Ecclesiastes. The obverse is the same as that of
(Fig.
(Fig. 25), which was copied from another 23) supposed to relate to the death of
medal
Anna
Cathrina, daughter of King Christian IV of Denmark. But the reverse (Fig. 58) represents a boy seated on
FIG. 58.
INSTAE ("We
in
the
exergue, c PRIVIL c^ c M (the ordinary signature of the medallist, Christian Maler). I am indebted for the illustration of this piece to the sale catalogue, by Otto Helbing of Munich, 1901, of the J. J. Schrott
Collection, in which
it
My attention
was kindly drawn to the existence of the piece by Mr. A. E. Cahn of Frankfurt-a.-M.
134 Cf. the Greek saying, nofj.<p6\v^ 6 &v6pcoiros (" Man is a bubble ") Shadows we are and like shadows depart " (on a sun-dial) " Shadows we are and shadows we pursue " (as alluded to by Edmund Burke).
;
"
150
Dr. H.
my
attention to a
memorial medal of Tomas Ernsthuyse, who died in 1684, shortly after he had been appointed Governor-General The medal is figured by G. van of the Dutch Indies.
Loon
of
French
the
edition,
1732, vol. a
286),
child
blowing
with
inscription,
MEMENTO
MOEI.
In Thomas Wright's introduction to Fairholt's Miscellanea Graphica (London, 1856, p. 63), a curious seventeenthcentury jewel in the Londesborough Collection is illustrated, which appears to have belonged to King James I
of England. It is a silver apple containing a small skull, the top of which opens like a lid. Inside the skull are
representations of the Creation and the Resurrection, with " the inscription Post mortem vita eternitas."
:
Watches of the seventeenth century were occasionally made in the form of a death's head, so as to serve memento
mori purposes, reminding one that with every hour one is nearer one's end, and that hours misspent cannot be regained. In this respect they resemble old sun-dials and clocks with quaint memento mori inscriptions. Compare " the words of Thomas a Kempis, Memento semper finis,
which could have perditum non redit tempus been used for an inscription on a sun-dial or a clock.
et quia
"
Amongst memento mori jewels in the British Museum are locket-like pendants (seventeenth century) shaped like a coffin, containing the minute figure of a skeleton.
One
is
of gold, enamelled,
("
Think
of dying so that you may live "). Another in silver is inscribed with the name of the deceased. locket-like
memorial pendant of a
151
the lid
is
a minute coffin
in the inside
is
some hair
in an ornamental border of gold thread, with a death's head (there were originally doubtless two death's heads)
and the
scribed
:
initials
"
A
skull
little
P.B. in fine gold wire ; the back is ine P.B. obit y 17 Mar: 1703 Aged 54 years." pendant (early seventeenth century) in the
is
British
;
Museum
135
hinge,
is
in the interior of the skull, which opens on a a minute enamelled figure of a skeleton with an
its
hour-glass under
neck
as a pillow.
small heart-
shaped memorial locket of gold, enamel, and gold thread ornamentation (late seventeenth century) represents a
skeleton emerging from a tomb, with an angel on either below is the monoside, trumpeting the resurrection
;
gram
COME YE
the same
period and kind of work bears the device of a figure seated at a table with open book, candle, and death's
LEARN TO
DIE.
small
in the eighteenth-century mourning brooch exhibited Victoria and Albert Museum has a miniature painting of
the deceased's relatives mourning at his tomb, in the usual style of the period, with the inscription,
HEAVEN
LOST.
It is figured in F.
i.
1856, PI.
Figs.
3, 4)
W. Fairholt's Miscellanea Graphica (London, from the Londesborough Collection, but is now
of the British
Ornament Room
Museum.
152
ADDITIONAL NOTES.
WITH
the admonitory devices and inscriptions on sepulchral
finger-rings, &c.,
palls.
may be
on funeral
The
hearse-cloth
or state pall of the Vintners' Company of London, still preserved at the Company's Hall, bears, amongst other devices
in embroidery, four representations of Death, supporting a coffin with one hand, and in the other holding a spade.
Above
tions
:
these four figures are labels with the following inscrip" Morere ut " Die so that vivas," i.e. you may live (1)
just justoru(m) a(n)i(m)aru(m)," 136 Similar state hearse-cloths are in the is the life of souls." the Merchant possession of several other City Companies Taylors' Company possess two the Ironmongers', the Fishmongers', the Brewers', the Saddlers', each possess one.
:
(for ever);" (2) "Mors p(ec)catoru(m) pessima," i.e. "The " death of sinners is most wretched ; (3) Moriri disce quia " " morieris," i.e. Learn to die because you shall die ; (4) "Mors " The death of the vita i.e.
p. 132).
"
series,
1888, vol.
vi. p. 1.
136 Compare the following admonitory inscription, for which I indebted to Dr. J. A. Arkwright
:
am
" Vive diu, sed vive Deo nam vivere mundo Mortis opus, viva est vivere vita Deo."
;
God for to live for the world is death's the living life." This advice is addressed to the reader on a sepulchral monument (1628) in Cuckfield Church, Sussex.
;
work
to live for
God
is
ADDITIONAL NOTES.
153
For these references I am indebted to the kindness of Mr. W. Wroth. If Mr. J. C. Lawson (Modern Greek Folklore and
Ancient Greek Beligion, Cambridge, 1910, pp. Ill et seq.) is right in supposing that the coin or coin-like object placed between the teeth or in the mouth of a corpse was ever intended to serve as an amulet to prevent an evil spirit from
entering, or the soul of the deceased from re-entering, the dead body, then of course the ancient custom of providing the dead with "Charon's money " may indeed be regarded as to some extent connected with the Eastern belief
European
in
"vampires."
IN WORKS OP ART OP THE FIFTEENTH AND SIXTEENTH CENTURIES, AS AN EXAMPLE OP FEMALE VIRTUE (see pp. 47, 48, 70).
Latin epigram on the subject, attributed to Beza, is printed in Abraham Wright's Delitiae Delitiarum (Oxford, It has been translated as follows by Dr. 1637, p. 14). George Turnbull (vide H. P. Dodd, The Epigrammatists, 1870,
p.
134)
:" If Tarquin's wrong, Lucretia, pleased your soul, Death was but justice for a crime so foul
;
But if by strength alone his will he had, To die for his misdoings proves you mad Then be no more the matron's boast and
pride,
You
you
died."
In the romance and art of the Middle Ages Lucretia's place as the legendary paragon of all female purity and honour may be compared with that of Helen of Troy as the legendary
ideal of all female beauty.
novel,
Hence Cervantes, in his immortal makes Don Quixote proclaim, in imitation of mediaeval " fairer than Helen and romance, that Aldonza Lorenzo is
INDEX.
(This does not include the main headings Table of Contents.) "
to be
found in
the
Arms
of
Death "
("
Wappen
des
Todes"), 12-14 Arondeaux, E., 102 Artistic philosophy of death, 12 Aspects of Death, 26-56 Aspects of Life. See LIFE Atonement by death, 37 Augustine, Saint, 34 Aury (or Avry), medallist, 99 Ausonius, 5, 27, 55 Azrael, 124 Aztec religious rites, 142, 143
Bacon, Francis,
4,
15
Badham,
G.,
27
D.
A.,
Archbishop
of Paris,
46, 110
Balanzano, Pietro, 75' Ball, John, 42 Barneveldt, J. van Olden, 38, 46, 85 Bartholomew, Saint, Massacre of " of the Huguenots, called Saint Bartholomew," 80, 81
Bartholomew, Saint,
Milan, 24
statue
at
Beaumont and
lion,
122
Bees, swarming from the (cosmic bull), 122 Beham, B., 17, 18, 77 Beham, H. S., 17, 41
Bellini, Giovanni, 146 Bertoldo di Giovanni,
moon
Black
Brunswickers
Appuleius, the romance of the " Golden Ass," 120 Argyle and Monmouth, execution of, 1, 36, 101, 102
" Black Hussars," 38, 39 Blair, Robert, 23 Blake, William, 23, 56 Boecklin, A., 23 Boldu, Giovanni, medals by, 65-67,
146-147
INDEX.
Bombarda (Andrea Gambi), medallist, 81 Boscoreale wine-cups, 7-10
155
Bowcher, Prank, medallist, 112 Boyne, battle" of the, 103 " Bracteates " Charon's (gold),
money," 32, 132, 152 Brearcliffe (or Briercliffe), John, surgeon of Halifax, 97, 98
Brettauer, J., 58 Briconnet, Robert, medal
of,
Cheselden prize-medal, 104 Chevalier, A., engraver, 111 Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury, monument of, 57, 88 Chinese ideas of death, 14 Chosroes I, of Persia, 140 Chuang Tzu, Chinese mystic, 14 Cicero, 4, 5, 35, 55 Coffin-shaped bezels of fingerrings, 136
52
,
Coffin-shaped
pendants
(jewels),
150
Coffin-ships," 40, 111 Coins, medals, and medal-like tokens relating to the subject of death, 57-112 Combe, William, 23 Congreve, W., 3 for Consolation, philosophical, death, 5, 28, 42 as a Christian Corn, ears of,
51, 52 Croesus, King of Lydia, advice of Solon, 70, 71 " Crown " of life, 36, 53 " Crown " of martyrs, 31, 44, 53,
"
Browne,
Sir Medici), 55
Thomas
(Religio
Brutus and Cassius, 62, 63 " 76 Brutus," the " Bubble " of Tuscan, 64, life, 55, 149, 150 " Buddha, the Jatakas," 32
Buerger's ballad, Leonore, 23 Bunyan, John, 135 Burgkmair, Hans, 17 Butterfly and skull on antique gems, 119, 120, 130 Butterfly and torch on antique gems, 120, 121, 128 Butterfly (for Psyche or the human soul) on antique gems, 118-124, 128 Byng, Admiral, and the loss of Minorca, 1, 36, 106
Caius, Dr.,
91,92 on medals, 44 Cupid and Psyche, 120-122, 128 Cupid and skeleton, 117 Cupid and torch, 120, 121, 128 Curtius, M., 47, 70
Crucifixion, the,
monument
(" II
of, 34,
84
"),
Cambi, Andrea
medallist, 81
Bombarda
Dance
cabre
of
"), 24'
Death
("
Danse Ma-
12-19, 23, 42
de, medallist, 52 Cap-jewels and cap-pieces, 58, 143 Carlyle, Thomas, 53 " " Carpe diem advice, 10, 11, 114 Casca, 2 Cassius and Brutus, 62, 63 Cavino, Giovanni, medallist, 76 Cervantes, 153 Charles I, of England, execution of, 38, 91, 92, 138 Charles I, of England, memorial finger-rings of, 138 Charles II, of England, death of, 100, 101 Charles IX, of France, and the
Candida, Jean
Dante,
Massacre of
81
St.
Bartholomew,
Domenico da
Pescia,
companion
156
Duerer, Albrecht, 12-14, 72, 73 Duty, 45
INDEX.
lating to the subject of death,
113-151
Genesis, 42 Genius of death, 114, 119, 124, 125 Genius of sleep, 114. See also
149
Ecclesiasticus, 4, 7, 15, 35, 49, 50,
56, 143 Edict of Nantes, revocation of, 102 Egoism, 44, 48, 50 Egyptian amulets (scarabs, &c.) placed with mummies, 131, 132
under HYPNOS
Gidley, Bartholomew, funeral of, 101 Girard, Philippe As, 112 Gisze, Georg, Holbein's portrait of, 53
Egyptian ideas of death, 6, 7, 31, 131, 132 Eldred, Anne, 99 Eleusinian Mysteries and coins of Eleusis, 31, 61, 62, 132 Empedocles, 60, 61
5-11, 48, 50, 55, 114-117, 120,
Golden Ass,"
the, of Appuleius,
121
Epidemic
diseases and sudden death, 12, 19, 23, 28, 92 devices on his
seals, 20, 25, 70-74,
120 Goujon, Jean, 4 Gozzoli, Benozzo, 16 Grandval, execution of, 36. 104 Greek and Roman ideas regarding death, 3-10 Gregory XIII, Pope, and the Massacre of St. Bartholomew, 80, 81 Grief for the death of others, 56
139, 140 Erichsen, Sir John, 43, 108 Ernsthuyse, Tomas, 150 Eros. See CUPID
Haroun
Eternity,
emblems
Etruscan ideas
Fame, posthumous,
Fear
Ferdinand
I,
Fiamma,
Gabrielle,
Emperor, 56 Bishop
of
Chioggia, 81 " Fortune," the medallist a la, 69 Fothergillian medal of the Royal Humane Society (London), 43, 108 Francis I, of France, 45 Franco, Goffredo, 79 Franklin, Benjamin, 51 Free will, 3, 54 Friendly death, 35
Galeotti, P. P., called Romano, medallist, 79, 80, 82 Gallicia, so-called "Massacres"
of, 109 Galvani, Aloisio, 108
Hermes psychopompos
nexion with Pythagorean and Orphic doctrines, 126, 127 or psychagogos, 31, 114, 119, 120, 123, 124 Herodias on an engraved gem, mediaeval imagination, 46 Herodotus, 6
Herrick, R., 11 Hesychius, 133
"
Gems
Hippocratic aphorism, 50, 105, 106 Hohenauer, Michael, medallist, 64 Hojer, George, 98 Holbein, the younger, 12, 14, 19, 21, 24, 53, 58, 74, 134 Homer, 124 Hong-Kong, bubonic plague at, 112 Honour, 45-48 Hope, 45, 55 Horace, 2, 3, 9, 10, 19, 26, 34, 40, 41, 73, 114 Horatius Codes, 47
INDEX.
Hotham, Sir John, 91 Huguenots, persecution and massacre of, 80, 81, 102 Huss, John, 46, 64
Hypnos,
See
31, also
157
49-51
Life, altruistic,
114,
118,
119,
124.
under
SLEEP
AND
Life and honour, 45 Life and time, 51 Life, aspects of, with regard to ideas of death, vi, 2-56, 87-90,
Life, Life, Life,
DEATH
Iconography Immortality
trine
of, vi,
compared compared
23
Life, compared to a soap-bubble, 55, 149, 150 Life, compared to a stage, 9, 10 Life, free-will in regard to, 54 Life, "Kismet" attitude towards,
54
Life, not to be
Ivory pendants, &c., shaped like human heads (and skulls) being " eaten by worms," 143-145
wasted in useless
mourning, 56
Life of activity, 49-51 Life of contemplation and meditation, 20, 49, 50
Jewelry and gems, relating to the subject of death, 113-151 Jewelry for sepulchral purposes, tinsel-like character of, 133 Job, 22, 87 John, Saint, 30, 85, 134 Johnson, Bartholomew, a centenarian, 56 Jortin's Life of Erasmus, 74, 139 Julius Caesar, murder of, 62 Juvenal, 27, 137
Life of pain and misery, 35 Life of pleasure, 5-11, 48, 50, 55, 114-117, 120, 121 Life, pessimistic attitudes towards,
54,55
Life, shortness of, 50, 51 Life, to be thought of, rather
than
death,
2,
51
Kempis, Thomas a, 51, 79, 150 " Kismet " attitude, 54, 142
Kleinert, P., medallist, 103
Longfellow, 51
of,
Korn, Onophrius, 79
Labour and
Lares, 117
rest, 52,
53
La Rochefoucauld,
"
vi
Larvae," in ancient art, 6, 8, 114-117, 130 Lawrence, Saint, 64, 65 Lecky, W. E. H., 4, 5, 9, 34, 50, 117 Leiden Anatomical Theatre, 19 " Lemures," 117 Lenthall (Speaker), 139 Leonardo da Vinci, 35, 53 Lessing, G. E., 114 Le Tellier, Michel, medal of, 99 Leveller, Death, the, 41, 42 " Levellers," Anabaptist, 42
Louis XVI, of France, execution,38 Love, manifested by death, 52 Love. See also under CUPID and under PSYCHE Lucan, 5, 41, 55 Lucian, 32, 133 and Lucretia, Roman legend mediaeval romance, 48, 70, 153
Lucretius, 5, 6, 33, 113, 121 Luther, Dr. Martin, 29, 53, 134
Macaber dance ("Danse Macabre "), 12-19, 23, 42 " Danse Macarius, Saint, and the Macabre," 16
Magic
and
necromancy
repre-
by aspects of death, vi, 2-56, 87-90, 143-152 Life after death, 28-33, 51
Life, affected Life, allegories of, 147-150
sented on antique gems, 126, 127, 130, 131 Malaria in Ancient Greece and Sicily, 59-61 Maler, Christian, medallist, 90, 149
158
INDEX.
"
"
Manillas, 17, 19, 25, 27, 29, 69, 77, 78, 83, 95, 97 Manlius Torquatus, 47 Marcus Aurelius, 34, 117 Marston, John, 134 Martial, 35, 84 " Martyrdom," involuntary, 45 Martyrs, 33, 44, 64, 102, 110 Marzi, Galeotto, 68 Massinger, 134 " " Medallic newspapers (" toy-
Morality 92-94
"Morality" stories and plays of the Middle Ages, 14 More, Sir Thomas, 20
of Venice, 75 E., 55, 112 Mueller, P. H., medallist, 103 Munk, Christina, her eldest daughter, Anna Cathrina, 87 Murillo, 24
Moro, Tommaso,
Mouchon, L.
shop
"
medals
and
political
Nantes, Edict
re-
of,
revoked, 102
Napoleon
I,
51
Necromancy
and
magic
repre-
57-112 Mediaeval ideas of death and hell, 11-22 Medical and social attitude towards unnecessary death, 43 Medici, Alexander de', Duke of Florence, 75 Medici, Giuliano de', 67 67 Medici, Lorenzo de', " " Lorenzino de', 75, 76 Medici, Meister des Amsterdamer Kabinets, 14
sented on antique gems, 126, 127, 130, 131 Nelson, 47 Neufarer, Ludwig, medallist, 64 Nicolson, Josias, 100 Nosce teipsum, 137 Nothnagel, Prof. H., 3 Notker Balbulus, of St. Gall, 27
Occo, Adolph, physician, 84
Omar Khayyam,
Orcagna, 16
10
Meister I. A. M. von Zwolle, 15 Meister mit der Weberschiitze, 15 Meister von 1480, 14 Memento mori, 3, 19, 26, 70, 71 Memento mori rings and other
objects in old English literature,
22, 135
Oriental ideas of death, 141 Orpheus and Orphic doctrines, 32, 122, 126, 127, 131 Orpheus, in Christian symbolism,
Ovid,
Menas, Saint, 64
Mercandetti, medallist, 108 Mercury. See HERMES Metempsychosis, 28, 31, 32, 122,
126, 127 Metsys, Quentin, portrait of Erasmus, 72 Metternich, and so-called "Massacres of Gallicia," 109 Mexican death's heads cut out of rock-crystal, 142 Milton, 28 Minorca, loss of, 1, 36, 106 Misery, 35, 52, 53 Mitchell, Sir A., 35 Mithraism and the moon, 122 Moderno, bronze plaques by, 70 Monkish ideals, 20, 49 Monmouth and Argyle, execution of, 1, 36, 101, 102 Moon-god and bee, 122 Moore, Sir John. 47 " " Moralische Pfenninge of Basel, 11, 92-94
Pain and pleasure, 53 " " Paine, Thomas, the end of pain
series of tokens, 37, 107, 108 Palladas, 10
with
admonitory
75
Parting scenes," sepulchral, in ancient art, 11, 89, 113, 124, 125 Paul, Saint, 29, 84, 134 Pavia, Certosa di, facade of, 67 Pazzi conspiracy, 67 Peacock, as a symbol of immortality, 127, 128 Perseus, legend of, vi Persius, 116 Pessimism, 10, 54, 55, 140, 141, 145-150 Petrarch, 24 Petronius, 3, 6, 10
"
INDEX.
Pherecrates, 133 Phoenix, 29, 75, 94, 128, 129 Pig, associated with Epicurus, 9 Plato, 4
159
like death's
supposed portraits of, on antique gems, 31, 118, 119 Playfair, Lord, 35 Pleasure and pain, 53 Plimsoll, Samuel, 40, 110, 111 Plutarch, 7, 70 Political medals and "tokens," 1, 36, 37, 106-108
Plato,
Political
Pisa, 67
murders and
97 Schomberg, Marshal,
Schiller,
political
executions, 36 Pollajuolo, Antonio del, 67 Pollux, Julius, of Naucratis, 133 Pope, the, and Us trois marts, 16
the
Nymph-
Prevention of unnecessary death, 43 Procuresses and loose women wearing memento mori fingerrings, 134
Propertius, 27 Psyche and butterfly on engraved gems, 118-124, 128 Psyche and Cupid, 120-122, 128 Psyche, symbolical of sexual love, 120, 121, 128 Psyche, symbolical of the human
soul, 118-124, 128 Pythagoras and Pythagorean doctrines, 32, 34, 119, 122, 126, 127
Solomon's," 140 Seals and signets with memento mori devices, 139 Seals of the Caliphs, 141 Seals, Oriental, to be distinguished from talismans, 140 Seals, Oriental, with inscriptions referring to death, 140-142 Second, Jean, medallist, 72 Selinus (Sicily), coins of, 59-61 Seneca, 3, 5, 15, 51, 117 Sepulchral monuments, Etruscan 11, 89, 124, 125 Sepulchral monuments, Greek, 11 89, 112 Sepulchral monuments, with adSeal,
"
152
10
Raimondi, Marcantonio,
Raleigh, Sir Walter, 95 Rantzow, Frantz, death of, 87, 88 Realism, dreadful kind of, in art, 24 Regulus, 47 Reinhard, Hans, medals by, 44 Religious faith, 28-33
Rembrandt, 44
Eespice fincm, 26, 70, 71 Rest and labour, 52, 53 Rethel, A., 23, 35 Riccio (Andrea Briosco), by, 70 Riccio, Domenico, 68
Simonides, 4 Skeleton and skull decorations in jewelry, 133-136, 150, 151 Skeleton and skull decorations on sepulchral monuments, 88, 89 Skeleton and wine-jar devices on Roman gems, 115, 120, 121 Skeletons and skulls in ancient
art, 6-10, 114-117, 120, 121, 129, 130, 181 Skulls in ancient art. See under
bronze
SKELETONS
Sleep and death, 35, 114, 119, 124, 125
Rochefoucauld, vi Rogat, E., medallist, 109 Roland, Madame, 33 Roman and Greek ideas regarding death, 3-10
Solomon's
seal,"
160
INDEX.
Vernon, Admiral, medals on the capture of Porto Bello, 36
Victory over death, 29, 30, 41, 54, 83,84 Vinci, Leonardo da, 35, 53 Virgil, vi, 81, 108, 122 Virginia, tokens wrongly supposed to refer to, 94-97 Virtue (or Valour) overcoming Death, 29, 30, 41, 54, 83, 84 Virtue (or Valour) withers without opposition, 52
See
under
PSYCHE
Spinoza, 2
Sternsee, Carolus von, hat-jewel
of,
143
Brutus," 76
Suicide, 32, 33, 53 Sun-dial inscriptions, 51, 79, 149,
Wadham
Eobert,
College,
satyrical
Walpole,
Sir
Terence, 70 " Terminus " device of Erasmus, 25, 70-74, 139, 140 Thanatos (Death), 124, 125, 126 Theognis of Megara, 54 Threat of death, 36, 37 Time, waste of, is waste of life, 51
medals of, 37 Walton, Izaak, 138 War, death's head badges in, 38, 39 Warton, Thomas, the younger, 125
of death's
Torch
"
on
Roman
gems,
"
Toy-shop
tokens,
medals and
political
1, 36, 37,
106-108
28, 31, 32,
Trimalchio's feast, 6 " Triumph of Death, "in Petrarch's Trionfi, 24 " Triumph of Death," Pisan fresco, 16 " Trois Morts," Les, 14-17 Tuke, Sir Brian, portrait of, 21, 23, 24 Tulpius, motto of, 44 Turnbull, George, 153 "Tuscan Brutus," the (" Lorenzino" de' Medici), 76
Usteri, J. M., 11
Worms,
blematic
Wyon, William,
105, 108
Valdes Leal, 24
"Vampires,"
Young, Edward,
56
9
of
series,
Zimmerman's Dance
series, 19
Death
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