Copyright
by
Kendra Jo Grimmett
2014
The Thesis Committee for Kendra Jo Grimmett
Certifies that this is the approved version of the following thesis:
Woman on Top: Interpreting Barthel Beham’s
Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes
APPROVED BY
SUPERVISING COMMITTEE:
Supervisor:
Jeffrey Chipps Smith
Joan A. Holladay
Woman on Top: Interpreting Barthel Beham’s
Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes
by
Kendra Jo Grimmett, B.A.
Thesis
Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of
The University of Texas at Austin
in Partial Fulfillment
of the Requirements
for the Degree of
Master of Arts
The University of Texas at Austin
August 2014
~ Dedication ~
I dedicate this thesis to my mom, my omi, and my sister, the three powerful
women who lovingly support me in everything that I do, and to my dad, the extraordinary
man who loves and supports us all.
~ Acknowledgements ~
First and foremost, I extend my most sincere and heartfelt thanks to my advisor
Jeffrey Chipps Smith for his continued support and enthusiasm for this project. I could
not have asked for a more attentive or generous mentor. His insightful and exceptionally
prompt feedback on all aspects of my work enriched both this paper and my approach to
the field of art history. I am particularly grateful for Professor Smith’s endless patience
and encouragement, which allowed me the time and freedom to write the thesis I
envisioned from the beginning.
I would also like to thank Joan A. Holladay, my invaluable second reader, both
for the critical and detailed feedback she provided on this paper and for her guidance
throughout my time in Austin. In fact, long before I started this project, Professor
Holladay inspired me to work on topics related to women and gender. It was her
scholarship on medieval women and their manuscripts that helped shape my
methodology and set me on the path to studying objects through a feminist lens.
Many people contributed to the success of this project. To my prospectus
committee: Jeffrey Chipps Smith, Joan A. Holladay, Louis A. Waldman, John Clarke,
and Francesca Consagra, I offer my gratitude for their excellent suggestions on how to
improve my thesis. I am also indebted to the Department of Prints and Drawings at the
Art Institute of Chicago and its helpful staff who let me study their impression of Judith
Seated on the Body of Holofernes and several more sixteenth-century German prints. I
extend my special thanks to Stacy Brodie, whose administrative assistance ensured that
this thesis was submitted in my absence.
For their moral support and editorial feedback, I am thankful for my colleagues
and friends, especially Holley Ledbetter. And last, but certainly not least, I thank my
family for their love and encouragement.
v
~ Abstract ~
Woman on Top: Interpreting Barthel Beham’s
Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes
Kendra Jo Grimmett, M.A.
The University of Texas at Austin, 2014
Supervisor: Jeffrey Chipps Smith
At no point in the apocryphal text does Judith, a wise and beautiful Jewish widow,
sit on Holofernes, the Assyrian general laying siege to her city. Yet, in 1525, Barthel
Beham, a young artist from Nuremberg, created Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes,
an engraving in which a voluptuous nude Judith sits atop Holofernes’s nude torso.
Neither the textual nor the visual traditions explain Beham’s choice to perch the chaste
woman on top of her slain enemy, so what sources inspired the printmaker? What is the
meaning of Judith’s provocative position?
The tiny printed image depicts the relationship between a male figure and a
female figure. Thus, in order to appreciate the complexity of that relationship, I begin this
thesis by reviewing what it meant to be a man and what it meant to be a woman in early
sixteenth-century Germany. Because gender roles and the dynamics between the sexes
were so complex, I encourage scholars to reevaluate Weibermacht (Power of Women)
imagery.
The nudity of Beham’s Judith and her intimate proximity to Holofernes suggest
that Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes is a Weibermacht print. In fact, Judith’s
vi
pose specifically echoes that of Phyllis riding Aristotle, a popular Weibermacht narrative.
The combined eroticism of Judith’s exposed body and her compromising position would
have appealed broadly to male viewers, but Beham likely targeted an erudite audience of
well-educated, affluent men when he designed the multivalent print.
Through close visual analysis and careful consideration of which prints circulated
in early sixteenth-century Nuremberg, I argue that Beham’s Judith resembles witches
riding backwards on goats, crouching Venuses, and a woman in the “reverse-cowgirl” sex
position. Admittedly, it is impossible to know which sources Beham studied in
preparation for Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, but I am inclined to believe that
he wanted each of those jocular references to enrich the meaning of his work, providing a
witty commentary on the power of women. But regardless of the artist’s intentionality, I
think visually literate viewers would have recognized and enjoyed decoding the layers of
meaning in Beham’s odd engraving.
vii
~ Table of Contents ~
List of Figures ........................................................................................................x
Introduction ...........................................................................................................1
Chapter 1: Gender Roles in Early Sixteenth-Century Germany .....................9
Beyond Eden and Athens: the Ancient Origins of Sixteenth-Century Gender
Roles ....................................................................................................11
Mr. and Mrs. Cleaver: Ideal Gender Roles in Early Modern Germany........15
Ideal Masculinity: Hausvater, Citizen, Ruler ......................................17
Ideal Femininity: The Chaste, Silent, and Obedient Wife ..................22
Reality Check: The Other Side of Masculinity and the (Brief) Empowerment
of Women.............................................................................................27
Disruptive Masculinity ........................................................................29
Rebellious Women ...............................................................................35
Mocking Men and Women: "Battle of the Sexes" and Weibermacht Imagery
..............................................................................................................42
Images of Marital Misconduct .............................................................42
Jokes and Gender Relations at Carnivals ............................................47
The Charms of Weibermacht Women ..................................................52
Conclusion ....................................................................................................62
Chapter 2: The Three Faces of Judith and their Audience ............................64
The Chaste Widow and the Heathen .............................................................66
The Triumphant Heroine and the Tyrant ......................................................73
The Femme Fatale and the Fool....................................................................77
Judith Riding Holofernes: Barthel Beham's Weibermacht Print ..................86
Not Everyman: The Educated, Affluent, and Visually Literate (Ideal) Male
Viewer ..................................................................................................89
Conclusion ....................................................................................................94
viii
Chapter 3: The Provocative Position ...............................................................95
The Sixteenth-Century German Art Market and the Little Masters ...........100
Judith the Witch ..........................................................................................106
Judith as Venus ...........................................................................................118
Sex Positions and Censorship .....................................................................126
Conclusion ..................................................................................................139
Conclusion .........................................................................................................141
Figures ................................................................................................................145
Bibliography ......................................................................................................193
Vita . ....................................................................................................................201
ix
~ List of Figures ~
Figure 1:
Judith Beheading Holofernes, Latin Bible, Salzburg, c. 1428-1430.
Munich, Bayerische Staatbibliothek, Cod. Lat. 15701, fol. 174v. After
Artstor .............................................................................................145
Figure 2:
Guyart Desmoulins, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes,
Bible Historiale, France, end of 14th century. Oxford, Bodleian Library,
MS. Bodl. 971, fol. 202v. After Artstor ..........................................145
Figure 3:
Jacopo de’ Barbari, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Italy, c. 1498.
Engraving, 185 x 123 mm. London, British Museum, 1845,0809.1021.
After The British Museum Online ..................................................146
Figure 4:
Judith, Midas-Objekt, Naples, c. 1350-1360. Berlin, Staatliche Museen
zu Berlin, Kupferstichkabinett, 78 E 3, fol. 183r. After Artstor .....146
Figure 5:
Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Speculum Humanae Salvationis
(Mirror of Human Salvation), Germany, c. 1473. Woodcut, fol. 164v.
After Artstor (The Illustrated Bartsch. Vol. 80, German Book Illustration
before 1500: Anonymous Artists, 1457-1475) ...............................146
Figure 6:
Attributed to Bartolomeo Bellano or workshop, Judith with the Head of
Holofernes, Padua, c. 1500. Bronze, 8.4 cm. Formerly Berlin, Kaiser
Friedrich Museum. After Susan Smith, “A Nude Judith from Padua and
the Reception of Donatello's Bronze David,” fig. 3 .......................147
Figure 7:
Nicoletto da Modena, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Italy, c. 1500.
Engraving, 92 x 58 mm. After Artstor (The Illustrated Bartsch. Vol. 25,
Early Italian Masters) ......................................................................147
Figure 8:
Michelangelo Buonarroti, Judith and her Maid with the Head of
Holofernes, Rome, 1508-1512. Fresco. Rome, Sistine Chapel. After
Artstor. ............................................................................................147
Figure 9:
Donatello, Judith and Holofernes, Florence, c. 1456-1457. Partially gilt
bronze, 236 cm. Florence, Palazzo Vecchio. After Artstor ............148
Figure 10: Sandro Botticelli, Return of Judith to Bethulia, Italy, c. 1470. Tempera
on wood, 31 x 24 cm, right half of diptych. Florence, Galleria degli
Uffizi. After Artstor ........................................................................148
x
Figure 11: Georg Pencz, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes,
Nuremberg, c. 1541. Engraving, 49 x 78 mm. London, The British
Museum, 1837,0616.144. After The British Museum Online. .......148
Figure 12: Conrat Meit, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Germany, c. 15121514. Alabaster with gilding, 30 cm. Munich, Bayerisches
Nationalmuseum. After Artstor ......................................................149
Figure 13: Hans Baldung Grien, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Strasbourg, c.
1525. Oil on panel, 208.5 x 74 cm. Nuremberg, Germanisches
Nationalmuseum Nürnberg, Gm1093. After Wikimedia Commons.
.........................................................................................................149
Figure 14: Sebald Beham, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes,
Nuremberg, c. 1520-1530. Engraving, 109 x 68 mm. London, The
British Museum, Gg, 4B.65. After The British Museum Online
.........................................................................................................150
Figure 15: Sebald Beham, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes,
Nuremberg, c. 1520-1530. Engraving, 114 x 71 mm. London, The
British Museum, 1845,0809.1209. After The British Museum Online
.........................................................................................................150
Figure 16: Barthel Beham, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Nuremberg, 1523.
Engraving, 58 x 40 mm. London, The British Museum, 1853,0709.42.
After The British Museum Online ..................................................150
Figure 17: Barthel Beham, Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, Nuremburg,
1525. Engraving, 55 x 37 mm. London, The British Museum,
1892,0411.16. After The British Museum Online ..........................151
Figure 18: Attributed to Cornelis Anthonisz, The Wise Man and the Wise Woman
(“Come and behold me, I signify a wise man; all behold me, for I am a
wise woman”), Amsterdam, second quarter of the 16th century.
Woodcut, Amsterdam, Rijksprentenkabinet. After Yvonne Bleyerveld,
“Chaste, Obedient, and Devout: Biblical Women as Patterns of Female
Virtue in Netherlandish and German Graphic Art, ca. 1500-1750,” fig. 1
.........................................................................................................152
Figure 19: Anton Woensam, A Wise Woman, Germany, c. 1525. Woodcut. Vienna,
Graphische Sammlung Albertina. After German History in Documents
and Images (GHDI) Online .............................................................153
xi
Figure 20: Erhard Schön, The Four Effects of Wine, Germany, 1528. Woodcut.
Coburg, Kunstsammlungen der Veste Coburg, Kupferstichkabinett.
After art-wallpaper.com ..................................................................154
Figure 21: Sebald Beham, Peasants behind the Hedge from the Peasants’ Feast or
the Twelve Months, Germany, c. 1546-1547. Engraving, 5 x 7.3 cm.
New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 66.529.57. After the
Metropolitan Museum of Art Online ..............................................154
Figure 22: Erhard Schön (image), Hans Sachs (text), Seven Wives Complaining
about their Husbands, Germany, 1531. Woodcut. Gotha, Herzogliches
Museum. After landsknechts.com...................................................155
Figure 23: Erhard Schön (image), Hans Sachs (text), Seven Men Complaining about
their Wives, Germany, 1531. Woodcut. Gotha, Herzogliches Museum.
After landsknechts.com...................................................................156
Figure 24: Erhard Schön (image), Hans Sachs (text), There is No Greater Treasure
on Earth than an Obedient Wife who Covets Honor, Germany, c. 1533.
Woodcut. Gotha, Herzogliches Museum. After landsknechts.com
.........................................................................................................157
Figure 25: Israhel van Meckenem, Battle for the Pants, Germany, c. 1495-1503.
Engraving, 160 x 109 mm. London, The British Museum,
1848,1125.141. After The British Museum Online ........................157
Figure 26: Monogrammist MT, A Mistreated Husband, Germany, c. 1540-1550.
Engraving, 74 x 59 mm. London, The British Museum, 1850,1112.227.
After The British Museum Online ..................................................157
Figure 27: Hans Schäuffelein, Diaper Washer, Germany, c. 1536. Woodcut to lost
poem Ho, Ho, Diaper Washer by Hans Sachs. Coburg,
Kunstsammlungen der Veste Coburg, Kupferstichkabinett. After artwallpaper.com .................................................................................158
Figure 28: Housebook Master, Coat of Arms with Peasant on his Head, Germany,
c. 1470-1500. Engraving, 137 x 85 mm. London, The British Museum,
E,1.138. After The British Museum Online ....................................158
Figure 29: Barthel Beham (image), Hans Sachs (text), The Nine Hides of an Angry
Wife, Germany, c. 1520-1540. Woodcut. Gotha, Schlossmuseum. After
art-wallpaper.com ...........................................................................159
xii
Figure 30: Albrecht Dürer, Design for Decoration in the Town Hall of Nuremberg,
Germany, 1521. Pen and brown ink with watercolor, silhouetted and
mounted on another sheet (probably by artist), 256 x 351 mm. New
York, The Morgan Library & Museum. After The Morgan Library &
Museum Online ...............................................................................160
Figure 31: Master ES, Samson and Delilah, Germany, c. 1460-1465. Engraving,
13.8 x 10.7 cm. After Wikimedia Commons .................................161
Figure 32: Hans Burgkmair, Samson and Delilah, from Weiberlisten, Germany, c.
1519. Woodcut, 118 x 95 mm. London, The British Museum,
1895,0122.371. After The British Museum Online ........................161
Figure 33: Lucas van Leyden, Solomon Adoring the Idol of Moloch, Leiden, c.
1514. Engraving, 171 x 135 mm. Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago.
After the Art Institute of Chicago Online .......................................162
Figure 34: Master MZ, Solomon Worshipping False Gods, Germany, 1501.
Engraving, 18.5 x 15.7 cm. Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art,
Rosenwald Collection, 1949.4.1. After National Gallery of Art Online
.........................................................................................................162
Figure 35: Hans Burgkmair, Solomon’s Idolatry, from Weiberlisten, Germany, c.
1519. Woodcut, 118 x 94 mm. London, The British Museum,
1895,0122.369. After The British Museum Online ........................163
Figure 36: Georg Pencz, David and Bathsheba, Germany, c. 1531. Engraving, 47 x
76 mm. London, The British Museum, 1837,0616.140. After The British
Museum Online ...............................................................................163
Figure 37: Hans Burgkmair, David and Bathsheba, from Weiberlisten, Germany,
1519. Woodcut, 119 x 94 mm. London, The British Museum,
1895,0122.370. After The British Museum Online ........................164
Figure 38: Master MZ, Phyllis Riding Aristotle, Germany, c. 1500-1503.
Engraving, 180 x 130 mm. London, The British Museum,
1895,0915.232. After The British Museum Online ........................164
Figure 39: Housebook Master, Phyllis Riding Aristotle, Germany, c. 1483-1488.
Drypoint, 159 mm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam,
Rijksprentenkabinet, RP-P-OB-917. After Wikimedia Commons
.........................................................................................................165
xiii
Figure 40: Hans Baldung Grien, Phyllis Riding Aristotle, Germany, c. 1515.
Woodcut, 33.3 x 23.8 cm. Berlin, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin,
Kupferstichkabinett, 923-2. After Artstor (Photo by Jörg P. Anders)
.........................................................................................................165
Figure 41: Judith, Humilitas, and Jael, Speculum Virginum, c. 1140. London,
British Library, MS Arundel 44, fol. 34v. After Elizabeth Bailey,
“Judith, Jael, and Humilitas in the Speculum Virginum,” fig. 15.1.
........................................................................................................ 166
Figure 42: The Virgin Mary Overcomes the Devil/Judith Kills Holofernes,
Speculum Humanae Salvationis (Mirror of Human Salvation),
Southwest Germany or Austria, c. 1330-1340. Vienna, Österreichische
Nationalbibliothek, Cod. S.N. 2612, fol. 32v. After the Digital Image
Server of the Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der frühen
Neuzeit ............................................................................................166
Figure 43: Erhard Schön, Eve, Sarah, Rebecca, Rachel, Leah, Jael, left sheet of The
Twelve Famous Women of the Old Testament, Germany, c. 1530.
Woodcut, 198 x 383 mm. London, The British Museum, 1909,0612.6.
After The British Museum Online ..................................................167
Figure 44: Erhard Schön, Ruth, Michal, Abigail, Judith, Esther, Susanna, right
sheet of The Twelve Famous Women of the Old Testament, Germany, c.
1530. Woodcut, 196 x 382 mm. London, The British Museum,
1909,0612.7. After The British Museum Online ............................167
Figure 45: Jost Amman, Judith the Moderate, from Celebrated Women of the Old
Testament, Germany, c. 1568-1596. Etching, 84 x 56 mm. London, The
British Museum, 1895,0617.16. After the British Museum Online
.........................................................................................................168
Figure 46: Jost Amman, Susanna the Chaste, from Celebrated Women of the Old
Testament, Germany, c. 1568-1596. Etching, 84 x 56 mm. London, The
British Museum, 1895,0617.18. After the British Museum Online
.........................................................................................................168
Figure 47: Attributed to Baccio Baldini, Judith and Holofernes, Florence, c. 14651480. Engraving, 115 mm, London, The British Museum, 1852,0301.3.
After The British Museum Online ..................................................169
xiv
Figure 48: Parmigianino, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes, Italy, c.
1503-1540. Etching, 154 x 92 mm. London, The British Museum,
W,1.16. After The British Museum Online ....................................169
Figure 49: Hans Baldung Grien, Eve, Strasbourg, c. 1524-1525. Oil on panel, 208 x
83.5 cm. Budapest, Szépművészeti Múzeum. After Wikimedia
Commons ........................................................................................170
Figure 50: Hans Baldung Grien, Venus and Cupid, Strasbourg, c. 1525. Oil on
panel, 208 x 84 cm. Otterlo, Kröller-Müller Museum, KM 110.804.
After Wikimedia Commons ............................................................170
Figure 51: Jacob Binck, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Germany, c. 15201559. Engraving, 45 x 31 mm. London, The British Museum,
1863,0725.663. After The British Museum Online ........................171
Figure 52: Hans Ladenspelder, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Germany, 1535.
Engraving, 68 x 47 mm. London, The British Museum, 1867,0713.53.
After The British Museum Online ..................................................171
Figure 53: Sebald Beham after Barthel Beham, Judith with the Head of Holofernes,
Germany, 1547. Engraving, 175 x 48 mm. London, The British
Museum, 1845,0809.1210. After The British Museum Online ......172
Figure 54: Monogrammist RB after Barthel Beham, Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes, Germany, c. 1530-1550. Engraving, 63 x 38 mm. London,
The British Museum, 1875,0508.1658. After The British Museum
Online .............................................................................................172
Figure 55: Barthel Beham, Cleopatra, Germany, 1524. Engraving, 58 x 39 mm.
London, The British Museum, 1853,0709.44. After The British Museum
Online..............................................................................................173
Figure 56: Albrecht Dürer, Witch Riding Backwards on a Goat, Nuremberg, c.
1500-1502. Engraving, 115 x 72 mm. Chicago, the Art Institute of
Chicago, 1938.1476. After the Art Institute of Chicago Online .....174
Figure 57: Hans Baldung Grien, The Witches’ Sabbath, Germany, 1510. Woodcut,
375 x 259 mm. London, The British Museum, 1852,1009.203. After The
British Museum Online ...................................................................174
xv
Figure 58: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael or Giulio Romano, Lo Stregozzo
(The Witches’ Procession), Italy, c. 1520s. Engraving, 30 x 63 cm.
Austin, The Blanton Museum of Art, Leo Steinberg Collection,
2002.1676. After the Blanton Museum of Art Online ....................175
Figure 59: Hans Baldung Grien, Weather Spell, in Johann Geiler von Kayserberg’s
Die Emeis, fol. 37v. Germany, 1516. Woodcut, 8.8 x 14.2 cm. Frankfurt,
Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg. After Bodo
Brinkmann, “Witches’ Lust and the Fall of Man,” fig. 12 .............175
Figure 60: Barthel Beham, detail of Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes,
Nuremburg, 1525. Engraving, 55 x 37 mm. London, The British
Museum, 1892,0411.16. After The British Museum Online ..........176
Figure 61: The Serpent Tempting Eve, Spiegel Menschlicher Behaltnuss (Mirror of
Human Salvation), Germany, c. 1481. Woodcut, fol. 2r, col. 1. After
Artstor (The Illustrated Bartsch, vol. 83, German Book Illustration
before 1500: Anonymous Artists, 1481-1482) ...............................176
Figure 62: Albrecht Dürer, The Four Witches, Germany, 1497. Engraving, 190 x
132 mm. London, The British Museum, 1910,0112.304. After The
British Museum Online ...................................................................177
Figure 63: Barthel Beham, Three Women and Death, Germany, c. 1525-1527.
Engraving, 73 x 54 mm. London, The British Museum, 1862,0712.608.
After The British Museum Online ..................................................177
Figure 64: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael, Judgment of Paris, Italy, c. 15101520. Engraving, 29.1 x 43.7 cm. New York, The Metropolitan Museum
of Art, 19.74.1. After The Metropolitan Museum of Art Online ....178
Figure 65: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael, detail of Judgment of Paris, Italy,
c. 1510-1520. Engraving, 29.1 x 43.7 cm. New York, The Metropolitan
Museum of Art, 19.74.1. After The Metropolitan Museum of Art Online
.........................................................................................................178
Figure 66: Barthel Beham, A Nude Woman Seated on a Cuirass, Nuremberg, c.
1520-1540. Engraving, 51 x 35 mm. London, The British Museum,
1853,0709.46. After The British Museum Online ..........................178
xvi
Figure 67: Crouching Venus (Lely’s Venus), Rome, 2nd century AD. Marble
sculpture, 1.120 m, Roman copy after Hellenistic original from 200 BC.
London, Royal Collection, on long-term loan to The British Museum.
After the Royal Collection Trust Online .........................................179
Figure 68: Marcantonio Raimondi, Crouching Venus, Italy, c. 1510-1527.
Engraving, 223 x 146 mm. London, The British Museum, H,2.68. After
The British Museum Online............................................................180
Figure 69: Albrecht Altdorfer, Crouching Venus, Germany, c. 1525-1530.
Engraving, 61 x 40 mm. London, The British Museum, 1881,0409.16.
After The British Museum Online ..................................................180
Figure 70: Power of Women, German Miscellany, early 15th century. Washington,
D.C., Library of Congress, Rosenwald Collection, MS 4, fol. 8r. After
Henrike Lähnemann, “The Cunning of Judith in Late Medieval German
Texts,” fig. 13.1 available on Open Edition Books Online ............181
Figure 71: Master Caspar of Regensburg, Venus and the Lover, Regensburg, c.
1485. Colored woodcut, 25.7 x 36.5 cm. Berlin, Staatliche Museen
Berlin, Kupferstichkabinett, 467-1908. Photo by Joerg P. Anders
available on Art Resource Online ...................................................182
Figure 72: Barthel Beham, Venus and Cupid, Germany, c. 1525. Drawing, 180 x
135 mm. Leiden, Rijksuniversiteit, Prentencabinet, PK. After Kurt
Löcher, Barthel Beham: ein Maler aus dem Dürerkreis, fig. 94 ....183
Figure 73: Monogrammist IB, Venus and Cupid, Germany, c. 1523-1530. Scabbard
design engraving, 180 x 24 mm. London, The British Museum,
1870,0625.114. After The British Museum Online ........................184
Figure 74: Allaert Claesz, Mars, Venus, and Cupid, Netherlands, c. 1520-1530.
Engraving, 65 mm. London, The British Museum, 1862, 1213.35. After
The British Museum Online............................................................185
Figure 75: Marcantonio Raimondi, Mars, Venus, and Cupid, Italy, c. 1508-1510.
Engraving, 296 x 211 mm. London, The British Museum,
1858,0417.1581. After The British Museum Online ......................185
Figure 76: Enea Vico after Parmigianino, Venus and Mars Embracing near Vulcan
at his Forge, Italy, 1543. Engraving, 225 x 335 mm. London, The
British Museum, 1867,0413.564. After The British Museum Online
.........................................................................................................186
xvii
Figure 77: Sandro Botticelli, Venus and Mars, Italy, c. 1485. Tempera on panel,
69.2 x 173.4 cm. London, The National Gallery, NG915. After
Wikimedia Commons .....................................................................186
Figure 78: Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes, Bible, Germany, c.
1478. Woodcut. After Artstor (The Illustrated Bartsch, Vol. 82: German
Book Illustration before 1500: Anonymous Artists, 1478-80) .......187
Figure 79: Sarcophagus with Scenes of a Bacchanalia, Italy, c. 140-160 AD. White
marble, 204 x 510 x 66 cm. Naples, Museo Archeologico Nazionale di
Napoli, Inv. No. 27710. After The Online Database of Ancient Art
.........................................................................................................188
Figure 80: Detail of Sarcophagus with Scenes of a Bacchanalia, Italy, c. 140-160
AD. White marble, 204 x 510 x 66 cm. Naples, Museo Archeologico
Nazionale di Napoli, Inv. No. 27710. After The Online Database of
Ancient Art
..............................................................................189
Figure 81: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael, fragment of Bacchanal, Italy, c.
1510-1520. Engraving, 143 x 175 mm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum,
Rijksprentenkabinet RP-P-OB-12.138. After the Rijksmuseum Online
.........................................................................................................189
Figure 82: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael, Bacchanal, Italy, c. 1510-1520.
Engraving, 150 x 505 mm. Oxford, Ashmolean Museum. After the
Ashmolean Museum Online ...........................................................190
Figure 83: After Marcantonio Raimondi after Giulio Romano, Position 14, from I
Modi, Venice, c. 1527. Woodcut after I Modi. After Lynne Lawner, I
Modi: the Sixteen Pleasures, page 87 .............................................191
Figure 84: Barthel Beham, Death and the Sleeping Woman, Nuremberg, c. 1520s.
Engraving, 54 x 77 mm. Paris, Musée du Louvre, Département des
Artsgraphiques, Collection Edmond de Rothschild, 6895 LR/Recto.
After the Louvre Online ..................................................................192
Figure 85: Barthel Beham, Bathing Woman, Nuremberg, c. 1520s. Engraving, 67 x
42 mm. Coburg, Kunstsammlungen der Veste Coburg, Inv. Nr. I,125,32.
After Kurt Löcher, Barthel Beham: ein Maler aus dem Dürerkreis, fig.
36.....................................................................................................192
xviii
~ Introduction ~
The Book of Judith, which dates to the second century BC and describes a pious
woman’s triumph over her foreign enemy, begins with Holofernes, the chief general of
King Nebuchadnezzar’s army, laying siege to the Israelite town of Bethulia.1 After thirtyfour days of unanswered prayers and drying cisterns, Bethulia’s thirsty inhabitants’ faith
in God wavers, and they consider surrendering to the Assyrians. Judith, a beautiful and
devout widow, takes matters into her own hands. First, she prays to God for strength and
the success of her plan. Then, Judith removes her widow’s garments, dresses in fine
clothing and jewelry, and leaves the city with her maid and a bag of kosher food. When
Judith enters the Assyrian camp, the soldiers’ “eyes [are] amazed,” and they “wonder
exceedingly at her beauty” before taking her to their leader.2 Judith explains to
Holofernes that she will help him defeat her people. Impressed by her wisdom and
enticed by her beauty, Holofernes welcomes Judith to stay. For three days Judith remains
in the Assyrian camp, going out into the valley to bathe and pray each night. On the
fourth night, with hopes of seducing his alluring guest, Holofernes invites Judith to a
private banquet in his tent. Wearing “all her woman’s finery,” Judith dines with
Holofernes, who drinks “a great quantity of wine, much more than he had ever drunk.”3
1
The Book of Judith is one of the seven deuterocanonical books excluded from most non-Catholic Bibles.
Wary of its historic veracity, Protestants assigned the Book of Judith to the Apocrypha. Throughout the text
I quote passages from the Book of Judith that are available in the Douay-Rheims Bible + Challoner Notes,
accessed August 8, 2014, 2014, http://www.drbo.org/chapter/18001.htm, and in The HarperCollins Study
Bible: New Revised Standard Version, with the Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books, 1st ed. (New York,
NY: HarperCollins, 1993). In place of several archaic verses from the Douay Version (DV) Book of Judith,
I substituted the more easily comprehensible translations from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV).
The meaning of each quoted chapter and verse is comparable in the two translations, but it is important to
note that the numbering in the NRSV does not match the DV.
2 Judith 10:14 DV. Throughout the narrative, the Assyrians marvel at Judith’s beauty and wisdom. For
example, Judith 11: 18-19 DV, “And all these words pleased Holofernes, and his servants, and they
admired her wisdom, and they said to one another: There is not such another woman upon earth in look, in
beauty, and in sense of words.”
3 Judith 12:15, 20 NRSV.
1
Left alone in the tent with the drunk general “[lying] on his bed, fast asleep,”
Judith prays to God for the strength she needs to accomplish her bloody task.4 Retrieving
Holofernes’s sword from his bedpost, Judith approaches the bed, “take[s] him by the hair
of his head,” and “strike[s] twice upon his neck, and cut[s] off his head.”5 After rolling
Holofernes’s body off the bed and covering it with the canopy, she gives his head to her
maid, who places it in the food bag. The women leave the camp under the guise of going
to pray. When they reach the gates of Bethulia, Judith shows the Jewish people
Holofernes’s head and proclaims:
The Lord has struck him down by the hand of a woman. As the Lord lives,
who has protected me in the way I went, I swear that it was my face that
seduced him to his destruction, and that he committed no sin with me, to
defile and shame me.6
The Jewish people easily defeat the leaderless Assyrians, and the city honors Judith for
the rest of her life.
Although visual representations of Judith’s narrative changed over the centuries,
the majority of images created before 1500 recall key scenes and elements from the
apocryphal text. For example, most artists depict one of three moments: Judith beheading
Holofernes (fig. 1), Judith handing the general’s head to her maid (fig. 2), or Judith
holding Holofernes’s head and sword (fig. 3). The setting for these scenes and the
presence of Judith’s maid vary. Often Judith appears inside Holofernes’s tent with her
maid right behind her (fig. 4, lower left corner). In other instances, Judith completes her
deadly task outdoors without assistance (fig. 5). There are endless variations on the Judith
theme, but whether she is raising her arm to swing the fatal blow or leaving behind
Holofernes’s body after the deed is done, Judith is identified by her attributes: the
general’s sword and severed head.
4
Judith 13:4 DV.
Judith 13: 9-10 DV.
6 Judith 13: 15-16 NRSV.
5
2
Until the turn of the sixteenth century, Judith appeared fully-clothed in artistic
depictions.7 The first images of nude Judiths originated in Italy around 1500. Although it
is unclear which artist removed Judith’s clothes first, some of the earliest examples are a
Paduan bronze statuette (fig. 6) and Nicoletto da Modena’s print (fig. 7). 8 But
representing the courageous Jewess as a classical nude did not become popular in Italy.
Instead, when Michelangelo painted his version of the story on the ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel (fig. 8), he followed in the tradition of fifteenth-century Italian masters, such as
Donatello (fig. 9) and Sandro Botticelli (fig. 10). Michelangelo’s rendering of Judith
from about 1508-1512, which spread throughout sixteenth-century Europe in prints (fig.
11), shows the heroine in classical garb alongside her maid as she leaves Holofernes’s
headless body in his tent. Although the Italian artists played with Judith’s state of dress—
displaying glimpses of her legs, arms, and breasts, the nude Judith did not take hold in
Italy.
In contrast to the Italians’ treatment of Judith, the sixteenth-century Germans
embraced the alluring widow’s story as another opportunity to depict the female nude.
Conrat Meit’s full-length, alabaster statue of Judith with the Head of Holofernes (fig. 12),
which dates to about 1512-1514 and stands less than a foot tall, is the earliest example of
a nude Judith from Germany. A decade or so later, about 1524-1525, Hans Baldung
Grien painted a full-length, larger-than-life nude Judith (fig. 13). Yet it was probably a
pair of brothers in southern Germany who were most responsible for the spread of the
nude Judith motif.
Sebald and Barthel Beham, printmakers and painters from
For more on Judith in the textual and visual traditions, see Kevin . Brine, Elena Ciletti, and Henrike
Lähnemann, eds., The Sword of Judith: Judith Studies Across the Disciplines (Cambridge .K.: Open Book
Publishers, 2010); Henrike Lähnemann, “Hystoria Judith: deutsche Judithdichtungen vom 12. bis zum 16.
Jahrhundert” (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2006); Laura Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne: Images du vice, images de
la vertu,” in Judith et Holopherne (Paris: Descl e de Brouwer, 2003), 3-123; and Jan Białostocki, “Judith:
Story, Image, and Symbol. Giorgione’s Painting in the Evolution of the Theme,” in The Message of
Images: Studies in the History of Art, Bibliotheca Artibus et Historiae (Vienna: IRSA, 1988), 113-131.
8 Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image, and Symbol,” 124; for more on the nude Judith, see Susan L. Smith,
“A Nude Judith from Padua and the eception of Donatello’s Bronze David,” Comitatus: A Journal of
Medieval and Renaissance Studies 25, no. 1 (1994): 59-80.
7
3
Nuremburg, produced at least four different engravings of Judith au naturel.9 Sebald
Beham (1500-1550), the older of the two men, designed two prints of Judith with her
maid sometime between 1520 and 1530 (figs. 14-15). Although the maid’s body is
covered by well-placed heads, a bag, or clothing, Judith’s bare body is on display. Barthel
Beham (1502-1540) dated his first nude Judith to 1523 (fig. 16). Here, Judith’s full
breasts and rounded stomach are the center of the composition. Beham covers her legs
with clingy drapery that calls attention to her bare limbs underneath the cloth. Judith sits
on a ledge with an upright sword in her right hand and Holofernes’s upturned head in her
left. Her expression seems regretful as she looks down into the face of the man she just
slayed. But as striking and different as Beham’s 1523 Judith may be, his second nude
Judith design is much more puzzling and, I will argue, complex.
Barthel Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes engraving from 1525
(fig. 17) boldly deviates from both the textual account and the visual tradition.10 Nowhere
in the Book of Judith does the text describe the heroine as nude or sitting on Holofernes,
yet in this small print, approximately 55 x 37 millimeters, Beham positions a shapely,
nude Judith atop Holofernes’s headless, nude torso. With the general’s sword in her right
hand and his head in her left, the beautiful widow turns her head sharply to the left as the
breeze blows her untamed curls in the same direction. With a slight scowl and dark,
foreboding eyes, Judith gazes down at her prey’s bearded head. Holofernes’s useless arm
rests on the ground, but there is no sign of the general’s now equally-useless genitalia. In
9
All four nude-Judith engravings by the Beham brothers appear in the catalogue section of Thomas Ulrich
Schauerte and Jürgen Müller, Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg: Konvention und Subversion in der
Druckgrafik der Beham-Brüder (Emsdetten, Germany: Edition Imorde, 2011), 249- 252; and the “Heroines
and Worthy Women” subsection in H. Diane ussell, Eva/Ave: Woman in Renaissance and Baroque Prints
(Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art / Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 1990), 6668.
10 Barthel Beham, Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, 1525, engraving; Bartsch 3; Pauli 1911, nos. 24. This print survives in multiple copies: one belongs to the Art Institute of Chicago (1920.1203, 54 x 36
mm), one belongs to the Museen der Stadt Nürnberg (St.N.464, 56 x 36 mm), one belongs to the
Graphische Sammlung der Universität in Erlangen (AK 531, 54 x 37 mm), and two belong to the British
Museum (1892,0411.16, 55 x 37 mm; Gg,4I.5, 55 x 38 [Plate-mark, excl. c. 4mm margin]). The British
Museum also owns a reverse copy of about 1530 by the Monogrammist R.B. (1875,0508.1658; 63 x 38
mm). Since several impressions of Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes survive, it seems that the image
was a popular one or, at least, that collectors carefully stored their copies.
4
place of the missing penis, Beham substitutes Holofernes’s sword—which Judith firmly
grasps—near the general’s navel. In the background, the artist includes neither the
Assyrian camp nor Holofernes’s tent. Instead, the two figures appear to be outdoors near
long grasses. In this print Beham has not only stripped Judith of her clothing and her
narrative, but he has also robbed the widow of her chastity by placing her in such a
shockingly intimate and compromised position. What inspired Beham to depict Judith
this way?
Neither the apocryphal story nor the visual tradition explains the artist’s use of
such a lascivious position. Even though other artists removed Judith’s fine garments long
before Beham, he eroticizes her state of undress in a truly unique manner. Beham’s print
is the only image I have encountered that places Judith—nude or clothed—sitting on
Holofernes. Why did he put the chaste widow’s fleshy, exposed bottom in direct contact
with the dead general’s bare chest? What inspired Beham’s break from tradition? How
would sixteenth-century viewers have interpreted this image?
In this thesis I employ a combination of historical and visual analysis to answer
those questions, placing Beham and his odd print into broader sixteenth-century
discourses. Previous scholars have only given this print—and, often, this artist—a
passing glance in catalogs, but I believe that this image can enrich our understanding of
sixteenth-century gender relations, print culture, and Beham’s place in the history of art.11
Despite its diminutive proportions, Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes is a complex,
clever print with layers of meaning for the intrepid viewer to decode.
In the first chapter of this thesis, I propose that Beham’s Judith Seated on the
Body of Holofernes is primarily about the relationship between a man and a woman. In
order to appreciate the complexity and subtlety of sixteenth-century gender dynamics and
roles, I begin by reviewing the history of gender relationships, including biblical
precedents and ancient “scientific” treatises. Next, I transition into a discussion of ideal
11
Russell, Eva/Ave, 67; Schauerte and Müller, Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg, 249-250.
5
masculinity and femininity as imagined during the early sixteenth century. Following that
presentation of exemplary male and female behavior is a “reality check,” or an overview
of the ways men and women did not behave according to the rigorous expectations
outlined in the preceding section. Throughout the chapter I employ historical fact,
contemporary texts, and various images to support my point that gender roles and
relationships were complicated, so much so that scholars should reconsider how they
interpret Weibermacht (Power of Women) imagery. Depictions of women duping men
could be didactic warnings against the power of women, but they could also be humorous
and sexually exciting for the sixteenth-century German men who ruled their households
and communities without constant fear of women.
Having established that Weibermacht imagery merits closer analysis, I argue in
my second chapter that Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes is a
Weibermacht print. Like gender relationships in the early modern period, Judith was a
complex, ambivalent figure; therefore, establishing the “face,” or type, of Judith in
Beham’s print is crucial for interpretation. First, I discuss Judith as the Chaste Widow
who could represent myriad virtues or the personification of the Virgin Mary or the
Church. Following that section is an overview of Judith as the Triumphant Heroine who
stands for righteous people seeking victories over any number of foes. Finally, I
demonstrate how Beham’s Judith is a Femme Fatale who uses her sexuality and cunning
to outwit and execute her seemingly-superior male enemy—just like the other wily
women of the Weibermacht tradition. Throughout this chapter I explain how Holofernes’s
role changes in relation to Judith, as well as how Beham’s Judith could not be the Chaste
Widow or the Triumphant Heroine, only the Femme Fatale. Since she is nude and
erotically positioned on Holofernes’s chest, I insist that Beham created this print for men.
As a means of transitioning from chapter 2 to chapter 3, I introduce the elite ideal male
audience for whom Beham designed his multivalent print. Those well-educated, welltraveled, affluent men would have enjoyed the intellectual challenge presented by
Judith’s odd position, perhaps as much as they delighted in her nude body.
6
I begin chapter 3 with an overview of Barthel Beham’s limited biography, but my
analysis in the final chapter has little to do with how Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes relates to the artist’s life. Instead, I focus more broadly on the historical
context of early modern Germany, placing Beham and his print at the heart of the
Reformation. The rebellious young printmaker, who was briefly exiled from Nuremberg
in 1525, faced a variety of challenges early in his career. First, he lived and worked in the
shadow of the internationally renowned German master Albrecht Dürer. Second, he
experienced a radical shift in the art market brought on by the eformation’s distrust of
religious imagery. Because most patrons no longer commissioned sacred works, artists in
the 1520s were forced to invent secular pieces if they wanted to stay in business. While
some artists failed to adapt, Barthel and his brother Sebald thrived in the new artistic
environment by experimenting with classical and erotic themes.
Much of chapter 3 consists of my close visual analysis of Judith Seated on the
Body of Holofernes. Since Nuremberg was a trading center, Barthel Beham and his
fellow printmakers known as the Little Masters undoubtedly had access to popular
German and Italian prints. In my final sections, I identify potential German and Italian
sources for Beham’s intimately positioned Judith and Holofernes. During the early
sixteenth century, artists were encouraged to imitate the works of other masters,
especially the Italian masters whose prints journeyed north with merchants and other
travelers. Keeping this concept in mind, I propose that Beham may have referenced
various prints of witches, Venus, and sex positions in his Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes. Personally, I am inclined to attribute artistic intentionality to Beham; I think
he probably meant to quote witches riding backwards on goats, crouching Venuses, and
the woman-on-top “reverse cowgirl” sex position in his erotic depiction of Judith and
Holofernes. His allusions to other powerful women enrich the meaning of his print. But
even if he did not include those references on purpose, I argue that his elite audience—
the same group of well-educated, well-traveled men who collected Italian and German
prints—could have read those references into Beham’s unorthodox depiction of Judith.
7
What becomes clear in this thesis is that Power of Women imagery, which I
broaden in chapter 3 to include “Battle of the Sexes,” Weibermacht, witches, Venus, and
sex position depictions, was very popular in patriarchal sixteenth-century Germany. The
empowered men who ran their households and communities may have had performance
anxieties or experienced feelings of helplessness when confronted by female beauty, but
they seemed to enjoy seeing (if not living with) powerful women—especially powerful,
nude women. It would be easy to dismiss the power of women as fearsome and unwanted
(as much scholarship does), but I propose that the intellectual men for whom Beham
designed his print would work beyond a single, obvious interpretation of women’s power.
Instead, they might consider how such sensuous, sexual power could hurt or please the
male recipient of the woman’s attention—a line of thinking that surely amused and
aroused male viewers, whether they discussed Power of Women imagery in groups or
enjoyed it in private. Ultimately, Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes is an image of
a nude woman in a risqué position created for the pleasure of visually literate men.
8
~ Chapter 1 ~
Gender Roles in Early Sixteenth-Century Germany
Stripped of its traditional setting, auxiliary characters, and several significant
story elements, Barthel Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes (fig. 17)
focuses on the relationship between a female figure and a male figure. The Assyrian
camp and the Jewish city are gone. The helpful maid and the bag of kosher food are
nowhere in the composition. Judith’s clothes are missing, as are Holofernes’s tent and
armor. What remains is a puzzling portrayal of a dead man and the woman who slayed
him. How might a sixteenth-century German audience interpret the relationship between
this Judith and this Holofernes?
In order to recognize the multiple potential messages conveyed by Beham’s
engraving, one must first grasp the complexity and diversity of sixteenth-century gender
roles. What did it mean to be a man? What did it mean to be a woman? In this chapter, I
begin by reviewing the origins of early modern gender stereotypes. Then I discuss
sixteenth-century concepts of ideal masculinity and femininity. In contrast to those
exemplars, I turn my attention to the disruptive side of masculinity and the ways in which
women took active roles in the work force, in the Reformation, and, sometimes, in the
home. As the discussion of gender progresses, early modern gender roles are increasingly
complicated, shifting from black-and-white to shades of grey. Finally, I transition into a
section on images of gender conflict, specifically “Battle for the Pants” and Weibermacht
(Power of Women) prints. Supported by extensive historical evidence, I urge scholars to
nuance their understanding of Weibermacht images through a closer and more critical
inspection of gender relationships.
9
Historians have written entire books on masculinity, femininity, gender
relationships, and marriage in sixteenth-century Germany.1 Art historians have analyzed
countless prints of marital violence and women in dominant positions over men. 2 But I
have not found a study that satisfactorily combines a subtle analysis of the complexity of
early modern gender and the popularity of images pitting men against women.3 The early
modern viewers who encountered images of aggressive or cunning women lived in a
patriarchal society that engrained certain ideas about gender roles in their minds. By
connecting social and cultural history with contemporary images about gender
relationships, I establish both the fertile ground from which Beham created his Judith
Seated on the Body of Holofernes and the foundation on which I interpret his print in this
thesis.
1
See, for example: Scott H. Hendrix and Susan C. Karant-Nunn, eds., Masculinity in the Reformation Era,
vol. 83, Sixteenth-Century Essays and Studies (Kirksville, MO: Truman State University Press, 2008);
Heide Wunder, “He Is the Sun, She Is the Moon”: Women in Early Modern Germany (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1998); Joel F. Harrington, Reordering Marriage and Society in Reformation
Germany (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1995); and Ulinka Rublack, ed., Gender in Early
Modern German History, Past & Present Publications (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press,
2002).
2 See, for example: Susan Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened: Old Testament Women in Northern
Prints, Harvard University Art Museums Gallery Series 6 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Art
Museums, 1993); Keith P. F. Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes and the World pside Down,” in Peasants,
Warriors, and Wives: Popular Imagery in the Reformation (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989),
101-126; H. Diane Russell, Eva/Ave: Woman in Renaissance and Baroque Prints (Washington, D.C.:
National Gallery of Art / Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 1990); Diane Wolfthal,
“Women’s Community and Male Spies: Erhard Schön’s How Seven Women Complain about Their
Worthless Husbands,” in Attending to Early Modern Women, ed. Susan Dwyer Amussen and Adele F.
Seeff, Center for Renaissance and Baroque Studies (Newark, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1998),
117-154.
3 Bette Talvacchia’s Taking Positions: On the Erotic in Renaissance Culture (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1999), Linda C. Hults’ The Witch as Muse: Art, Gender, and Power in Early Modern
Europe (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 2005), and Natalie Zemon Davis’ “Women on Top:
Symbolic Sexual Inversion and Political Disorder in Early Modern Europe,” in The Reversible World:
Symbolic Inversion in Art and Society, Symbol, Myth, and Ritual Series (Ithaca: Cornell University Press,
1978), 147–90, most closely resemble the type of scholarship I hope to produce. They each discuss both the
subtleties of the historical context and the textual and visual media produced during the early modern
period. Yet Talvacchia does not address Germany, Hults does not discuss Judith, and I find parts of Davis’
argument problematic. No current scholarship specifically analyzes Barthel Beham’s Judith Seated on the
Body of Holofernes using the methods of Talvacchia, Hults, or Davis.
10
Beyond Eden and Athens: The Ancient Origins of Sixteenth-Century Gender Roles
As the Reformation swept through Germany in the early sixteenth century,
reformers sought changes in the church and the Christianization of all aspects of life. 4
Instead of chastity being the most holy bodily state and the (corrupt) church being the
moral example for the community, reformers placed marriage and the household at the
center of good Christian living. The household, governed by a fair patriarch and
maintained by a supportive wife, became the essential unit used to build a moral society.
Yet, even with marriage elevated to a new prominence, the reformers did not aim to
change traditional gender roles.5 On the contrary, ancient ideas about gender differences
were engrained in the minds of sixteenth-century Germans, including the newlywed
Martin Luther and the other leaders of the Reformation. Although the Bible states that
men and women are spiritually equal in the eyes of God and can both be saved through
faith, the early Church Fathers’ writings and the ancient Greek medical treatises describe
how men are physically, mentally, and morally superior to women.6
Because God created Adam first, early theologians determined that man was a
more perfect image of God and had “natural preeminence over Eve.”7 Following this
logic, as a weaker, secondary vessel created from Adam’s rib, woman was always
intended to be man’s subservient helpmate.8 When Eve fell prey to the serpent’s
Wunder, “He is the Sun, She is the Moon”, 45.
Sherrin Marshall, “Women in the eformation Era,” in Becoming Visible: Women in European History,
ed. Renate Bridenthal and Claudia Koonz (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1977), 172.
6 Merry E. Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers: Women and the eformation in Germany,” in Women in
Reformation and Counter-Reformation Europe: Public and Private Worlds, ed. Sherrin Marshall
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989), 12; Heide Wunder, “What Made a Man a Man? : Sixteenthand Seventeenth-Century Findings,” in Gender in Early Modern German History, ed. Ulinka Rublack, Past
& Present Publications (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 22; Cissie C. Fairchilds,
Women in Early Modern Europe, 1500-1700, 1st ed., The Longman History of European Women (Harlow,
U.K.: Pearson/Longman, 2007), 196.
7 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 3; for more on theologians’ ideas about women, see Susan L.
Smith, The Power of Women: A Topos in Medieval Art and Literature (Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press, 1995); Fairchild’s chapter, “Inferiors or Equals? Ideas about the Nature of Women,” in
Women in Early Modern Europe; and ussell’s introduction in Eva/Ave.
8 Elissa B. Weaver, “Gender,” in A Companion to the Worlds of the Renaissance, ed. Guido Ruggiero, 1st
ed. (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2008), 190; Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 3.
4
5
11
persuasive lies and ate the forbidden fruit, she fatally demonstrated her sex’s
susceptibility to sin and the “devil’s allure.”9 But Eve did not stop at personal
disobedience; she encouraged Adam to eat the fruit, too, cementing womankind’s role as
temptress and the bane of man’s existence.10
This patristic interpretation of Eve was alive and well in the sixteenth century
when, in his “Lectures on Timothy 1” (Vorlesung über 1. Timotheus, c. 1527-1528),
Martin Luther wrote, “Adam was deceived not by the serpent, but by the woman.” 11 In
short, Luther, John Calvin, and other proponents of the Reformation believed that Eve,
who sinned first, was directly responsible for mankind’s expulsion from Paradise,
mortality, toil, and sorrow.12 Therefore, as daughters of Eve, all women were considered
naturally rebellious and inherently vulnerable to evil.13 For their own protection—and the
spiritual safety of the men around them, women needed constant supervision and the
guiding hand of a man to keep them on the virtuous path. Early modern theologians
found support for that concept of necessary supervision in Genesis 3:16, when God
places Eve under Adam’s rule: “thou shalt be under thy husband’s power, and he shall
have dominion over thee.”14 Luther, who insisted that men and women were created
equally but made unequal after the Fall, interpreted both women’s pain in childbirth and
their subjection to male authority as God’s punishments for Eve’s sin.15 Life after the Fall
was a constant battle between virtue and vice—would one’s path lead to Heaven or Hell?
Left to their own devices, women would inevitably choose the wrong path, so men were
tasked with the physical and spiritual well-being of their wives and daughters. All that
9
Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 3.
It is no coincidence that medieval images of the Fall often depict the serpent with a woman’s head. In
fact, it seems quite logical within the history of Power of Women imagery to put a female head on the very
first deceiver.
11 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 3.
12 Christa Grössinger, Picturing Women in Late Medieval and Renaissance Art, Manchester Medieval
Studies (Manchester, U.K. ; New York: Manchester University Press / St. Martin’s Press, 1997), 1;
Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 3; Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers,” 12.
13 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 3
14 Genesis 3:16 DV; Christa Grössinger, Humour and Folly in Secular and Profane Prints of Northern
Europe, 1430-1540 (London: Harvey Miller, 2002), 107-108.
15 Fairchilds, Women in Early Modern Europe, 196; Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 121.
10
12
men asked for in return was obedience.16 But they had to remain vigilant against
women’s negative influence because, as Lutheran pastor Conrad Sam wrote in 1534,
“Women are still Eve. They still hold the apple in their hand.”17 After all, men are sons of
Adam, all too easily tempted by Eves.
The early Church Fathers of the fourth and fifth centuries cautioned against the
dangers of women, from their disruptive speech to their uncontrollable sexual desires.18
In his Against Jovinianus (Adversus Jovinianum, c. 393), which influenced much of
medieval thinking, St. Jerome (c. 342-420) wrote that even touching a woman would
have “evil consequences” and that the presence of a wife would distract a husband from
his prayers.19 He advocated an ascetic lifestyle isolated from the luxuries and temptations
of everyday life, yet “even in the desert [the Church Fathers who fled the world] failed to
rid themselves of their erotic fantasies of women.”20 St. Augustine (354-430) wrote On
the Good of Marriage (De Bono Coniugali, c. 400) in defense of women against the
extreme opinions of St. Jerome. But he, too, feared the power and uncontrollability of
sexual arousal that originated from the Fall.21 Furthermore, St. Augustine supported the
concept of women as the “weaker” sex, naturally subjected to man.22 The hierarchy of the
sexes was deeply rooted in religion.
Renaissance humanists added to sixteenth-century understanding of men and
women through the study of ancient Greek medical treatises by Aristotle, Galen, and
Hippocrates.23 The ancient philosophers and physicians bolstered theological
interpretations of the genders, insisting that women were “anatomically and
physiologically less fully developed than men” and therefore biologically subject to
Wunder, “What Made a Man a Man?” 21.
Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 3.
18 Weaver, “Gender,” 190.
19 Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 107; Grössinger, Picturing Women, 1-2.
20 Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 107.
21 Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 107-108.
22 Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 107-108.
23 Weaver, “Gender,” 190.
16
17
13
them.24 According to Aristotle, man was the perfect creation of Nature, armed with
superior physical and mental abilities that made him highly rational and cautious.25
Woman, on the other hand, was an imperfect creation with an inferior body that was
weak, irrational, emotional, governed by passion, and receptive to evil influences.26
Aristotle explained that women’s bodies did not produce enough heat to complete
the process of forming into men.27 This was particularly evident in the shape of male and
female genitalia. Homologies in the male and female sex organs led people to believe that
women’s genitals were an internal, earlier version of men’s genitals. Women’s bodies
simply did not have the heat required to push the genitals out of the body. What a
woman’s body did contain was a uterus, which was thought to be responsible for her
irrational behavior and lack of control. Her uterus made her violently passionate and
vengeful but also more compassionate.28 If a woman’s womb was not “amply fed by
sexual intercourse” or reproduction, the organ would wander through the body,
“overpowering [the woman’s] speech and sense.”29
Many of the ancient theories about anatomy related to the humors: a man’s body
was warm and dry, a woman’s body was cold and damp. Since heat was the source of
energy, and energy fueled the mind and body, men were naturally larger, stronger, more
active, and capable of greater reason.30 Male bodies efficiently produced and utilized heat
to maintain their masculine form. Unfortunately, the same heat that constructed the male
Russell, Eva/Ave, 17; Wunder, “What Made a Man a Man?” 21; for more on the ancient philosophers’
biological justifications of female inferiority, see: Lesley Dean-Jones, “Excursus--Medicine: The ‘Proof’ of
Anatomy,” in Women in the Classical World, ed. Elaine Fantham et al. (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1994), 183-205; Natalie B. Kampen, “Gender Theory in oman Art,” in I, Claudia: Women in
Ancient Rome, ed. Diana E. E. Kleiner and Susan B. Matheson (New Haven ; Austin: Yale University Art
Gallery / University of Texas Press, 1996), 16; and ussell’s introduction in Eva/Ave, especially 17.
25 Weaver, “Gender,” 190; Wunder, “What Made a Man a Man?” 21; Patricia Simons, The Sex of Men in
Premodern Europe: A Cultural History, Cambridge Social and Cultural Histories (Cambridge, U.K.:
Cambridge University Press, 2011), 109.
26 Wunder, “What Made a Man a Man?” 22; Grössinger, Picturing Women, 4.
27 Weaver, “Gender,” 190.
28 Russell, Eva/Ave, 17.
29 Davis, “Women on Top,” 147-148.
30 Weaver, “Gender,” 190.
24
14
body also made young men particularly vulnerable to their “inflammable” passions: their
desires could easily flame up and consume them.31 As man’s opposite in all things,
woman’s cold and damp nature meant that she was limp, unsteady, and as changing as
the moon.32 Essentially, women were inferior to men in every way.33 While men
participated in the public realm, provided for the household, and protected the family,
women, who were better suited to the domestic realm, guarded the household’s
“possessions, children, and, through their chastity, its integrity.”34 But women even
needed guidance and supervision in the domestic realm.35 Men were supposed to “watch,
protect, guard, and lead women with the power of rational thinking that was, by nature,
stronger in them.”36
Although Galen indicated that both sexes achieved their own perfection, he, too,
insisted that the male body was superior.37 Essentially, ancient medical texts biologically
supported biblical concepts of male superiority. This, in turn, “provided the foundation of
the sexes in social order: the supremacy of man and the subordination of woman,”
explains Heide Wunder.38 In fact, if a man possessed any defects, his deficiencies were
thought to stem from nurture rather than nature—for instance, being ignorantly reared by
his mother, growing up in a “brutish” peasant environment, or living in poverty could
ruin a naturally superior man.39
Mr. and Mrs. Cleaver: Ideal Gender Roles in Early Modern Germany
With the Protestant Reformation came the upheaval of the church and sixteenthcentury German communities. But reformers not only questioned church practices, they
31
Grössinger, Picturing Women, 95.
Grössinger, Picturing Women, 4.
33 Weaver, “Gender,” 190; Grössinger, Picturing Women, 95; Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers,” 12.
34 Weaver, “Gender,” 190; Russell, Eva/Ave, 17.
35 Weaver, “Gender,” 190.
36 Grössinger, Picturing Women, 4.
37 Weaver, “Gender,” 190.
38 Wunder, “What Made a Man a Man?” 21.
39 Davis, “Women on Top,” 147.
32
15
reevaluated marriage and the household (a social unit consisting of a husband and wife,
their children, their servants, and any apprentices or journeymen).40 The household,
founded on the bond of marriage, became the cornerstone of the Protestants’ reprioritized
social structure.41 With marriage at the heart of the household, debates about the proper
roles of men and women flourished.42 But the end result of those discussions aligned with
traditional views: the husband was responsible for governing the household and the wife
was instructed to be a subordinate helpmate.43 Like well-run households (the building
blocks of a moral community), early modern German cities were modeled on the idea of
paternal discipline and control. Both municipal fathers on town councils and husbands
who headed households were supervisors and “rulers.”44 But marriage (and society as a
whole) was imagined as a cooperative relationship. Husbands and wives were (however
unequal) partners in the business of maintaining their household, just as the governing
council and the community members were supposed to work together for the betterment
of the town.45 God intended for men and women to be united by a common goal and
dependent upon one another for the success of their family and business. 46 This
cooperative system in which everyone knew his or her place, moral obligations, and
social duties extended to children, servants, and workshop employees.47 Order and moral
living were the aims of this highly-regulated society.48
40
Russell, Eva/Ave, 19.
Steven E. Ozment, When Fathers Ruled: Family Life in Reformation Europe, Studies in Cultural History
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1983), 8; Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers,” 9; Alberti’s
On the Family, completed by 1441, also sees the family as the fundamental social unit of an ethical society
(Russell, Eva/Ave, 18); Fairchilds, Women in Early Modern Europe, 199.
42 Russell, Eva/Ave, 19.
43 Lyndal Roper, Oedipus and the Devil: Witchcraft, Sexuality, and Religion in Early Modern Europe
(London ; New York: outledge, 1994), 40; Scott H. Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy in Reformation
Germany,” in Masculinity in the Reformation Era, ed. Scott H. Hendrix and Susan C. Karant-Nunn
(Kirksville, MO: Truman State University Press, 2008), 71.
44 B. Ann Tlusty, Bacchus and Civic Order: The Culture of Drink in Early Modern Germany, Studies in
Early Modern German History (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 2001), 116.
45 Marshall, “Women in the eformation Era,” 173; Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 72.
46 Marshall, “Women in the eformation Era,” 173; Wunder, “What Made a Man a Man?” 22.
47 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 148.
48 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 148.
41
16
To be clear, the Protestant reforms did not revolutionize gender roles, nor intend
to do so; instead, they targeted sexuality.49 Virginity was considered the most ideal bodily
state, but maintaining vows of chastity was nearly impossible for the human race. 50 With
original sin came carnal desire, and since only the rarest people could live celibate lives,
the reformers decided that marriage was the best way to combat mankind’s unavoidable
lust.51 The Protestants were particularly critical of the clergy, a group so well-known for
breaking their vows of chastity that the church implemented a tax on priests who kept
concubines and prostitutes.52 Finding the clergy’s blatant disobedience offensive in their
Christian communities, the reformers demanded that priests marry. 53 Similarly,
Protestants verbally attacked and abolished convents—accusing them of being as moral
as brothels.54 By “freeing” women from “inhumane and antisocial” nunneries and placing
them at the center of the home and family as wives and mothers, reformers believed they
“had liberated [women] from sexual repression” (or, alternately, promiscuity), “cultural
deprivation,” and the “male-regulated life of a cloister.”55 Essentially, everyone was
encouraged to take responsibility for his or her baser urges by joining with a spouse, and
marriage was viewed as a solution for bodily desires, as well as the stability of a renewed
moral society in Germany.
Ideal Masculinity: Hausvater, Citizen, Ruler
As the reformers shifted emphasis onto the importance of the family unit, the
proper roles of men and women became central to the running of the household. For
example, a married man was supposed to be a good Hausvater, or household head, by
providing for the welfare of the family, protecting the household, and ruling over the
49
Fairchilds, Women in Early Modern Europe, 195.
Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 4.
51 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 4. See, for instance, Martin Luther’s 1522 “On the Estate of
Marriage.”
52 Marshall, “Women in the eformation Era,” 172.
53 Wunder, “He is the Sun, She is the Moon”, 45.
54 Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers,” 9.
55 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 25, 1, 49.
50
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people under his care with a “firm but just hand.”56 According to Viet Dietrich, the
preacher at St. Sebald’s in Nuremberg from 1535 to 1549, being the “provider” for his
wife and children was the punishment for man’s original sin, just as woman’s punishment
was to bear children in pain.57 But the Hausvater was not only responsible for the
economic success of the household, he was also “answerable for the honor, souls, and
industry” of the people under his care.58 The household was a microcosm of the Christian
world: like God governed the world, the city council fathers judged the moral, religious,
and work discipline of its citizens, and so too did the Hausvater preside over his wife,
children, servants, and workers.59
In order to perform ideal masculinity, men also strove to demonstrate selfsufficiency and a host of other desirable male qualities, including intellect, honesty,
courage, piety, a good reputation, justice, temperance, steadfastness, and a sense of
duty.60 The male figure in Cornelis Anthonisz’s large woodcut The Wise Man and the
Wise Woman (fig. 18) is symbolically adorned with objects representing his ideal
masculinity, such as the helmet, beard, scales, dog, etc.61 Ulinka Rublack argues that part
of idealized masculinity resided in the man’s “ability to abstain from unreasonable
demands on others, to control passions, and to work for the common good.”62 Of course,
a man’s masculinity and honor were also connected to his success in business and public
life. This differed slightly depending on his social class. For an upper-class man, loyalty
and bravery were most important; for the bourgeois and working-class men, honesty,
integrity, and craftsmanship were essential to their value as men.63 According to Scott
Hendrix, the pressures and responsibilities of being an early modern man weighed on
56
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 50; also Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 46.
Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 79.
58 Tlusty, Bacchus and Civic Order, 116-117.
59 Tlusty, Bacchus and Civic Order, 117; Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 46; Weaver, “Gender,” 190.
60 Ilja M. Veldman, “Lessons for Ladies: A Selection of Sixteenth and Seventeenth-Century Dutch Prints,”
Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 16, no. 2/3 (January 1, 1986): 113.
61 Veldman, “Lessons for Ladies,” 113.
62 linka ublack, “Meanings of Gender in Early Modern German History,” in Gender in Early Modern
German History, Past & Present Publications (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 2-3.
63 Weaver, “Gender,” 190.
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18
those broad sixteenth-century shoulders. To be successful men, husbands had to rule their
households, produce enough to support the people in their care, and temper their
desires—these tasks were not always easy.64
With superior rationality and “manly strength,” men were supposed to
demonstrate good self-government, control their passions, and therefore merit their
dominant position in society and the household. In theory, a man should be a “model of
self-control” who is “able to moderate his own appetite and drives,” otherwise it was
unlikely that he could command and moderate the desires of those around him.65
Moderation was itself a defining characteristic of Renaissance masculinity. 66 Under the
influence of Aristotelian medicine, it was assumed that the male body was biologically
moderate: neither too hot, nor too cold.67 In contrast to men’s “biological” inclination
toward moderation, women were thought to be inherently immoderate, or to use Todd
eeser’s more accurate terminology, “nonmoderate.”68 A good example of moderation
comes from Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics: the moderate man should neither rush into
battle rashly, nor should he hold back from a necessary battle in fear. He should neither
eat/drink/spend too much, nor too little.69 These rules of moderation applied to virtually
every aspect of Renaissance life—and both genders, but “nonmoderation” (mostly
excess) was all too common in sixteenth-century society.
Perhaps the strongest evidence that these titans of order and morality struggled
with—and fully acknowledged—the burden of some (sexual) impulses is the reformers’
persistent concentration on marriage. In 1522, Luther wrote an entire treatise “On the
Estate of Marriage” (Vom ehelichen Leben), and in 1539, in his “Lectures on Genesis”
(Genesisvorlesung), he went on to argue: “Marriage is necessary as a remedy for lust, and
Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 71.
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 50.
66 Todd W. Reeser, Moderating Masculinity in Early Modern Culture, North Carolina Studies in the
Romance Languages and Literatures 283 (Chapel Hill: U.N.C. Dept. of Romance Languages, 2006), 13.
67 Reeser, Moderating Masculinity, 19.
68 Reeser, Moderating Masculinity, 13, 15. Because moderation is the mean of lack and excess, using
immoderate—which often means excessive—is inadequate. Instead, nonmoderate is useful here.
69 Reeser, Moderating Masculinity, 14.
64
65
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through marriage God permits sexual intercourse.”70 Truthfully, one of the reasons that
reformers pushed men to marry was to help them moderate their lust—what Luther
considered “one of sin’s consequences for men”—in as unsinful a way as possible.71
Without marriage, reformers worried that men, however temperate and just in other areas
of life, would succumb to sexual promiscuity.72 Thus, in order to avoid the sins of the
flesh, the Protestant church advocated marriage, citing 1 Corinthians 7:2: “But for fear of
fornication, let every man have his own wife, and let every woman have her own
husband.”73 For Luther, wives were “an antidote against sin,” who not only managed the
household but helped contain a man’s raging libido.74
ather than live like “whoring”
Catholic priests, Luther believed it was better to slake one’s “excessive desire of the
flesh” with one woman: one’s wife.75 Thus, in theory, marriage had a stabilizing function
in early modern German society. In fact, marriage was often a “precondition of
mastership and full membership of the guild.”76 As Lyndal oper explains, “What gave
one access to the world of brothers was one’s mastery of a woman which guaranteed
one’s sexual status.”77 Essentially, men were not “securely male” if they did not rule over
a woman.78
“Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 4.
Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks, “‘Lustful Luther’: Male Libido in the Writings of the eformer,” in
Masculinity in the Reformation Era, ed. Scott H. Hendrix and Susan C. Karant-Nunn (Kirksville, MO:
Truman State University Press, 2008), 194.
72 Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 74.
73 1 Corinthians 7:2 DV.
74 Wiesner-Hanks, “Lustful Luther,” 195.
75 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 4; Wiesner, “Lustful Luther,” 195.
76 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 46.
77 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 46.
78 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 46. nfortunately, writes oper, “As the economy contracted and guilds
made entry more difficult, masterhood was a status which ever fewer sixteenth-century craftsmen could
attain.” Thus, unmarried journeymen’s livelihood and masculinity were at risk. Those men could neither
prove their manhood through marriage (the mastery of a woman) or through their craft (the mastery of their
trade).
70
71
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Scott Hendrix astutely observes that sexuality was an important part of early
modern masculinity.79 Even the religious men who took their vows seriously recognized
that they would not be able to remain chaste. One such man named Andreas Althamer
wrote, “It ought to be at least possible that we can keep our vows, but I cannot vow to be
chaste any more than I can vow to fly.”80 One way or another, the lay and religious men
alike would have sex. Luther wrote in his lectures on Genesis from about 1535-1545, “In
our age you hardly find one man among a thousand who refrains from relationship with
women until his thirtieth year.”81 Thus, marriage was simply the least sinful way to deal
with inevitable desires. This example of men’s incontrollable lust is one of many that
goes against men’s allegedly superior self-control and moderation. Luther describes Old
Testament patriarchs who controlled their sex drives (e.g. Noah, Abraham, and Joseph) as
possessing “an extraordinary gift of chastity and an almost angelic nature.”82 Notably, in
his writings about lust, Luther focuses on the male libido—not women’s sexual urges.83
Still, it is revealing—though unsurprising—that sexual sin, which was so closely
associated with women, proved so troublesome for early modern men. Women were a
threat to masculinity on all fronts, inciting male lusts and robbing men of their selfcontrol and vigor through sex.
It is possible that men’s inability to curb their own sex drives increased their
anxiety over women’s supposedly insatiable desires. Patricia Simons suggests that men
worried about their sexual performance—would it be enough to satisfy their wives and
prevent their sexually voracious women from seeking someone else’s seed?84 Some
medical authorities thought that “without regular moisturizing with male semen, the
uterus would dry up,” so women were always seeking sex—if their husbands could not
Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 7 ; see also “Lustful Luther” in which Wiesner demonstrates
through Martin Luther’s writings how lust was at the center of the eformation.
80 Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 7 .
81 Wiesner-Hanks, “Lustful Luther,” 197.
82 Wiesner-Hanks, “Lustful Luther,” 197.
83 Wiesner-Hanks, “Lustful Luther,” 20 -209.
84 Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 230.
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provide it, they would go elsewhere.85 eeser explains that men had “an underlying male
anxiety [that] women’s sexuality could not be contained and that male power was
insufficient to control women in the household.”86 A connection between sex and
power—both in the bedroom and in the household—emerges in the discourse on gender
relations. If a man could not control his wife, then he not only risked losing his honor and
masculinity, but, writes eeser, “the malady of feminine excess repeatedly threaten[ed] to
cross over into the male body and infect masculinity…The ‘danger’ of immoderate male
desire for women…would suggest a similarity between the sexually excessive man and
the woman when he desires her.”87 If the husband or wife strayed from his or her gender
roles through nonmoderation or sin, the balance was thrown off and the spouse could
become more or less masculine or feminine.
Ideal Femininity: The Chaste, Silent, and Obedient Wife
According to Ecclesiasticus 26:1, “Happy is the husband of a good wife,” but
what type of woman was a “good wife” in sixteenth-century Germany?88 Early modern
conduct books and prints made it quite clear that chastity was the “queen of virtues in a
woman.”89 While the “rules of conduct for men are numerous…,” wrote Juan Luis Vives,
a Spanish humanist and educational theorist, “a woman’s only care is chastity.”90 In
Vives’ widely published conduct book The Instruction of a Christien Woman (De
Institutione Feminae Christianae, 1523), which was available throughout Europe in
85
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 11.
Reeser, Moderating Masculinity, 30. This relates back to medical treatises and the humors. In The Sex of
Men in Premodern Europe, Patricia Simons describes how intercourse was considered a medical remedy
for balancing women’s humors. A man’s hot fluids warmed a naturally cold woman, but robbed the man of
some of his energy. Thus, too much sex could ruin a man, draining him of his essential life force—the heat
that made him masculine. Russell also writes about this balance/completion through intercourse in her
introduction to Eva/Ave, specifically 17.
87 Reeser, Moderating Masculinity, 25 (my italics).
88 Ecclesiasticus 26:1 DV.
89 Nancy Weitz Miller, “Metaphor and the Mystification of Chastity in Vive’s Instruction of a Christien
Woman,” in Menacing Virgins: Representing Virginity in the Middle Ages and Renaissance (Newark, NJ:
Associated University Presses, 1999), 135.
90 Weaver, “Gender,” 188.
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thirty-six translations, he explained that men should be wise, eloquent, strong, charitable,
and have a good memory, “but for a woman, these male virtues do not apply; for her,
only chastity is essential.”91 Here, chastity referred not only to a young girl’s virginal
state, but also the modest, virtuous, and retiring way a proper woman lived.92 Women
were expected to guard their chastity both before and during marriage, and if a woman
“lost” her chastity through voluntary (or involuntary) sex, she became “utterly
dishonorable,” a worthless commodity.93 Married women maintained their chastity
through unconditional fidelity to their husbands and through limited, passionless
intercourse conducted solely for procreation.94
In addition to chastity, early modern society valued womanly virtues essential for
preserving chastity: modesty, humility, steadfastness, and moderation.95 As the
descendants of Eve, women were in constant danger of losing control of their insatiable
sexual natures and irresistible beauty.96 Moreover, Vives noted that their faces could
“inflame young men’s minds unto foul and unlawful lusts,” endangering the souls of men
who looked at the lovely women.97 To “defend against the heat of lust inspired by
viewing the physical body,” Vives recommended shamefastness, or the presentation of
“the image of cold chastity”—whatever that means.98 Overall, Vives gave women an
unreasonable amount of agency. He insisted, as Nancy Miller describes it, that women
could “entice or repel any man, as if she were in complete control of all men’s desires as
well as her own.”99 For Vives, “It is an evil keeper that cannot keep one thing well
committed to her keeping…and especially which no man will take from her against her
Miller, “Metaphor and the Mystification of Chastity,” 133; Veldman, “Lessons for Ladies,” 119; Russell,
Eva/Ave, 19.
92 Yvonne Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout: Biblical Women as Patterns of Female Virtue in
Netherlandish and German Graphic Art, Ca. 1500-1750,” Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History
of Art 28, no. 4 (January 1, 2000): 220.
93 Veldman, “Lessons for Ladies,” 119; Miller, “Metaphor and the Mystification of Chastity,” 137.
94 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 220; Veldman, “Lessons for Ladies,” 119.
95 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 220.
96 Gloria Kaufman, “Juan Luis Vives on the Education of Women,” Signs 3, no. 4 (July 1, 1978): 895.
97 Miller, “Metaphor and the Mystification of Chastity,” 141.
98 Miller, “Metaphor and the Mystification of Chastity,” 142.
99 Miller, “Metaphor and the Mystification of Chastity,” 142.
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will, nor touch it, except she be willing herself.”100 Therefore, according to Vives’
estimation, rape is impossible because women control all desire. “A woman who cannot
repel sexual assault is clearly not chaste,” writes Miller on Vives.101 Thus, without the
guidance, supervision, and moral education that their male family members provided,
women could easily lose their chastity.
Fathers, husbands, and brothers were responsible for shaping and controlling the
bodies and minds of their female family members.102 Women, who were always at risk
for slipping into sin, were trained to be modest and humble—their education was
intentionally selective, lest their minds become undisciplined and their imaginations and
tongues loosened.103 Beginning with St. Augustine, the care and maintenance of the
female character involved a “series of corrective measures to which the female soul
should be subjected,” and that discipline and moderation extended to the woman’s
body.104 A variety of texts addressed the proper posture of women.105 Both Vives and
Sebastian Brant, the early modern German humanist and satirist, recommend that women
keep their eyes downcast. Brant wrote, “A wife who would be modest found / Should
cast her eyes upon the ground / and not coquet whene'er she can / And not make eyes at
every man.”106 Leonardo da Vinci describes the ideal female posture more fully in the
margin of one of his studies of female heads, “Women should be represented with
demure actions, their legs tightly closed together, their arms held together, their heads
lowered and inclined to one side.”107 The motionless female figure in Anton Woensam’s
A Wise Woman (c. 1525, fig. 19) visually represents the ideal womanly posture: she
shows no sign of agitation or abrupt gestures, her eyes are downcast, her clothing is
Miller, “Metaphor and the Mystification of Chastity,” 143.
Miller, “Metaphor and the Mystification of Chastity,” 143.
102 Weaver, “Gender,” 195.
103 Davis, “Women on Top,” 148-149.
104 Paolo Berdini, “Women nder the Gaze: A enaissance Genealogy,” Art History 21, no. 4 (1998): 576.
105 Berdini, “Women nder the Gaze,” 567.
106 Berdini, “Women nder the Gaze,” 56 .
107 Berdini, “Women nder the Gaze,” 567.
100
101
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modest, and her emotions are in check.108 As Paolo Berdini points out, women’s bodies
were “locked into a formula” that restricted their bodily actions and transformed them
into objects of the male gaze.109
But for women’s moral and physical safety—and the integrity of the man’s
household, men preferred for women to stay out of the public eye, inside the home. Leon
Battista Alberti explained in Book II of his On the Family (Della famiglia, c. 1432-1434)
that women are timid, soft, and slow creatures who are better suited to sitting and
watching over things. For Alberti, the ideal early modern woman was “silent, obedient,
chaste, and enclosed.”110 Luther goes on to reinforce this idea by writing that a wife “is
like a nail, driven into the wall…[she] should stay at home and look after the affairs of
the household.”111 Thus, women were considered biologically designed for indoor lives
and physically and spiritually safeguarded from themselves and others when enclosed.
This circular argument for a woman’s role as the perfect housewife was also based on
economic concerns. In a sixteenth-century patriarchal society, a man’s titles and property
passed to his legitimate descendants, but if his wife was unchaste, then the system failed
and put the family fortune in peril.112
Truly, all female virtues were related to the correct attitude a woman should
assume towards her husband. Good women were obedient to God and husband.113 They
were silent and pious, diligent and courteous, prudent and wise—to the benefit and
support of their husbands’ households.114 Reading material for German girls encouraged
silence, as did German and Netherlandish prints.115 For example both Anthonisz’s (fig.
1 ) and Woensam’s (fig. 19) “wise women” promote the ideal of the silent wife: the
108
Grössinger, Picturing Women, 45.
Berdini, “Women nder the Gaze,” 56 .
110 Weaver, “Gender,” 191 (my italics).
111 Wolfthal, “Women’s Community and Male Spies,” 147.
112 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 220; Veldman, “Lessons for Ladies,” 120.
113 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 220; Veldman, “Lessons for Ladies,” 113.
114 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 220.
115 Wolfthal, “Women’s Community and Male Spies,” 129.
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female figures literally wear padlocks on their mouths. Woesam’s A Wise Woman
symbolically demonstrates many more desirable virtues—in addition to chastity and
silence—that a woman should possess. Her falcon-like eyes keep her clear of shameful
behavior; the key in her ear indicates that she is willing to listen to God’s word; the lock
on her mouth prevents her from using bad language, talking unnecessarily, and gossiping;
the mirror wards off pride; the turtle-dove on her breast illustrates that she will let no
other man but her husband near her; the snake at her waist means that she will speak to
no one but her husband; the jug represents charity toward the poor; and the horses’
hooves stand for her unshakeable chastity.116 The ideal woman is the subordinate
representative of her husband’s household and honor: bodily, spiritually, mentally.
Yet even the most ideal women and happy marriages were largely justified by
their essential role in procreation. In fact, the only use that Isidore of Seville (c. 560-636)
found for women was motherhood.117 Thomas Aquinas (c. 1225-1274) agreed in his midthirteenth-century Summa Theologiae that Woman was created to help Man with
procreation, “not indeed to help him in any other work, as some have maintained,
because where most work is concerned man can get help more conveniently from another
man than from a woman.”118 Protestants encouraged both men and women to marry and
have families, but marriage and motherhood were a woman’s highest calling, not only her
living arrangement.119 Moreover, the pain of childbirth was Woman’s punishment for the
Fall; women were granted salvation through their useful role in regeneration. As Luther
summarized in his “Lectures on Timothy 1” from the late 1520s, “You will be saved if
you have subjected yourselves and bear your children with pain.”120 If the union of a man
and his wife did not produce children, infertility was grounds for divorce.121 Although
sex seems to sit in direct conflict with ideas of chastity, Aquinas taught that married
Grössinger, Picturing Women, 43-44; Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 107; Veldman, “Lessons for
Ladies,” 113.
117 Grössinger, Picturing Women, 4.
118 Grössinger, Picturing Women, 4.
119 Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers,” 13.
120 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 5.
121 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 6.
116
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women “could be virtuous as long as [they] had sexual relationships with [their
husbands] for the sole purpose of procreation and kept [their] minds chaste.”122
From the information available on ideal femininity and masculinity, it seems that
men were understood to be naturally better capable of performing proper masculine roles
than women were of performing proper feminine roles. Men had rationality, strength, and
balanced humors on their side, but women struggled with their sexual urges and weak
minds and bodies. While women needed male guidance and supervision to live morally,
men were capable of moderating their own desires. Though proper masculinity required
lists of virtues, responsibility for other people, and private and public honor, in theory it
should have been easier for a man to obtain due to his superior nature. Proper femininity,
though easily reduced to chastity, silence, and obedience, was thus less easily obtained by
a woman because of her weaker overall nature. But it is crucial to remember that these
ideals do not take into account the lived reality of household dynamics in sixteenthcentury Germany. These exemplars correspond to biblical and biological theories, but
how closely did living people follow these recommendations for male and female gender
roles? One could argue that conduct books, prints, and sermons—the rules and
regulations circulated in society—more accurately reflect desired behaviors, rather than
the norms of everyday life. After all, communities and law-makers generally write rules
and expectations when people fail to live up to them on their own.
Reality Check: The Other Side of Masculinity and the (Brief) Empowerment of
Women
Regardless of how stridently religious and government leaders urged sixteenthcentury Germans to behave according to the ideals of masculinity and femininity, men
and women who lived during the tumultuous pre-Reformation and Reformation eras did
not always perform their gender roles as specified in the previous section. In some
122
Grössinger, Picturing Women, 4.
27
aspects, it is striking how much reality diverged from the ideal. 123 This rebuff of ideal
gender roles is partially accounted for by the contradictory expectations placed upon
men.
On one hand, in the household and in cooperation with his wife, a sixteenthcentury German man was supposed to be a pillar of moral guidance and exemplar of selfcontrol and moderation. On the other hand, in all-male groups, such as guilds, trade
associations, military units, and political corporations, men had to publically defend and
validate their honor by testing the boundaries of their control through drinking and
fisticuffs.124 In truth, beyond the influence of reformers trying to Christianize society,
masculinity and male honor were primarily related to membership and participation in
all-male groups rather than to households and marriage.125 Being a member of various
brotherhoods gave men a sense of political belonging and reaffirmed their “consciousness
of being [men].”126
But defending the guild’s honor and one’s place in the group often came at the
expense of a stable household. The drunken violence of men who wasted their money on
alcohol and gambling likely necessitated that women take a more active leadership role in
household affairs. At this same point in history, women participated in the Reformation
alongside their male counterparts, only to be pushed back into their subordinate roles
when things settled down. By examining how men and women’s lives diverged from the
ideals in the previous section, the complexity of gender roles becomes even more
apparent, demonstrating why a nuanced reading of Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes—and other images of women exerting power—is imperative.
Weaver, “Gender,” 189.
Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 108.
125 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 108.
126 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 108.
123
124
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Disruptive Masculinity
Although preachers, pamphlets, and prints encouraged self-control and
moderation, “few men were controlled at all times,” writes ublack, “Nor did they want
to be, for another code of masculinity required them to play with the limits of selfcontrol.”127 In truth, sixteenth-century codes of masculinity were contradictory: a man
needed to demonstrate self-control and moderation but also to test the boundaries of his
control through (near) excess. It is this reckless, darker side of masculinity that Lyndal
oper deems “disruptive” to the early modern town.128 Instead of supporting the
patriarchal system of civic order, “men posed a serious public-order problem.”129 Young
men fought in the streets at night; drunken husbands beat their wives nearly to death; and
guilds fostered brotherhoods that could incite political unrest through violent competition
and conflicting loyalties. Councils tried to control the disorder and misrule, but, as Roper
says, “the male world was repeatedly the locale for fights, insults, drunkenness, and
excessive behavior.”130
Alcohol consumption was a central part of male bonding, legal proceedings, guild
celebrations, and other important occasions in male social culture. Like the right to bear
arms, participation in social drinking rituals was a sign of masculinity. Therefore, if a
man let his drinking habits get in the way of running his household, the town council
could ban him from the tavern for a year.131 This emasculating “honor punishment”
effectively banned him from normal male society.132 In his sixteenth-century discourse Of
Honour,
obert Ashley noted, “the honour of the Germans in particular was contingent
on the trait of generosity, expressed through the provision of food and drink.”133
Therefore, it is unsurprising that the Augsburg merchant Hans Jakob Fugger, who hated
ublack, “Meanings of Gender,” 5.
Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 107.
129 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 107.
130 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 111.
131 Tlusty, Bacchus and Civic Order, 118.
132 Tlusty, Bacchus and Civic Order, 118.
133 Tlusty, Bacchus and Civic Order, 122-123.
127
128
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wine, earned the derogatory nickname Wasserman (“water man” or Aquarius), for
serving watered-down beverages to his guests.134 Fugger’s fellow men mocked him for
his faux pas, and, in all likelihood, called his manhood into question by naming him after
Ganymede, the homosexual cup-bearer of Zeus who is the inspiration for the
constellation Aquarius. Like men today, ribbing a fellow man about his masculinity and
calling attention to foul-play could be done in fun or provocation.
Drunkenness was not the goal of the drinking practices so interwoven into
German culture—but it was often the disruptive, messy, and evil result.135 When they
could afford the alcohol, sixteenth-century Germans drank in excess and with relish.136
The “immoderate drinking habits of the Germans” led contemporary critics to complain
that “the god of wine was replacing the god of war as the symbol of German
manhood.”137 German men were no longer proving their prowess in battle, they were
being “knighted” as the “heaviest drinker.”138 In his pamphlet entitled “On the Horrible
Vice of Drunkenness” (Von dem greüwlichen laster der trunkenheyt, c. 1531), Sebastian
Franck, Barthel Beham’s brother-in-law, details how excessive drinking damages the
body, soul, honor, and one’s possessions.139 Franck and others compare drunkards to
animals: they smell bad, fall into filth too horrible for pigs, behave violently, disregard
God, “growl like dogs, grumble like bears, and vomit and crawl into stalls with pigs.”140
As illustrated in Erhard Schön’s The Four Effects of Wine (fig. 20), alcohol could
transform moderate Hausväter into violent, aggressive tyrants (into lions or bears);
playful, gambling fools (apes); quiet, amorous dolts (lambs); or a dirty gluttons without
control over their bodily functions or fluids (pigs or dogs).141
134
Tlusty, Bacchus and Civic Order, 123.
Alison G. Stewart, Before Bruegel: Sebald Beham and the Origins of Peasant Festival Imagery
(Aldershot, U.K.: Ashgate, 2008), 87.
136 Stewart, Before Bruegel, 93.
137 Tlusty, Bacchus and Civic Order, 125.
138 Tlusty, Bacchus and Civic Order, 125.
139 Stewart, Before Bruegel, 73.
140 Stewart, Before Bruegel, 73.
141 Stewart, Before Bruegel, 76-78.
135
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Drunkenness—“one of the greatest sins attacked from the pulpit”—was the cause
of the most severe public and private problems.142 In the early sixteenth-century, the
Nuremberg town council tried to stymie those ill effects (which included blasphemy,
drunkenness, anger, lust, adultery, strife, manslaughter, brawls, and other public vices) by
limiting the number of feast days (a.k.a. opportunities to drink excessively) celebrated
every year.143 Additionally, numerous times between 1496 and 1548, the same council
forbade “toasting,” or “pledging healths,” which required men to drink heavily to
demonstrate respect and honor.144 Moralizing against the Demon Drink, an Augsburg
Ordinance calls upon experience and reason to discourage drunkenness:
Even if excessive wining and drunkenness had not been so greatly
accursed in both divine and heathen writings, and everyone had not
already been warned against it, daily experience of what misery and
disorder, such as the transformation of noble reason into animal
insensibility, destruction of soul, body, and life, honor and good visibly
follows from it, should justly teach us to utterly avoid it.145
But it is fairly obvious that temperance was not a high priority for sixteenth-century
German men who enjoyed drinking with their brothers.
Violence was another way men bonded, proved their manhood, and established
or defended their honor. Fisticuffs in the streets, at processions, during weddings or
dances, and at guild meetings were common. In fact, tournaments, such as the jousts in
Nuremberg’s Hauptmarkt, were organized to showcase publicly masculine violence.146
According to Simons, the chivalric contests were not only exhibitions of masculinity and
public displays of honor and control, but the breaking of the lance had an ejaculatory
quality. For Simons in The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, masculinity is the capacity
of projection. From external genitals (and beards) forced out by the male body’s greater
142
Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 110; Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 70.
Stewart, Before Bruegel, 43.
144 Stewart, Before Bruegel, 87.
145 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 111.
146 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 113. Many thanks to Jeffrey Chipps Smith for his insight on the jousts in
Nuremberg.
143
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heat, to the expelling of bodily fluids (including urine, semen, and vomit), men—with
their aggressively, expansively, and publicly assertive behaviors and symbols—are
projective.147 Similarly, oper compares men to volcanoes with “drives and fluids which
constantly threaten to erupt, spilling outwards to dirty [their] environment through
ejaculation, bloodshed, vomiting, defecation.”148 This projectile, eruptive nature of men
is well-illustrated in a contemporary image by Sebald Beham; here, a man spews vomit
and defecates (fig. 21). For Roper, male bodies break boundaries and dirty themselves
and others through projectile behaviors; in contrast, female bodies are constantly
threatened by invasion—a penetrative process that dirties and destroys their honor.149
nfortunately, women often experienced men’s explosive, projective natures
firsthand. The household could be a place of violent marital fights where a drunk and lazy
husband abused his power, failing to exercise moderation—or mercy.150 The complaints
raised by the aggrieved wives in Schön’s 1531 woodcut Seven Wives Complaining about
their Husbands (fig. 22) indicate the types of offenses sixteenth-century German men
probably committed. Here, the wives describe their husbands as gamblers, drunkards,
inadequate providers, lazy incompetents, wife beaters, or all of the above.151 In a
contemporary pamphlet from the early 1520s, another fictional wife laments the poverty
and disrepair of her household. Instead of being a good provider, her husband spends
their money at the pub, comes home late at night and “raises hell,” gets up in the morning
with complaints and demands, and promptly slinks back to the tavern.152 According to
Diane Wolfthal, the grievances that Schön’s fabricated women raise would have been
legitimate complaints in the day—there were court proceedings that document similar
cases.153 But, in his treatise “Women’s Business” (Der Weiber geschäft, 1533), Wolfgang
147
Patricia Simons argues throughout The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe that men are projective.
Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 112.
149 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 112-113.
150 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 154.
151 Wolfthal, “Women’s Community and Male Spies,” 131.
152 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 50-51.
153 Wolfthal, “Women’s Community and Male Spies,” 133.
148
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uss insists that a good wife did not perceive her husband’s faults—or if she did, she
ignored them.154
Unfortunately, the severity of some offenses could not be ignored. Truly brutish
husbands resorted to punching, kicking, or biting to discipline their disobedient wives.155
While husbands were legally permitted to dole out a moderate degree of corporeal
punishment, when women were too harshly beaten, they could (and did) take their
complaints to the authorities.156 In fact, it was often at the insistence of an “unfairly”
beaten wife that town councils intervened in the domestic sphere—checking for violence,
drunkenness, and other disruptive sins.157 Town councils realized that male authorities
within many households were not acting as “good governors,” but to completely deny
men the right to punish their wives would emasculate them and undermine their “proper
marital relationship.”158 Still, Protestants generally disapproved of wife-beating.159
Nuremberg preacher Veit Dietrich held that violence was not manly, that husbands were
still men when they refrained from hitting their wives.160 After all, Steven Ozment writes,
“paternal authority in eformation Europe did not necessarily mean that a man was free
to dominate his household as he pleased.”161 In reality, town councils and religious
leaders put “enormous moral and legal pressure” on men who “flagrantly abused their
mandate.”162 In efforts to regulate marital conflicts, Protestant secular authorities
“expand[ed] the traditional scope of their prosecuting authority.”163 Perhaps ironically, by
Wolfthal, “Women’s Community and Male Spies,” 129.
Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 46.
156 Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 120; Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 109; Harrington, Reordering
Marriage and Society, 267.
157 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 46, 154.
158 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 46-47; Harrington, Reordering Marriage and Society, 267.
159 Fairchilds, Women in Early Modern Europe, 202.
160 Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 79.
161 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 51.
162 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 51.
163 Harrington, Reordering Marriage and Society, 247.
154
155
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policing the morals within individual households, the heads of the community
undermined the same patriarchal governance that they claimed to uphold.164
Doubtless, the ideal Hausväter described in the previous section and the drunk,
violent tyrants introduced in this section are extreme examples on either end of the
spectrum of sixteenth-century German masculinity. Thinking of all early modern men as
vicious brutes—or living saints—would be misleading and, frankly, a disservice to the
complex, varied men of the eformation era. Scott Hendrix reminds us, “In that century,
too, men were different in many respects from one another,” so behaviors that one class
or group of men found masculine might offend another.165 Whereas most scholarship on
early modern masculinity presents the extremes—the strong, dominant patriarch or the
vulgar, abusive asshole, Hendrix provides a more sympathetic and human view of
sixteenth-century men, a perspective I find convincing and worthwhile to consider here.
For Hendrix, and the Protestant preachers on whose views he bases his research, the men
in question were “neither supermen nor weaklings.”166 They needed emotional and
domestic support from their wives, as well as sexual fulfillment. They were burdened by
the demands of their household and the community.167 When they failed to uphold the
high standards placed upon them, they received little sympathy, but “quick blame.” In
short, they were human partners and providers who were “susceptible to temptation and
vulnerable to failure.”168
My purpose for focusing on the complexity of sixteenth-century masculinity is
twofold: to establish a common set of experiences or ideals carried internally by early
modern men and to provide a more realistic, human picture of them. I agree with
Hendrix: sixteenth-century German men were not all the same. But they lived in a
community with certain expectations of self-control and raucous male camaraderie.
164
Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 46.
Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 87.
166 Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 87.
167 Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 74.
168 Hendrix, “Masculinity and Patriarchy,” 88.
165
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Ribald joking and mockery could (and surely did) occur within guilds, town councils, and
other all-male groups. Patricia Simons argues that men in those environments used and
encountered “an endless profusion of word plays and metaphors” typically associated
with sexual imagery.169 It is precisely from within this male realm of “sexual jokes, visual
puns, and misogynist raillery” that viewers interpreted and enjoyed Beham’s Judith
Seated on the Body of Holofernes and its many layers of meaning.170
Rebellious Women
Unlike sixteenth-century masculinity with its striking duality, early modern
femininity did not possess an acceptable or desired antithesis. Women who practiced
ideal femininity through chastity, silence, and obedience were deemed “pious women,”
meaning they were “honorable, God-fearing, and brave.”171 Women whose actions
transgressed the limits of acceptable female behavior were considered “rebellious
women” by their husbands and “uppity” or unruly [ungezogene] women by the
authorities.172 Since female “disorderliness” originated with Eve’s disobedience, it was
not equated across gender lines with disruptive masculinity.173 No one encouraged
women to test their self-control or moderation—primarily because women were believed
to have such a tenuous hold on their desires and bodies to begin with!
As one would expect, prints, pamphlets, and other documents describe the myriad
ways women misbehaved. For example, an anonymous vernacular pamphlet from the
early 1520s describes (in rhyming couplets) spousal grievances.174 According to an
unhappy husband, his wife is stubborn, cross, quick to contradict him, and ready to curse
him “if he dared to scold” her.”175 If the man tries to beat her with a strap, his unruly wife
169
Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 77.
Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 170.
171 Wunder, “He is the Sun, She is the Moon”, 174.
172 Wunder, “He is the Sun, She is the Moon”, 174.
173 Davis, “Women on Top,” 147.
174 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 50-51.
175 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 51.
170
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picks up a brick; if the man makes a fist, the wife prepares to fight him with a club.176 As
punishment for not letting her get her own way, the husband goes without meals and
sleeps alone—and on top of all that, the wife falsely accuses him of infidelity and snubs
him when he makes less money or loses his job!177 That undesirable wife is comparable
to the wives described in Schön’s Seven Men Complaining about their Wives (1531, fig.
23; the companion sheet to his Seven Wives Complaining about their Husbands). Seven
dissatisfied husbands accuse their spouses of various sinful and abhorrent behaviors,
including being “poor housekeepers, drunkards, spendthrifts, harridans, and shrews.”178
One old wife is too bossy; one young wife is too vain and flirtatious. One man has a lazy
wife who will not clean the house. Another man’s wife is a drunkard who spends all their
money. Yet another wife scolds her husband and argues with him; even when he beats
her, she comes and drags him home from the pub.179 Typically, spouses (of both sexes)
raised grievances about sexual misconduct, violence, the unfair division of labor, and the
unjust control of money—complaints they felt would be “judged as legitimate.”180
Like virtue, sin and discipline were gendered. According to
oper, “While
women were primarily prosecuted for their sexual misconduct and evil tongues, men
were disciplined for rowdy behavior, drunkenness, gambling, and blasphemy.”181 As is
documented in Hans Sachs’s text accompanying Schön’s image of complaining
husbands, early modern women sometimes drank and fought, but the discipline
ordinances dealt with them differently than their male counterparts. For example, when a
woman was fined for fighting, the cost was half that of a man’s fine for the same
offense—presumably because men were more likely to fight or draw weapons.182
Similarly, despite the gender neutral language of discipline ordinances, certain slips
176
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 51.
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 51.
178 Wolfthal, “Women’s Community and Male Spies,” 131.
179 Grössinger, Picturing Women, 124.
180 Wolfthal, “Women’s Community and Male Spies,” 133.
181 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 153.
182 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 40-41.
177
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reveal that the town councils’ project of discipline targeted men and women differently.
In a section describing the sins of drinking and gambling, damages to “wife and child”
are mentioned—not damages to “husband and child.”183 Sections about adultery,
fornication, and procuring tend to address women—even though men were also punished
for sexual misbehavior.184 For instance, when caught, prostitutes and their clients were
fined.185 While it seems probable that sixteenth-century men and women caused different
types of trouble for their governing councils, the laws and corresponding punishments go
out of their way to pinpoint and amplify concepts of ideal gender roles. In fact, the
sections on sexual misconduct praise marriage and describe the proper roles of husbands
and wives; thus, gender roles appear in the laws.186
Following John Calvin’s argument that sexually unsatisfied women “were prone
to lewd and hysterical behaviors,” it could have been women’s uncontrollable sex
drives—exponentially greater than men’s—that put them at odds with the law and led
them into prostitution.187 In sixteenth-century Germany, women who did not have their
sexual desires met were considered dangerous—“a threat to the virtue and order of
society!”188 But they were also a threat to (oh-so-easily) tempted men who could not
resist the corrupting influence of female sexuality.189 Women, those historic seductresses,
could cleverly manipulate any man into a sinful dalliance.190 Unmarried women were
particularly suspect, both 1) because they had no husband and thus did not fulfill their
proper gender role, and 2) because they had no husband and thus could not temper their
burning lusts in the marital bed.191 Moreover, in the sixteenth century, “40 percent of all
183
Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 40-41.
Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 153.
185 Fairchilds, Women in Early Modern Europe, 205.
186 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 153.
187 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 9; Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers,” 13
188 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 9.
189 Berdini, “Women nder the Gaze,” 577.
190 Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 107.
191 Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers,” 13.
184
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women were single (an estimated 20 percent spinsters, 10-20 percent widows).”192 The
demographic background also indicates that women “heavily outnumbered men” in a
population receiving a surge of women “freed” from convents.193 Before the Protestants
closed brothels, unsuspecting men could easily identify prostitutes by their distinctive
clothing and the fact that they lived on the outskirts of town. But as the reformers tried
(unsuccessfully) to abolish prostitution and adultery, unmarried and unmarked women
could all potentially be wantons, ready to lure men into sin.194
Prostitution was not the only type of work women performed. And while a wife’s
first priority was the maintenance of her household, which entailed “cooking, laundering,
gardening, sewing, child care, and doctoring,” as long as everything was kept in good
order, she could volunteer to do charitable work or provide additional income through her
own labor.195 In fact, women of all marital statuses worked in a variety of occupations.
nmarried single women were “nurses, midwives, maids, barmaids, prostitutes, small
shopkeepers, bearers of water, stone, and coal, weavers, flax workers, street sweepers,
and guild assistant.”196 Some women even belonged to guilds and continued working in
their trade after marriage.197 Married women helped manage their husband’s shops or
sold their wares. According to Steven Ozment, “some [married women] were engaged in
international trade, and could be described as true business partners with their
husbands.”198 Apparently female workers labored in “virtually every craft,” and many
single and married ladies produced piece work for the textile, food, and drink industries
from home.199 But a strained economy put women and men in direct competition for
work. To the benefit of the male laborers, as the sixteenth century progressed, a slow
“professionalization” began to exclude women from the work force; the new regulations
192
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 1.
Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 124-125.
194 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 47; Fairchilds, Women in Early Modern Europe, 204.
195 Marshall, “Women in the eformation Era,” 167; Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 13, 68.
196 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 13.
197 Half the membership of certain guilds consisted of women; Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 124.
198 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 13.
199 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 13.
193
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barred women from taking the highest-paying positions, forcing them into the less
desirable low-pay-low-status jobs.200
The work place was not the only realm where tensions between the sexes existed.
As evidenced from the numerous complaints leveled at their spouses, within their own
marriages men and women sometimes struggled to get along. Keith Moxey suggests that
the ages of early modern married couples may have added to the psychological
stressfulness of married life.201 Unlike in the Middle Ages when significantly older men
married pubescent girls, over the course of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, men
and women married later.202 Modern demographers suggest that women married when
they were twenty to twenty-four years old; men, slightly older than their wives, became
husbands when they were between twenty-four and thirty.203 Gone were the easily
impressionable, “trainable” young girls who married vastly older authority figures; in
their place were more mature women who brought their well-established personal and
social views into the marriage. It is highly unlikely that the opinions and world views of
women in their early to mid-twenties perfectly aligned with their husband’s. Moxey
proposes that, “As a consequence of [the married couple’s] maturity” and the close
proximity of their ages, “the potential for conflict must have increased.”204
Compounding men’s anxiety about losing control in the household and the job
market were the active, public roles women took during the early years of the
Reformation. The ideas of the Reformation circulated in pamphlets and broadsheets, in
sermons from the pulpit, and from the mouths of traveling preachers, but most sixteenthcentury women were first introduced to the movement by the male members of their
families.205 Both single and married women enthusiastically joined the “priesthood of all
Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 124.
Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 125.
202 Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 125; Veldman, “Lessons for Ladies,” 120.
203 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 58.
204 Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 125.
205 Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers,” 11-12.
200
201
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believers” and began preaching the doctrine of salvation through faith alone.206 With so
much social and religious upheaval, women had the opportunity to step beyond their
traditional gender roles and support a reformed religion that wanted to reassess women’s
roles in the household and church.207 Typically, men disapproved of women participating
in social and political issues that could distract them from their household duties, but for
the success of the Reformation, men needed women to help lead sieges, participate in
iconoclastic violence, and defend their homes and cities in battle.208 In the heat of the
religious struggle, women were encouraged to preach, to proselytize, and even to become
martyrs for the cause.209 Lower-class women attacked churches, marched through town
singing hymns, and fought Catholic women in the streets; queens and noblewomen raised
armies and brokered treatises on behalf of the Protestants.210
But once the Protestants gained political and social recognition and the
eformation was firmly established, the need for women’s participation diminished—as
did men’s tolerance for their infiltration of the male sphere of activity.211 Women were
encouraged to return to their proper roles in the household where they could teach their
children the new doctrine; too much direct involvement in the cause “distracted women
from their primary responsibilities to husband, children, and home.”212 Substantial
participation by women is fairly characteristic of the beginnings of religious movements,
but once the movement is settled and institutionalized, a time of “retrenchment”
follows.213 Women’s broadened, more active roles are a temporary evil of religious
reevaluation. Thus, the “progressive elements” of the
eformation that allowed for
greater possibilities for women were “expunged” as women were pushed back into their
Wiesner, “Nuns, Wives, and Mothers,” 15; Wunder, “He is the Sun, She is the Moon”, 181.
Wunder, “He is the Sun, She is the Moon”, 181; Marshall, “Women in the eformation Era,” 167.
208 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 68; Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 2, 6-7; Fairchilds, Women
in Early Modern Europe, 210.
209 Weaver, “Gender,” 202.
210 Fairchilds, Women in Early Modern Europe, 210, 213.
211 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 7-8; Weaver, “Gender,” 203.
212 Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 8; Weaver, “Gender,” 203; Fairchilds, Women in Early
Modern Europe, 216.
213 Wunder, “He is the Sun, She is the Moon”, 182; Marshall, “Women in the eformation Era,” 187.
206
207
40
homes.214 However helpful women were in the thick of the battle, men still considered
women morally and intellectually weak, so any prolonged female participation in
“theological speculation or preaching” was considered “disorderly” and unsuitable for
their sex.215
Faced with a flagging economy that increased job competition, marriages taking
place between people of nearer-equal age, and a religious movement open to female
participation, sixteenth-century German men had ample reasons for feeling uneasy about
the stability of gender roles. The new assertiveness of women who married later and
actively supported the Reformation likely inspired feelings of anxiety regarding social
hierarchy in their male counterparts.216 Witnessing women’s ability to successfully stand
alongside their men on the frontlines of the Reformation, on the job market, and in the
home may have unsettled some patriarchs, leading them to believe that confining women
to the home would eliminate female competition in multiple arenas.217 Moxey suggests
that it is out of this uneasy environment that prints and broadsheets depicting themes of
marital rebellion flourished.218 I find Moxey’s combination of visual and historical
evidence convincing; therefore, in the following section, I expand on his theory and
include Weibermacht (Power of Women) imagery in the discussion. With the subtleties
of gender roles and power dynamics of sixteenth-century Germany in mind, I argue that
Power of Women imagery deserves a much closer and more critical analysis against the
backdrop of its social context. Traditional, one-dimensional interpretations fall short; this
category of image is packed with multiple (sometimes contradictory) meanings.
Marshall, “Women in the eformation Era,” 187; Wunder, “He is the Sun, She is the Moon”, 182.
Davis, “Women on Top,” 14 .
216 Weaver, “Gender,” 203.
217 Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 126.
218 Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 125; Grössinger, Picturing Women, 127.
214
215
41
Mocking Men and Women: Battle of the Sexes and Weibermacht Imagery
Convincing sixteenth-century men—and women, for that matter—to marry was
no easy task. In 1522, only a few years into the Reformation, Martin Luther complained
in his treatise “On the Estate of Marriage” that “marriage [had] fallen into awful
disrepute.”219 After years of hearing misogynistic, anti-marriage teachings, especially
from the pro-celibacy Catholic Church, members of both sexes were reluctant to enter
into the state of holy matrimony. According to an observer in 1534, marriage had become
a “weak, despised, and rejected estate” in Augsburg.220 While marriage was the
Protestants’ solution for a Christianized society, unmarried men did not want to be henpecked or cuckolded, and unmarried women did not want to die in childbirth or
experience the loss of a child.221 Men likely encountered Sebastian Franck’s collection of
popular German proverbs (1541), in which Franck pairs St. Jerome’s misogynist proverb:
“If you find things going too well, take a wife,” with another anti-marriage sentiment: “If
you take a wife, you get a devil on your back.”222 In virtually all media, men were taught
about the “depravity of womankind and the unhappiness of the estate of marriage,” so it
is really no wonder that they wished to avoid the altar.223 But with the Protestants
insisting that everyone marry (and closing down the brothels), men became husbands and
women became wives anyway.
Images of Marital Misconduct
Marriage was a theme addressed in virtually all media in sixteenth-century
Germany, including mystery plays, pamphlets, sermons, and prints.224 Like Beham’s
Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, a large number of woodcuts about marriage and
219
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 3.
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 4.
221 Infant and child mortality rates were very high in the sixteenth century. Steven Ozment notes that
somewhere between one-third to one-half of all children died by age five (When Fathers Ruled, 1).
222 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 3.
223 Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 3.
224 Wunder, “He is the Sun, She is the Moon”, 50; Grössinger, Picturing Women, 98.
220
42
the battle of the sexes were produced in Nuremberg in the first half of the sixteenth
century.225 Broadsheets depicting topsy-turvy gender relations with women ruling over or
beating their husbands were often accompanied by Hans Sachs’s texts, which warned
men against their wives’ “usurpation of authority.”226 For example, in a broadsheet
entitled There is No Greater Treasure on Earth than an Obedient Wife who Covets Honor
(fig. 24), Erhard Schön’s woodcut is paired with words written by Hans Sachs, a poet,
playwright and shoemaker native to Nuremberg. The image depicts, from left to right, a
man on all fours pulling a cart loaded with a barrel of unwashed clothing, perhaps
diapers. Standing over the man is his wife, who raises one arm to strike her husband with
a whip and holds his purse, pants, and sword (objects representing his masculine
authority) in her other arm. Following the degraded car-pulling man and his dominatrix
wife are an unmarried man, an unmarried woman, a foolish woman, and a wise man.
Each of the six figures participates in the dialogue written by Sachs.227 The poor
husband laments taking a wife who is hostile and never has a kind word for him. He
wishes he had never married, never let a “shrewish scold” enter his household, but he
acknowledges that he shares his fate with many men. “If you want a beautiful and devout
wife,” replies the whip-wielding woman, “then stay at home…and stop carousing about.”
She was unable to “maintain her wifely dignity” because her husband would not work or
provide for her. As a result of his own failings, his wife is forcing him to wash, spin, pull
the cart, and be beaten. When the unmarried man asks the unmarried woman if she would
rob him of his authority (beating him, injuring him with sharp words, and forcing him to
do women’s work), the unmarried woman answers that she has “no desire for such
power” and will be a model wife. The foolish woman warns the unmarried man that
marriage “is more properly called Pain,” and with it comes lifelong anxiety, worry, and
want; therefore it is better to pay women for their company. The wise man concludes the
225
Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 119.
Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 119.
227 In this paragraph I rely on Steven Ozment’s translation of Hans Sachs’s text, found on pp. 52-53 in
When Fathers Ruled.
226
43
exchange by advising the unmarried man to avoid the “wiles of whores, who are always
there to deceive you.” Instead, the unmarried man should take a wife, provide for her, and
be patient, “stay[ing] with her in love and suffering.”
While all six figures in There is No Greater Treasure represent valid perspectives
on married life, most prints focused specifically on the struggle for power within
marriages. It was believed that “the lower ruled the higher” in every woman, so if a
woman had her way, she would inevitably try to assert her inferior power and rule over
the men above her.228 Some of the more popular representations of women seeking
masculine authority were so-called “Battle for the Pants” images, in which husbands and
wives fought to “wear the pants” and thus assume the dominant role within the marriage.
In Israhel van Meckenem’s 1502 Battle for the Pants engraving (fig. 25), a crazed wife,
accompanied by a devil, prepares to strike her kneeling husband with a distaff; the
coveted pants lie in the foreground, waiting to be taken by the victor of the fight. A wife
is already wearing her husband’s pants, complete with codpiece, in Monogrammist
M.T.’s engraving A Mistreated Husband of about 1540-1550 (fig. 26), but she continues
to beat her husband with a stick. As described in There is no Greater Treasure, once the
wife strips her husband of his trousers, she lords over him and forces him to do women’s
work, inverting the normal patriarchal hierarchy. Hans Schäuffelin depicts this
(un)natural progression in his woodcut Diaper Washer from about 1536 (fig. 27). Here,
an imposing woman, armed with a rod, supervises her husband as he washes dirty
diapers, beating them with a washing beetle. While she neither wears nor carries pants, it
is clear that she has taken control within the household because she sports a fat purse and
keys (symbols of power) around her waist.229 Notably, Windelwascher (“diaper washer”)
was a derogatory name for a henpecked husband in early modern Germany.230
Davis, “Women on Top,” 14 .
Grössinger, Humour and Folly, 118.
230 Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 106.
228
229
44
According to Todd Reeser, early modern men “constantly fear[ed]” losing their
power, so they “constantly guard[ed] against the threat of disempowerment.”231 Malcolm
Jones writes that if a man’s patriarchal control slipped, he risked unbearable humiliation
and the loss of masculinity.232 The historical evidence throughout this chapter supports
eeser and Jones’s assertions: sixteenth-century German men worried about controlling
their wives and themselves, anxious to prove their masculinity and retain their authority.
How, then, should art historians interpret the popularity of prints featuring women in
power? While it is likely that economic instability, increased marriage ages, and the
complexities of gender roles in Reformation Germany amplified tensions between the
sexes, did men truly “fear” the power of women?233 I am unconvinced that serious fears
about women’s power to dominant or mislead men fueled print production.
Marriage was a burden. Wives could be nagging harpies. But the social realities
of sixteenth-century Germany, a patriarchal society engrained with misogynistic
skepticism about women, do not support “an obsessive fear of women.” emember, this
is a society that considered men superior to women in every way, allowed men to legally
beat their wives, and compared men’s rule within their household to both the municipal
fathers’ governance and God’s dominion over all creation! While I agree that images of
marital conflict in which women gain the upper hand sometimes carry moralizing or
didactic messages that reinforce the importance of male dominion, I believe they are
also—and perhaps foremost—intended to be funny. Images of women’s power were a
visual expression of men’s deep-seated anxieties at a time of religious and social
upheaval, but one defense against psychological turmoil and vulnerability is laughter.234
Women wearing or putting on trousers, beating their husbands, or forcing men to wash
231
Reeser, Moderating Masculinity, 30.
Malcolm Jones, “Who Wears the Trousers: Gender elations,” in The Secret Middle Ages (Westport,
CT: Praeger, 2002), 228.
233 Todd Reeser (Moderating Masculinity, 30), Christa Grössinger (Humour and Folly, 126), and Malcolm
Jones (“Who Wears the Trousers,” 240, 242) all use the word “fear” when referring to men’s feelings about
the power of women.
234 Humor and mockery through inversion or gender-swapping is also an effective political and social tool.
Perhaps the same viewers who laughed at images of marital conflict also laughed at images lampooning
and ridiculing the Catholic Church. It would seem that early modern Germans appreciated a good laugh.
232
45
diapers were total inversions of the natural order; thus, because they were unrealistic,
they were also ridiculous—sometimes downright absurd. In his engraving of a mock
coat-of-arms, the Housebook Master equates women in power with a world completely
upside down (fig. 2 ). Here a wife sits on her husband’s back as she works with her
distaff; below the inverted couple, a peasant facing away from the viewer stands on his
head. A woman in power was just as outlandish as a man who stands on his head.
But that misogynistic humor could take a much darker turn. In a more realistic
image of spousal abuse, Barthel Beham depicts a man beating his unruly wife (fig. 29).
The image, which was printed with Sachs’s The Nine Hides of an Angry Wife, a welldressed man brandishes a stool, preparing to strike the woman at his feet. She struggles
on the ground, trying to defend herself with a distaff. According to Sachs’s text, when the
man returned from a night of drinking with his friends, his wife refused to speak to him.
Aggravated by her “insubordination,” the husband proceeds to beat words out of her.
With each strike the woman is compared to a different type of animal. Initially, her skin
feels like a codfish; with the first hit, she rages like a bear; the third blow makes her hiss
like a goose; and the fourth has her barking like a dog.235 She finally transforms back into
a woman with the ninth blow and asks for her husband’s forgiveness, “promising to never
question his authority” again.236 Such a violent “misogynist fantasy,” as Moxey
accurately describes it, is abhorrent to modern readers, but comparing women to different
types of animals was just another humorous inversion for the enjoyment of early modern
men. In fact, it is possible that the men encountering the broadsheet sympathized with the
fictional husband—all too familiar with terse, angry wives who met them at the door after
a night of drinking. It is worth noting here that the town councils did not always rule in
abused women’s favors. When a woman in Nuremberg sued her husband for being “too
235
236
Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 116.
Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 116.
46
rough” in bed, the all-male council had her imprisoned to set an example for all wives
who questioned their husbands’ authority.237
Jokes and Gender Relations at Carnivals
Mockery of gender relations, especially marital misconduct, was a common
practice during festivals and carnivals in sixteenth-century Germany. On many such
occasions, satirical “licenses” were granted to the women of the town. One outlandish
proclamation from Nuremberg gave every woman with “a wretched dissolute husband”
the right to deny him freedom and beat him until “his asshole was roaring.” 238 Natalie
Zemon Davis describes another:
Foeminarius, the Hereditary Steward of Quarrel and Dispute Valley, gave
three years of privileges to the suffering Company of Wives so that they
might rule their husbands: they could bear arms, elect their own mayor,
and go out and entertain as they wished, while their spouses could buy
nothing and drink no wine or beer without the wives’ permission. And of
course the men did all the housework and welcomed any bastards that the
wives might bear.239
The prospect of women actually running the government and controlling their husbands
was an on-going joke shared by the community and reiterated in all forms of popular
culture. Men may have needed disciplining, but it was preposterous to think that women
should rule their husbands—let alone the government!
Sometimes towns paraded effigies of tyrannical wives and their weakling
husbands through the streets.240 In fact, the “village scold or domineering wife” could be
muzzled and pulled through the streets or ducked into the pond.241 Men who allowed
themselves to be beaten and dominated by their wives also faced their community’s
disdain and their neighbors’ jeers. A mistreated husband—a disgrace to his sex—was
237
Harrington, Reordering Marriage and Society, 267.
Davis, “Women on Top,” 171.
239 Davis, “Women on Top,” 171.
240 Davis, “Women on Top,” 168.
241 Davis, “Women on Top,” 16 .
238
47
sometimes forced to ride a horse or donkey backwards through town. 242 Creative festival
organizers constructed floats to display the violence of disobedient wives: “the wives
were shown hitting their husbands with distaffs, tripe, sticks, trenchers, and water pots,
throwing stones at them, pulling their beards, or kicking them in the genitalia.”243 Printed
images, written proclamations, and public processions point to the absurdity of such a
topsy-turvy world—and surely encouraged laughter from viewers or witnesses. But
calling attention to unruly wives and their pathetic husbands provided more than fodder
for laughter; the printed images and public processions clearly indicated which bad
behaviors and topsy-turvy relationships would not be tolerated, deserved derision, and
necessitated correction.
Inversions of all kinds were popular at annual carnivals. “Women played men,
men played women, [and] men played women who were playing men,” writes Davis. 244
Similarly, Moxey notes, “The ritual substitution of humans for beasts of burden was a
traditional means of symbolizing inversion of social order in German carnival
celebrations.”245 Both anthropologists and scholars of festive inversions consider the
swapping of clothes and roles to be part of a ritual renewal of the traditional patriarchal
system—of the “natural order” of the world.246 Temporary role reversals act as a safety
valve for tensions within the society, but once the festivities are concluded, order and
stability are restored and proper gender roles are resumed. “A world turned upside down
Davis, “Women on Top,” 16 ; Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 114. Sometimes a neighbor would
play the part of the husband and ride through down backwards.
243 Davis, “Women on Top,” 16 .
244 Davis, “Women on Top,” 152. In her classic essay, which I encountered after titling my thesis, Davis
speculates that the ambiguous presence of violent, domineering wives in popular early modern culture may
have “made the unruly option a more conceivable one.” Davis goes on, suggesting that images of
disorderly women could “operate to widen behavioral options for women within and even outside
marriage.” But I completely disagree with this interpretation. The historical evidence simply does not
support her speculation. Sixteenth-century German society was not encouraging women to explore
masculine roles—that contradicts ideal femininity as well as women’s roles as wives and mothers,
subordinates in the household. Davis also asserts that urban carnivals sent mixed messages: hen-pecked
husbands should take control of their wives and women on top should keep up the fight; the evidence Davis
presents in her own article (such as the citations I make in this paper) works against her interpretations.
245 Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 101.
246 Davis, “Women on Top,” 153-154.
242
48
can only be righted, not changed.”247 Like the shaming of unruly women and their
spineless husbands, certain carnival practices shined a very public light on people who
failed to perform their “social duties,” like getting married or being a good spouse—
expecting them to change their undesirable behavior.248 At carnivals during the
Reformation, women who had no suitors, old unmarried women, and monks were
mocked for not having spouses. They were sometimes forced to pull a plow through or
around the village, trading places with lowly animals.249 Inversions called attention to
problem members of society and strongly suggested they get with the program. In
contrast to Moxey’s interpretation of the cart-pulling husband in There is No Greater
Treasure (fig. 24), which assumes the husband is mocked for having gotten married, I
propose that the husband is mocked, like the unmarried women and monks, for his failure
to assume the proper mantle of his gender.250
Like Davis, I want to speculate about an alternate reading of prints featuring
women in dominant positions. In her essay Davis focuses on a female audience’s
hypothetical response, arguing that “the image of the disorderly woman did not always
function to keep women in their place” but encouraged women to act outside their gender
roles, to behave badly.251 My interpretation is the exact opposite of Davis’ unsupported
hypothesis. In my opinion, women were not the target audience for such prints, so it is a
non-issue whether or not they kept women “in their place.” Instead, I propose that images
of women in power were meant to be didactic and, most intriguingly, entertaining for
male viewers. They carry both a corrective and a humorous message, perhaps to temper
the blow. As I have demonstrated with the historical evidence, it was a man’s
responsibility to govern his household; he was considered biologically and intellectually
Davis, “Women on Top,” 154.
Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 101.
249 Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 101.
250 Moxey, “The Battle of the Sexes,” 103.
251 Davis, “Women on Top,” 154. Davis’s attempt to interpret prints from the perspective of early modern
women is admirable and interesting, but there is little to no evidence to substantiate an investigation
focused on women’s responses. Furthermore, the historical evidence I have assembled in this paper does
not support her hypotheses.
247
248
49
superior to his female counterpart in every way, so it should not have been that difficult.
Yet, sixteenth-century society both knew that men lost control of themselves through
alcohol consumption, lust, and violence—and regularly encouraged men to test the
boundaries of their self-control.
It is a logical next step, in a society filled with derision for failure in social roles,
to think that bad husbands were mocked in prints of gender conflict. On one hand, the
man is a sympathetic figure whom male viewers would pity and possibly relate with
through their own experiences in marriage. But on the other hand, hen-pecked husbands
should be mocked for not performing their masculinity. According to Hans Sachs’s 1533
carnival play The Angry Wife, it was up to the mistreated husband to take back control
and start acting “like a man.” Through the character of a neighbor, Sachs advised
husbands of quarrelsome wives to right the inverted relationship (fix the system) and
assume their proper gender role. The neighbor instructs the husband:
Go ahead and act like a man!
Otherwise she'll end up riding you,
And before long she'll
Deprive you of your pants, your purse, and your sword,
Which will make us all ashamed of you.
Do not give her too much reign,
But rather take an oak cudgel
And beat her soundly between the ears!252
Here, a man ridden by a woman was not only robbed of his authority in the household,
but he also lost social status among men: he “[made] us all ashamed of [him].” Early
modern society thought of the “division of power between the sexes…as a zero-sum
game,” if one spouse gained power, then the other lost power.253 Therefore, if a husband
wanted to regain power and authority within his marriage—and among men, he had to
take power away from his wife.
252
253
Hans Sachs’s The Angry Wife (1533) as provided by Moxey in “The Battle of the Sexes,” 117.
Wunder, “What Made a Man a Man?” 22.
50
In sixteenth-century society there are several examples of men mocking men for
losing or not performing their masculinity. Melchoir Ambach, the editor of biblical,
patristic, and contemporary rants against whoring and adultery, specifically hated that
people took sexual misconduct so lightly, writing:
…indeed, adultery and whoring are treated as very minor sins, even as no
sins at all. One jokes about them! How many cuckolded husbands are
there? How many wives justifiably enraged at unfaithful husbands? How
many respectable young girls go about with their bellies swollen by
unroasted bratwursts?254
Similarly, in 1524, Wittenberg’s new marriage service emphasized that marriage was “a
far different thing than what the world presently jokes about and insults.”255 In groups
over a drink or at home over a book, I propose that men took pleasure in images of a
topsy-turvy world, using laughter as a way to cope with the harsh realities of the real
world. Prints, carnival practices, and popular texts demonstrated the chaos and evils of
the world upside down, reminding men why they were in charge and justifying the
patriarchal hierarchy.
Of course, prints with dominant female characters and men who couldn’t control
them—or their own desires, could prove enjoyable in a variety of ways. I have already
mentioned how humor was most certainly present, as was the moralizing or didactic
angle. In addition to those readings of men under duress in their marriages, I suggest an
additional pleasure available in Weibermacht (Power of Women) images. Like the battle
of the sexes imagery, Weibermacht prints carried a didactic narrative warning men
against the evils of seductive women and their wiles, but many of those print show
exotic, semi-(or completely) nude women in intimate relation to (un)lucky men. Is the
failure to perform one’s masculinity and the following doom and humiliation worth the
time spent in the arms of sexually powerful women?
254
255
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 56 (my italics).
Ozment, When Fathers Ruled, 8.
51
The Charms of Weibermacht Women
Scholarship has defined the Weibermacht (Power of Women) topos as “a group of
themes, in literature and the fine arts, that focused on women who used their feminine
wiles to triumph over men.”256 This broad definition can sometimes include images of
marital conflict or the power of love. But “traditional” Weibermacht images depict
irresistible—and consequently dangerous—women from biblical stories, history, and
romances as they humiliate, ruin, and/or kill their male counterparts. For example, Eve,
Salome, Delilah, Phyllis, and Guinevere are included in this collection of women.
Notably, the Power of Women topos “singles out the most celebrated men of the past,”
demonstrating how all men—no matter how strong, smart, or moral—are equally
susceptible to women’s wiles (a.k.a. sexual power).257
Countless late medieval and early modern texts—from moralizing sermons to
comic carnival plays—and images reference the Weibermacht narratives.258 Visual
representations of these cunning, beautiful women first appeared in the margins of
illuminated manuscripts in the late thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.259 As their
popularity grew, Weibermacht women covered the surfaces of an array of public and
private objects: architectural façades, stained glass, wall paintings, tapestries, bed
hangings, table linens, drinking goblets, salt cellars, writing tablets, musical instruments,
jewelry, combs, and caskets.260 At the end of the fifteenth century, printmakers started
using the Power of Women topos in their woodcuts and engravings, but it was during the
first half of the sixteenth century that Weibermacht imagery reached the pinnacle of its
256
Russell, Eva/Ave, 147; for more art historical discussions about the Power of Women topos, see:
Russell, Eva/Ave; Smith, The Power of Women; Jones, “Who Wears the Trousers”; Dackerman, Chaste,
Chased, & Chastened; Grössinger’s “Women,” in Humor and Folly, 107-129; Martin Knauer, Dürers
unfolgsame Erben: Bildstrategien in den Kupferstichen der deutschen Kleinmeister, Studien zur
Internationalen Architektur- und Kunstgeschichte 101 (Petersberg: Michael Imhof, 2013), 34-35.
257 Smith, The Power of Women, 2.
258 Smith, The Power of Women, 2.
259 Smith, The Power of Women, 16.
260 Smith, The Power of Women, 16, 192-193.
52
popularity.261 Northern European printmakers, including Hans Burgkmair, Hans Baldung
Grien, Lucas van Leyden, and the Little Masters, designed numerous Power of Women
depictions, usually in the form of sets or series.262
Moreover, in 1520, when the municipal council of Nuremberg commissioned
Albrecht Dürer to redesign their town hall, Dürer incorporated Weibermacht images into
his concept for the window-lined south wall.263 Dürer’s design was never realized, but a
surviving preparatory drawing shows that the spandrel between each pair of windows
would have contained a roundel featuring a scene of the triumph of womanhood (fig.
30).264 Here, from left to right, the narrative medallions depict David watching Bathsheba
bathe, Delilah cutting Samson’s hair, and Phyllis riding Aristotle. Thus, Nuremberg’s
most celebrated artist intended to include Weibermacht imagery in an important public
space used for conferences, celebrations, and legal proceedings.265 H. Diane Russell
suggests, “The murals must have been intended to entertain or amuse both men and
women.”266 The Weibermacht scenes could have reminded the influential men within the
hall that they, too, were “subject to beguilement by women,” and the women attending
dances in the space may have been pleased to “have their power acknowledged in the
decorations.”267 In both public and private spaces, sixteenth-century Germans
encountered Weibermacht images, a constant reminder of the fluid power dynamics
between men and women.
Of course, some stories were more frequently represented than others. From the
long list of outwitted and outmaneuvered men, Samson, Solomon, David, and Aristotle
were particularly popular.268 Samson’s amazing physical strength was no match for
261
Russell, Eva/Ave, 148, 13.
Jane Campbell Hutchison, “The Housebook Master and the Folly of the Wise Man,” The Art Bulletin
48, no. 1 (March 1, 1966): 73.
263 Jochen Sander et al., eds., Albrecht Dürer: His Art in Context (Munich: Prestel, 2013), 288.
264 Sander, et. al., Albrecht Dürer, 288.
265 Sander, et. al., Albrecht Dürer, 288.
266 Russell, Eva/Ave, 150.
267 Russell, Eva/Ave, 150.
268 Russell, Eva/Ave, 147.
262
53
Delilah’s pretty face—or her nagging and perseverance.269 The Philistines offered to pay
Delilah if she told them how to defeat Samson, so she asked Samson to reveal the source
of his strength. When Samson told Delilah that being tied with fresh bowstrings would
make him weak, she tied him up and called for the Philistines. But Samson easily broke
through them. When Samson told Delilah that being tied with new ropes would rob him
of his strength, she tied him up and called for the Philistines. But the ropes did not hold
him either. When Samson told Delilah that weaving his hair into the fabric on a loom
would weaken him, she worked his hair into the fabric and called for the Philistines. But,
again, that did not weaken him. Delilah complained that Samson was making a fool out
of her because he would not tell her his secret. How, she reasoned, could Samson love
her if he did not confide in her? Sick of her prodding, Samson—who obviously did not
possess superior mental strength—confessed that shaving off his hair would leave him
powerless. While Samson slept on her lap, Delilah cut his hair and called for the
Philistines. Delilah’s betrayal set events in motion that led to Samson’s blinding, arrest,
and death.
In an early engraving by Master E.S., a small, dozing Samson rests his head on
Delilah’s lap (fig. 31). Delilah, a much larger figure, confronts the viewer with her dark
gaze and coy smile—perhaps the same coquettish expression that enticed Samson. Hans
Burgkmair designed four woodcuts on the “Follies of Love” (Liebestorheiten, c. 1519),
including Samson and Delilah, Solomon’s Idolatry, David and Bathsheba, and Phyllis
Riding Aristotle. Burgkmair’s Samson is older and more powerfully built than Master
E.S’s figure, and his Delilah is even more sumptuously dressed in a beautiful gown and
jewelry (fig. 32). Here, Delilah has sheared away half of her sleeping lover’s long tresses.
The presence of wine in the lower left corner suggests that alcohol kept Samson asleep
throughout his haircut. If only Samson had not confided in Delilah!
269
For the story of Samson and Delilah, see Judges 16.
54
King Solomon’s divinely-given wisdom did not stand a chance against the exotic
temptation of foreign women.270 Despite God’s instruction that the people of Israel never
intermarry with foreign women, for “they will most certainly turn away your heart to
follow their gods,” Solomon married hundreds of them—700 princesses—and kept 300
concubines.271 He loved them “most ardent[ly].”272 And, as God predicted, Solomon’s
foreign wives tempted him to follow other gods.273 Heavily influenced by his many pagan
consorts, Solomon stopped worshiping God with his whole heart; instead, he burnt
incenses and offered sacrifices to his wives’ gods.274 Lucas van Leyden, who created both
large and small Weibermacht series, shows Solomon kneeling at an altar dedicated to a
nude male god with untamed hair and pointed ears (fig. 33).275 The standing female
figure who directs Solomon’s worship wears a cap with large, wild feathers—an indicator
of her exotic origin. In Master MZ’s engraving of this theme (fig. 34), a giant,
authoritative woman urges a small, kneeling Solomon to worship a statue of a nude
female goddess. The base of the statue consists of architectural niches filled with
additional nude women. In this example the Power of Women theme is particularly
strong. Solomon no longer worships God; guided by the hands of a woman, Solomon
worships women and the seductive female form. In Burgkmair’s version of Solomon’s
idolatry (fig. 35), the female statue that Solomon worships is nearly identical to the
woman standing behind him with her hand on his shoulder. Both the woman and the idol
wear gowns and elaborate headdresses. Here, the power of a woman is strong enough to
turn a pious man from God—redirecting his adoration to contemporary beauties!
Solomon’s lust for exotic women made him vulnerable and open to blasphemy. If only
Solomon had not married pagan women!
For the story of Solomon’s idolatry, see 1 Kings 11.
1 Kings 11: 2-3 DV.
272 1 Kings 11: 2 DV.
273 1 Kings 11:4.
274 1 Kings 11:8.
275 Russell (Eva/Ave, 163) mentions that Solomon’s Idolatry was a popular anti-model for Protestants who
opposed image worship. The iconoclasts compared Solomon’s idolatry to iconophiles’ adoration of images
of saints, the Virgin Mary, and Christ.
270
271
55
David’s impressive morality could not hold out against Bathsheba’s beautiful
body.276 King David stayed in Jerusalem, “at the time when kings go forth to war,” and
sent his army to fight without him.277 One night, while walking on the roof of his palace,
he spotted a woman bathing. Captivated by her beauty, David asked about her and
learned that her name was Bathsheba—and she was married to Uriah, a soldier. Despite
that discovery, the lusty king sent for Bathsheba, slept with her, and got her pregnant.
First, David tried to cover his sin by sending Uriah home to sleep with his wife. But
Uriah refused to enjoy the pleasures of his marriage bed while his fellow men slept in
tents, so David ordered his death.
pon the king’s request, Bathsheba’s unsuspecting
husband was sent to the frontlines to die. When her mourning period was over, David
“brought [Bathsheba] into his house, and she became his wife and bore him a son: and
this thing which David had done, was displeasing to the Lord.”278 Despite her passive
role in this narrative, Bathsheba is often blamed for leading David to sin. Perhaps if she
had veiled herself in shamefastness, like Juan Luis Vives recommends for all women, the
king would not have desired her—but that seems doubtful.
Because Bathsheba was bathing when David saw her, artists used the story as an
excuse to depict the female nude. Georg Pencz, one of Barthel Beham’s colleagues,
shows most of Bathsheba’s unclothed body in profile (fig. 36). King David, identified by
his harp, looks out at her from a balcony in the background. Bathsheba’s maid extends a
hand to shield her mistress as she washes her leg, but Bathsheba’s gaze seems to meet
that of her suitor. Is Pencz blaming Bathsheba here? It is unclear. Hans Burgkmair also
includes David and Bathsheba in his Weiberlisten (Women’s Wiles) series (fig. 37). King
David is barely visible looking out a window in the upper-right corner. Positioned in the
foreground, Bathsheba sits on the edge of a fountain with her back to the viewer. The
drapery around her shoulders surely shields her front from David’s prying eyes, but the
entire length of her back and right buttock are exposed to the viewer’s gaze. Burgkmair
276
For the story of David and Bathsheba, see 2 Samuel 11.
2 Samuel 11: 1 DV.
278 2 Samuel 11: 27 DV.
277
56
gives his audience a privileged view. Whoever spends time looking at the engraving takes
on a voyeuristic role similar to the sinful king. One reading of this unique viewing
experience could be didactic: a reminder of the dangers of looking at female beauty. But
Bathsheba’s nude back combined with the phallic spouts pouring water into the deep,
dark fountain suggests a different purpose for this work: this is an erotic visual
indulgence veiled in a moralizing Old Testament story. If only David had been with his
army and never seen Bathsheba!
Aristotle’s legendary intellect crumbled at Phyllis’ dainty, feminine feet. The
story of Phyllis and Aristotle, which has no connection to the historical Aristotle and
actually “originated as a piece of medieval libel,” exists in different versions, but the
outcome is always the same: the humiliation of Aristotle.279 Jacques de Vitry, a medieval
cleric vehemently opposed to the reading of classical philosophy, first told the tale as an
attack on Aristotle.280 According to Jacques who wrote about 1229-1240, Aristotle
thought that his pupil Alexander the Great was neglecting his duties and spending too
much time with his (unnamed) wife. When Aristotle tried to separate them, she “resolved
to get revenge.”281 The woman made Aristotle fall in love with her by showing him her
legs; before she would assuage his lust, she insisted that Aristotle give her a piggy-back
ride. When he agreed to her conditions, the woman told Alexander, who came to witness
his teacher’s foolish behavior. In the thirteenth-century Norman poem by Henry
d’Andely and the middle high German poem Aristotle and Phyllis (Aristoteles und Fillis)
it inspired, the woman is not Alexander’s wife, but his mistress. Furthermore, the
seduction is immediately followed by the woman riding Aristotle, whom she saddles and
bridles! Instead of taking place indoors, the great philosopher’s humiliation occurs in a
garden—where the Phyllis in the German poem uses a branch from a flowering rosebush
to whip Aristotle’s back.282 A fifteenth-century German Fastnachtspiel entitled A Play of
Hutchison, “The Housebook Master,” 75.
Hutchison, “The Housebook Master,” 75.
281 Hutchison, “The Housebook Master,” 75.
282 Hutchison, “The Housebook Master,” 76.
279
280
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Master Aristotle (Ain Spil von Maister Aristotiles) tells a slightly different story. It begins
with an unnamed king praising Aristotle for “his complete indifference to beautiful
women.”283 Unconvinced, the queen sets off to conquer Aristotle. The besotted
philosopher, unschooled in wooing, offers to teach her grammar, philosophy, and
rhetoric, but the queen asks for a piggy-back ride instead. The play ends with the king
deriding Aristotle for “allow[ing] himself to be out-witted by a woman” and debased to
the level of a lowly beast.284 What began as a critique of Aristotelianism became an
extremely successful criticism of the power of women.285
Visual representations of Phyllis riding Aristotle were among the most popular
from the Weibermacht series.286 In Master M.Z.’s engraving (fig. 3 ), the lovely Phyllis
with flowing curls and a half-lidded, sultry expression raises a whip to strike her “horse.”
Aristotle turns his bridled head, gazing with adoring eyes at her pale, exposed flesh.
Phyllis, whose large breasts threaten to spill out of her dress, presents a fine figure topped
by an expensive, feathered hat. On the left, two observers witness Aristotle’s humiliation.
The small, nude female statue standing in the architectural niche above the two men
probably represents Eve, the first woman whose wiles brought misery to mankind. Both
Master M.Z. and the Housebook Master’s Phyllis Riding Aristotle prints show Aristotle’s
public humiliation taking place in a garden. In the Housebook Master’s engraving (fig.
39), two men watch from over a wall as Phyllis rides sidesaddle on the duped
philosopher’s back. This Phyllis demurely looks down at her beast of burden, gently
grasping the reins and whip. Framed with dark, furrowed brows, Aristotle’s angry gaze
confronts the viewer. Is he unhappy that Phyllis is abusing him? Or is he more upset that
there are witnesses to his foolishness? How easily the beautiful woman overpowered the
usually rational philosopher! If only Aristotle had used his wits!
Hutchison, “The Housebook Master,” 76.
Hutchison, “The Housebook Master,” 76.
285 Hutchison, “The Housebook Master,” 75.
286 Russell, Eva/Ave, 149.
283
284
58
Susan Smith argues that, while the selection of bad women and the combinations
of their cautionary narratives varied, the purpose of the Power of Women topos was
always the same: “to bring to bear the authority of history on the issue of women and
power.”287 I agree that biblical, historical, and legendary narratives about women
deceiving and dominating men likely lent authority to misogynistic claims against
women and their sexual power. Certainly Weibermacht imagery could—like the
representations of marital conflict described in the previous section—convey a
moralizing message about the evil effects of women’s power. But this limited reading of
Power of Women series does not fully account for their content or their popularity.
Because most of the scholarship on these images dates back to the nineties and thirdwave feminism, unsurprisingly, the authors read Weibermacht prints as vehicles of
misogyny—which they are, but those scholars have not pushed beyond that first layer of
meaning. Yes, Power of Women prints reinforce anxieties about women’s sexuality and
encourage men to keep them under control, but those same images depict men failing to
assert their authority, failing to combat feminine wiles with superior masculine rationale
and moderation. After all, there are two essential characters in each Weibermacht
narrative: a dominant, powerful woman and a submissive, “powerless” man. For
example, Delilah nagged Samson until he divulged his secret; he failed to “act like a
man” and control his woman. Furthermore, the inclusion of wine in Burgkmair’s print
may also suggest that Samson drank too much alcohol. If Power of Women images show
a topsy-turvy world in which women step beyond the boundaries of proper feminine
behavior, then, conversely, they must also depict men failing to perform proper
masculinity. These are the rules of the zero-sum power dynamic of early modern society.
Weakness is an implicit trait of men who cannot control their desires, who allow
women to top them. True, sixteenth-century German society blamed women for leading
men astray, but they also called attention to men who overindulged or lost control.
“Indeed, male overindulgence was as much a concern as female cunning,” writes Julia
287
Smith, The Power of Women, 2.
59
Nurse, “Young women were often depicted with lascivious or debauched men to
accentuate the stupidity of such behavior.”288 Hen-pecked husbands were mocked during
carnivals; drunkards were an acknowledged social ill; and abusive husbands were (often)
punished by town councils. Building on my logic in the previous section: since the
failings of average husbands were the butt of jokes, simultaneously spurring mockery and
urging self-correction, then the failings of exemplary men (like Samson, Solomon, David,
and Aristotle) were surely that much funnier and more thought-provoking. The humor of
the situation is increased exponentially by the superior quality of the men who falter in
the presence of women. Even the manliest men—with the greatest strength, wisdom,
morals, and rationality—lost control on occasion, and it was due, in part, to their revered
status that their follies were so comical.289
Men who chuckled at the absurdity of the Housebook Master’s satirical coat-ofarms, which compared an upside-down peasant to a woman sitting on her husband’s back
(fig. 2 ), could just as easily appreciate the humor of the Housebook Master’s depiction
of Phyllis riding Aristotle (fig. 39). The difference between the husband’s and the
philosopher’s humiliation was that Aristotle failed to resist Phyllis despite his legendary
intellectual power. Sixteenth-century German men—with libidos so rampant that Luther
expressed concerns about controlling them—were acquainted with the irresistible
magnetism of women. Having experienced strong sexual desires and either becoming
fools over women or witnessing their comrades behave ridiculously for the fairer sex, the
men viewing Weibermacht prints could mock the men for losing control, chuckle
sympathetically about an all-too-familiar situation, or laugh at/with a friend whose love
life too closely resembled that of the man on the printed page. Men struggling with the
288 Julia Nurse, “She-Devils, Harlots, and Harridans in Northern enaissance Prints,” History Today 48,
no. 7 (July 1998): 47.
289 Hutchison, “The Housebook Master,” 7 . Hutchison reads humor in the Housebook Master’s pair of
tondo prints Solomon Worshiping a Strange God and Aristotle Ridden by Phyllis. “They are depictions, first
and foremost,” she writes, “of the follies of two men who were revered in Antiquity for their wisdom—one
a Biblical sage, the other a pagan scholar.” Because the “exquisite joke” mocks neo-Thomist Via Antiqua,
she argues that it was likely amusing to a rival group (Via Moderna) who thought following the Ancients’
examples too closely was dangerous.
60
demands of their own masculinity might find the failings of the high-and-mighty
exemplars of manhood amusing.
Power of Women images could be fodder for the amusement of men in more
ways than one. In addition to laughing about the foolish behavior of the duped men or,
perhaps, sitting in a tavern joking about each other’s experiences with women, early
modern men may have privately enjoyed certain Weibermacht prints for their portrayals
of semi- or completely nude beauties—a privileged perspective less available in more
public genres.290 In contrast to most of the modestly-clothed, crazed wives in “Battle of
the Sexes” prints (figs. 24-25), Weibermacht women were sometimes extravagantly
dressed with plunging necklines (fig. 38) or conveniently uncovered (fig. 37) for the
enjoyment of the viewer.291
ecall the privileged view of Bathsheba’s bare back that
Burgkmair created for his audience!
While some Power of Women narratives logically included female nudity (i.e.
David and Bathsheba), a few artists took the liberty of stripping away other women’s
clothing, providing visual feasts for hungry male eyes. For example, in his Phyllis Riding
Aristotle (fig. 40), Hans Baldung Grien presents both Phyllis and Aristotle in the buff,
leaving no room for doubt about their sexual relationship. Obviously, Baldung and other
artists used Weibermacht scenes as opportunities to depict female nudes. The moralizing
biblical or mythological Power of Women narratives counteracted the lascivious displays
of feminine flesh, which artists included to pique their patrons’ interest. A man could
justify his purchase—and close study—of such an image by referring to its warning
against women’s charms and its message of moderation. As they looked at the appealing
female forms, perhaps male viewers could sympathize with the men who fell for them.
290
Knauer, Dürers unfolgsame Erben, 34.
Some “Battle of the Sexes” prints, like fig. 26, include partial nudity, but that is uncommon. In
Monogrammist M.T.’s A Mistreated Husband, the artist specifically draws attention to the woman’s
feminine beauty. In addition to exposing her breasts and letting her long hair fly untamed over her shoulder,
by dressing the woman in pants, the artist also shows the dip-in at her waist and the flaring out around her
buttocks and hips. Furthermore, the short pants expose the angry wife’s delicate ankle, turned in a graceful,
dance-like pose. Similarly, her shapely calves are exposed to the male print collector in a manner unseen in
real life. But this is not the standard iconography for “Battle of the Sexes” prints.
291
61
Depending on the woman’s beauty, early modern men may have even envied the fools
who spent time in those warm arms. Was she worth it? If Samson, Solomon, David, or
Aristotle could do it all again, would they face ridicule, sin, and death for sexual
pleasure? Perhaps sixteenth-century German men could think back fondly on moments
when they acted foolishly for lust or love—or temporary gratification.
Like the gender relationships they address, Power of Women images are too
complex to reduce to a single meaning or purpose. To be clear, I am not arguing that
previous scholarship is wrong but that Weibermacht images have many potential
meanings. These images mock female power and male weakness while villainizing
female sexuality and objectifying women. Because they are such rich images, I propose
that Weibermacht prints can be both outlets for male anxieties about women and amusing
collectibles that could inspire laughter and/or lust. Laughter might temper anxieties raised
by seeing women dominating men—whether in reality or fiction. Transforming
Weibermacht women into sex objects by adjusting or removing their clothes might
neutralize the power of the dominant female figure, using a man’s lust to remind him that
men possess and control women—both the living and printed ones. Whatever power real
women had in sixteenth-century Germany—in the household, through their work, or
during the Reformation, it was limited and regulated by men.
Conclusion
In this careful study of gender roles and relations, I have revealed many of the
intricacies and contradictions of sixteenth-century masculinity and femininity. The
extensive historical and visual information analyzed in the preceding pages establishes
the gendered context within which Barthel Beham created Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes, and it provides the foundation on which I interpret the engraving in the
remaining chapters of this thesis. With a nuanced appreciation for the ideal and lived
relationships between the sexes, the pressures placed on men and women, and the
mockery and criticism they faced if they failed to perform proper masculinity or
62
femininity, in the next chapter I begin my multivalent interpretation of Beham’s work.
Like the “Battle of the Sexes” and Weibermacht prints that play with themes of morality,
didacticism, humor, and sexuality, Beham’s small, clever engraving depicts an intriguing
relationship between a woman and a man. As I have demonstrated at length, both lived
and visually rendered gender relationships are far too complex to generalize. This leads
me to ask: in the minds of sixteenth-century Germans, what kind of woman was Judith?
And what kind of man was Holofernes? Furthermore, how might an early modern viewer
interpret the intimate physical interaction of their nude bodies in Beham’s image?
Interpreting Judith as a woman and Holofernes as a man aids in our overall understanding
of their sexually-charged relationship.
63
~ Chapter 2 ~
The Three Faces of Judith and their Audience
According to the Apocrypha, Judith was a chaste widow who outwitted and killed
a powerful man on behalf of God and her people. She prevented her loathsome enemy
Holofernes, a heathen general, from destroying her city and the Chosen People living
there. Thus, it would seem that the roles of hero and villain were clear-cut, yet the
methods that Judith employed in her triumph complicate matters. After all, Judith used
her beauty and womanly wiles to dominate a male adversary. On one hand she was a
faithful instrument of God who slayed an evil man. On the other, Judith stepped beyond
her subordinate role as a woman and employed her feminine charms to deceive a hypermasculine military leader. Therefore, the nature of Judith’s actions tainted her victory,
especially for late medieval and early modern audiences.
Much like sixteenth-century German women, Judith could alternately stand for
ideal femininity or the destructive power of female cunning and sexuality. Was she a
pious, chaste servant of God, like the Virgin Mary? Or were her actions more in line with
Eve’s fatal disobedience? Margarita Stocker writes, “Exceptionally amongst the biblical
sirens, Judith was a polyvalent image that the observer could perceive either way [as a
shrew or heroine].”1 In truth, the textual accounts and visual representations of Judith
were subtler and more complicated than a binary of good and evil. I have found that
Judith frequently appears as an exemplary Christian woman, a fearsome hero, a cunning
femme fatale, or some combination of those types.2 As her counterpart in an
1
Margarita Stocker, Judith: Sexual Warrior, Women and Power in Western Culture (New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1998), 52.
2 My tripartite division of “Judiths” resembles that of Henrike Lähnemann’s in her “Hystoria Judith:
deutsche Judithdichtungen vom 12. bis zum 16. Jahrhundert” (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2006), 416-442. Since I
developed my Judith-types without previous knowledge of Lähnemann’s, our divisions are neither identical
nor contradictory. Laura Weigert’s Judith categories in her “Judith et Holopherne: Images du vice, images
de la vertu,” in Judith et Holopherne (Paris: Descl e de Brouwer, 2003) were helpful in shaping my
divisions.
64
ambivalently-received narrative, Holofernes was often portrayed as the abhorrent enemy
of God or the representative of tyrannical authorities, but at other times he became an
outwitted fool. For instance, when Judith took on the mantle of deceptive woman,
Holofernes could become a more sympathetic character—at least in the eyes of early
modern men. So where exactly on the spectrum of good and evil did Beham’s figures of
Judith and Holofernes fall?
In order to determine the character of Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes, I review three “faces,” or types, of Judiths that coexisted in the late medieval
and early modern periods. Although Judith could personify virtues or heroism, she could
just as easily stand for dangerous female sexuality and the power of women. Throughout
my discussion of Judith’s textual and visual reception, I argue that Beham’s 1525 Judith
is intended to be understood as a cunning femme fatale—and his Holofernes a defeated,
ridiculous man. While the Nuremberg printmaker embraces the complexity of Judith and
her relationship to Holofernes, ultimately, Beham gives his figures the appearance and
body positions befitting the Weibermacht (Power of Women) tradition. Very much like
Phyllis riding Aristotle, Judith sits astride Holofernes.
Each “face” of Judith served a distinctly different purpose and targeted a specific
audience. The Chaste Widow functioned as an exemplar for women’s behavior. The
Triumphant Heroine rallied righteous groups together to stand against their tyrannical
foes. And, as I argued in chapter 1, the Femme Fatale both warned and amused male
audiences. Because Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes is a Femme Fatale, I argue
that Beham specifically created his voluptuous nude for male viewers. In the final section
of this chapter, I describe the wealthy, educated, and visually literate merchants,
patricians, and artists who would have surely enjoyed seeing the female nude, but also
recognized and appreciated the complexity of Beham’s design.
65
The Chaste Widow and the Heathen
In his influential, fourth-century preface to the Book of Judith, St. Jerome wrote,
“Receive the widow Judith, a paradigm of chastity, and with triumphant laud make her
known in perpetual praises.”3 He and other early Church Fathers considered Judith a
model of chastity for both women and men. They placed great emphasis on her pious
motivations; vehemently insisted that she was not sexually “polluted” during her
encounter with Holofernes; and “nervously glossed over” the seductive means by which
she overcame the Assyrian general.4 Remarkably, St. Jerome sharpened his positive
interpretation of Judith’s virtuousness by adding an additional phrase—of his own
invention—to the end of the Book of Judith; he wrote, “And chastity was joined to her
virtue.”5 For St. Ambrose (c. 337-397), one of St. Jerome’s contemporaries, Judith’s
chastity and temperance were foils for Holofernes’s lust and drunkenness.6 Similarly, in
his early fifth-century allegory the Psychomachia (Battle of Spirits), the Late Antique
Latin poet Prudentius praised “the unbending Judith” for:
…spurning the lecherous captain’s jeweled couch, check[ing] his unclean
passion with the sword, and woman as she was, winn[ing] a famous
victory over the foe with no trembling hand, [but] with boldness heaveninspired.7
See translation of St. Jerome’s entire preface to the Book of Judith in Elena Ciletti and Henrike
Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” in The Sword of Judith: Judith Studies across the
Disciplines (Cambridge, U.K.: OpenBook Publishers, 2010), 42-43.
4 Elena Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology in the enaissance Iconography of Judith,” in Refiguring Woman:
Perspectives on Gender and the Italian Renaissance, ed. Marilyn Migiel and Juliana Schiesari (Ithaca:
Cornell University Press, 1991), 41; Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 57.
5 Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology,” 42.
6 Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 94.
7 Elizabeth Bailey, “Judith, Jael, and Humilitas in the Speculum Virginum,” in The Sword of Judith: Judith
Studies across the Disciplines, ed. Elena Ciletti and Henrike Lähnemann (Cambridge, U.K.: OpenBook
Publishers, 2010), 283.
3
66
Prudentius described Judith as a model of feminine virtues. In addition to possessing
chastity, Judith was often associated with Humility, Piety, Fortitude, Temperance,
Justice, Wisdom, Magnanimity, and Eloquence.8
For each virtue Judith personified, Holofernes embodied a corresponding vice. A
visual example of this motif appears in the earliest extant Mirror of Virgins (Speculum
Virginum), a manuscript filled with moral lessons for women.9 Here, the beautiful
Humilitas (Humility) stands over the mannish figure of Superbia (Pride) as she slays her
(fig. 41). The twelfth-century artist follows the tradition of the Psychomachia, which
describes victorious Virtues standing over fallen Vices. Both Judith and Jael, the labeled
figures flanking Humility, assume the triumphant position of Virtue standing over Vice
(represented by their dead enemies Holofernes and Sisera). Like Judith, Jael killed a
pagan military commander who oppressed the Israelites. Jael, depicted on the left,
welcomed Sisera into her tent with hospitality and promised to hide him from his
enemies, but when he fell asleep, she hammered a tent peg into his temple. In this image
Sisera’s head bleeds from the spike embedded in his skull, but, perhaps for symmetry
with Sisera, Holofernes’s head is still attached to his body. In her catalogue entry for
Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, ussell notes that “a female standing
or sitting over the body of a male might suggest the medieval psychomachia tradition
where virtue conquers vice” but that Beham’s Judith possesses a “more sinister air.”10
Like Russell, I am unconvinced that Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes is primarily
concerned with Virtue and Vice. Beham may be playing with the theme, but his use of
nudity suggests something less wholesome.
Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 46; Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 94; Jan
Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image, and Symbol,” in The Message of Images: Studies in the History of Art,
Bibliotheca Artibus et Historiae (Vienna: IRSA, 1988), 119.
9 Bailey, “Judith, Jael, and Humilitas,” 277; Lähnemann, “Hystoria Judith,” 432.
10 H. Diane Russell, Eva/Ave: Woman in Renaissance and Baroque Prints (Washington, D.C.: National
Gallery of Art / Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 1990), 67.
8
67
Judith’s exemplary chastity, humility, and overall virtuousness made it possible
for the Catholic Church to view her as a prefiguration of the Virgin Mary. 11 Both women
were chaste victors over Satan. First, Judith chastely defeated “the devil’s emissary, the
lewd, proud, and idolatrous Antichrist, Holofernes” and saved her people.12 Then, Mary
triumphed over Satan through her chaste conception of Christ, “who broke the reign of
the devil on earth” and offered the people of the world new life.13 Notably, key phrases
from the Book of Judith were incorporated into the liturgy of Mary’s feast days, and both
theologians and artists referenced the typological relationship between the Queen of
Heaven and the Old Testament widow.14 Images pairing the two pure and holy women
appeared as early as the tenth century.
15
In Chapter Thirty of the Mirror of Human
Salvation (Speculum Humanae Salvationis), an image of Mary’s victory is typically
depicted on the same page or near an image of Judith killing Holofernes.16 A colorful,
early fourteenth-century example shows the Virgin Mary plunging a spear through the
devil’s gaping mouth while Judith holds both Holofernes’s bloody sword and severed
head aloft (fig. 42). Here, Mary’s weapons are the Arma Christi and Judith’s are beauty,
fine garments, and Holofernes’s sword. As instruments of Divine Will who conquered the
devil and sin, both women were also considered personifications of the Church
(Ecclesia), triumphant over the infidels.17
In the sixteenth century, when Martin Luther translated the Book of Judith into
German, he argued that the story was a “Divine Allegory.”18 In his preface, Luther
explained that “Judith,” which means “Jewess,” represents the pious and faithful Jewish
Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 92; Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology,” 42; Bailey, “Judith, Jael, and
Humilitas,” 2 ; and Lähnemann, “Hystoria Judith,” 419-424.
12 Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology,” 43; Lähnemann, “Hystoria Judith,” 420.
13 Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology,” 43.
14 Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology,” 43.
15 Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology,” 43.
16 Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image, and Symbol,” 119; Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 92.
17 Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 45-46; Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image,
and Symbol,” 118
18 Adelheid Straten, Das Judith-Thema in Deutschland im 16. Jahrhundert: Studien zur Ikonographie—
Materialien und Beiträge (Munich: Minerva, 1983), 10, 27.
11
68
people who remained pure, even during times of great turmoil. “Holofernes,” which
Luther translated as “pagan, ungodly, or unchristian Lord or Prince,” represents the threat
of atheism and heathens.19 Even the Jewish city Bethulia, a city unknown on any map,
carried symbolic meaning: “Bethulia” means “virgin,” so Luther compared the good Jews
to pure virgins since they lived without idolatry or disbelief.20 Because no historical
evidence supported the existence of a real Judith, Holofernes, or Bethulia, Luther
believed it should be excluded from the Bible. Yet he described Judith’s narrative as “a
fine, good, holy, useful book,” which Christians should read for its moral lessons.21
Although it was ultimately omitted from the official canon, the wise and beautiful
widow’s shocking story circulated throughout Europe in vernacular translations like
Luther’s. Judith’s triumph over Holofernes became a very popular theme. Early modern
audiences encountered her in virtually all written and visual media: from sermons, plays,
poems, and literature to paintings, prints, tapestries, and sculpture.22 Judith flooded the
market as decoration on ceramics, metalware, seals, furniture, mirrors, screens,
fireplaces, jewelry boxes, and pen cases.23 Stocker writes, “In the enaissance Judiths did
furnish a room.”24
But Judith was not the only Old Testament woman whose popularity grew during
the Reformation Era. As reformers protested the idolatrous worship of saints and the
blasphemous prominence of the Virgin Mary in the Church, they looked for new role
models in the Old Testament—a text made more readily available and widely known
19
Stranten, Das Judith-Thema, 27.
Stranten, Das Judith-Thema, 10.
21 Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 100. My translation of Martin Luther’s German (“ein fein, gut, heilig,
nutzlich Buch”; LW 35: 3 ) given in Weigert’s “Judith et Holopherne.”
22 Stranten, Das Judith-Thema, 19; Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 57; Stocker,
Judith, 46.
23 Stocker, Judith, 46.
24 Stocker, Judith, 46.
20
69
through vernacular translations.25 In her article Yvonne Bleyerveld explains how in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, “biblical women served as patterns of feminine
virtues,” such as chastity, moderation, and piety, for both Protestant and Catholic
audiences.26 While printed images of “ideal biblical virgins, wives and widows” were
looked at and collected by male audiences, they were considered a particularly
“appropriate tool in the moral education of women as obedient, chaste and retiring
daughters, wives and mothers.”27
In both the literary and the pictorial tradition, “sets” of biblical women were
described as exemplars of proper feminine behavior and presented as “mirrors” of ideal
womanly conduct.28 Generally, authors ascribed a specific virtue to each virgin, wife, or
widow. For example, Juan Luis Vives praised Judith for her piety in his Instruction of a
Christien Woman.
29
But for Erasmus, who lists Judith first among seven exemplary
widows in his “On the Christian Widow” (De vidua christiana, 1529), Judith “embodies
all the virtues of a Christian widow, but above all restraint and moderation.”30 In the
poem “The Mirror of Honor of Twelve Women from the Old Testament” (Der ehren
Spiegel der zwölf durchleuchtigen Frawen dess Alten Testaments, 1530), in which Hans
Sachs assigns each woman a different virtue, he lauds Judith for her moderation. 31 It is
25
The reformers agreed that the Virgin Mary should be honored as the Mother of God, but they did not
think she deserved to be worshipped like God. As an example of piety, chastity, and good Christian
behavior, Mary remained a role model for both women and men.
26 Yvonne Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout: Biblical Women as Patterns of Female Virtue in
Netherlandish and German Graphic Art, Ca. 1500-1750,” Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History
of Art 28, no. 4 (January 1, 2000): 250.
27 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 220, 237, 250; Ilja M. Veldman, “Lessons for Ladies: A
Selection of Sixteenth and Seventeenth-Century Dutch Prints,” Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the
History of Art 16, no. 2/3 (January 1, 1986): 127.
28 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 250, 220.
29 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 222.
30 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 222.
31 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 225. Considering Judith’s courage, wisdom, and chastity,
“moderation” may seem unfitting as her primary virtue. But while Holofernes drank himself into
unconsciousness, Judith remained sober, giving her the opportunity to defeat her enemy. On page 226,
Bleyerveld discusses how women were supposed to learn that “moderation in dress, eating, and drinking
brings honor.” In an even less flattering and more misogynistic interpretation, Judith also moderated her
own lust for Holofernes, resisting his sexual advances to accomplish her task. Thus, by pointing to Judith’s
70
generally accepted that Sachs’s poem accompanied Erhard Schön’s large woodcut Twelve
Famous Women of the Old Testament (figs. 43-44), the earliest example of a series of
virtuous biblical women.32 Judith is the tenth woman in the row, easily identified by the
sword and head she holds.33 Its large size, measuring 76 centimeters long and printed on
two blocks, suggests that Schön’s woodcut was probably intended to hang on the wall,
printed with Sachs’s poem.34 Unfortunately, no sheet combining the image and the text
survives. If the print hung on the walls of a domestic interior, presumably as a constant
reminder of womanly virtues for its inhabitants, then it is quite logical that such sheets
suffered normal wear and tear: damp air, soot from the fireplace, or damage when
(re)moved from the wall.
Prints depicting exemplary biblical women, which first appealed to German and
Netherlandish urban elite living in successful mercantile cities like Nuremberg and
Antwerp, remained popular throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. 35 For
example, decades after Schön and Sachs’s collaboration, Jost Amman designed a set of
etchings inspired by their twelve women. Each of Amman’s Celebrated Women of the
Old Testament prints is inscribed with the woman’s name, her number in Schön’s row,
and her virtue as described by Sachs’s poem.36 For example, on the Judith etching, the
label “10 · Iudith die Messig [mäßig]” (“10 · Judith the Moderate”) appears along the
right edge (fig. 45). Perhaps Amman hoped to sell more prints by separating the virtuous
ladies from one another. Far more interesting than Amman’s decision to produce twelve
separate images is the way he eroticized the women. All but two of Schön’s women wear
moderation, the authors imply that she restrained unladylike desires for alcohol and sex. They praise her
inactivity.
32 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 224-225.
33 Ten of the twelve women are holding identifying attributes. Only Sarah and Susanna have empty hands.
They are all named in Sachs’s poem. From left to right: Eve (apple and skull), Sarah, ebecca (pitcher),
Rachel (bare branch), Leah (flowering branch), Jael (hammer and tent peg), Ruth (sheaf of corn), Michal
(cord), Abigail (basket of flowers), Judith (sword and head), Esther (crown and scepter), and Susanna.
34 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 225.
35 Bleyerveld, “Chaste, Obedient and Devout,” 250.
36 It is entirely possible that Jost Amman numbered his women according to Sachs’s poem instead of
Schön’s prints. It is unclear if Amman saw Schoen’s print because their figures appear entirely unrelated,
yet that does not preclude the younger artists’ knowledge of the earlier work.
71
modest gowns that mask their largely static figures (figs. 43-44).37 In contrast, all but two
of Amman’s women wear clingy dresses, reveal tantalizing stretches of bare leg and/or
arm, and pose in aesthetically pleasing (or suggestive) positions. Compare, for instance,
Schön’s Judith (fig. 44, fourth figure from the left) who stands upright with a long
pleated skirt and full sleeves that cover her body to Amman’s Judith whose flowing,
high-cut skirt reveals a shapely lower leg and dainty foot, and whose short-sleeved, formfitting bodice leaves little to the imagination. Perhaps the most shocking transformation is
from Schön’s demure, veiled Susanna (fig. 44, first figure on the right) to Amman’s nude,
suggestively-draped Susanna with flowing tresses (fig. 46). Like his contemporaries who
used Weibermacht prints as opportunities to represent nude Bathshebas and Phyllises,
Amman produced beautiful, half-dressed female forms thinly cloaked in moralizing
biblical narratives.
Images of virtuous women from the Bible as represented by Schön were likely
intended for women’s moral edification, but Amman’s sirens targeted a different
audience: male print collectors. I am not saying that nudity precluded a print from
teaching virtuous behavior, but considering sixteenth-century society’s concern about the
dangers of female lust and sexuality, it seems unlikely that artists designed sexual
imagery specifically for women. While it is entirely possible that women (alone or with
their husbands) could have admired nude or semi-nude female bodies for their aesthetic
value—or even found them arousing, there is simply not enough evidence to support an
investigation of women’s image reception. Therefore, based on what historical
information is available, I will continue to assume that the nude female body was
intended for male viewers’ consumption. Since Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes
features a prominent female nude, for the purposes of this thesis I am only concerned
with interpreting Beham’s image from the perspective of sixteenth-century German men.
37
Eve, who appears nude in contemporary prints, wears an animal skin dress that exposes her lower legs
and knees; Jael’s form-fitting, short-sleeved dress clings her to navel and thighs as a gust of wind blow her
skirt up to reveal a hint of knee and her boot-covered calves.
72
Throughout the late medieval and early modern periods, Judith was continually
used as a personification of virtues: she was an exemplary woman. In this subcategory of
Judith images, the artists may reveal her legs or arms or cleavage, but “good Judiths” are
never nude Judiths. Celebrating the beautiful widow’s chastity while displaying her body
is inherently contradictory. Nudity, which may imply sexual activity, robs Judith of her
chastity, moderation, and restraint; therefore, prints truly aiming to teach morals depicted
their Judiths clothed. Furthermore, in this subcategory, Holofernes functions more like a
prop than a full-fledged character. His head is a gruesome attribute identifying Judith and
reminding the audience of her story. Even when his body is present, the focus is turned to
Judith and her victory (figs. 41-42). In Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes,
a completely nude Judith holds the standard “pieces” of Holofernes, but her intimate
relationship to his body elevates Holofernes from prop to participant. It is obvious that
Beham’s print does not belong with these pious images. Here, Judith is neither a virtue
nor a personification of the Virgin, and she is certainly not a woman for other women to
emulate. How does Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes compare to more
heroic depictions of the narrative?
The Triumphant Heroine and the Tyrant
The core message of the Book of Judith is a simple one: with God’s help the
righteous can overthrow tyranny. By imagining Judith as the personification of Good
vanquishing Evil (Holofernes), the pesky issue of her chastity could be ignored and her
victory could allegorize any number of political or social struggles. Functioning as a
personification, Judith’s dangerous sexuality was neutralized, but her gender remained
symbolically significant. God was able to use a woman to carry out His justice; thus, no
matter how bad the odds may appear, with God’s backing, the truly righteous will
73
ultimately prevail. Instead of Judith representing Chastity, Humility, or Moderation, in
this light she becomes a symbol of heroic courage, justice, and political emancipation.38
Donatello’s bronze, once-gilt sculpture Judith and Holofernes is an Italian
enaissance example of the “heroic Judith” type (1460, fig. 9). Judith grasps
Holofernes’s head by his hair and prepares to strike him with his sword. Here and in
other Italian artists’ depictions of Judith, she wears classicizing garments that “literally
[envelope her] in the authoritative mantle of classical female heroism.”39 Whereas images
of Judith in courtly gowns and fine jewelry allude to her questionably deceitful and
seductive actions, antiquated clothing visually links Judith with legendary heroines. 40 A
round engraving attributed to Baccio Baldini even depicts Judith wearing fanciful armor
over her high-waisted, classically draped gown (fig. 47). The fringe on her shoulders and
rosettes covering her breasts resemble the details of a cuirass—albeit a small, feminine
one. The winged helmet and wreath around her neck symbolize victory. Altogether this
Judith’s appearance, from her exotic clothing to her confident stance, recalls images of
classical goddesses, like Athena, and historically fearsome female warriors, like the
Amazons. Typically, Italian artists also show Judith with her sword raised in victory, as
depicted in Parmigianino’s etching (fig. 4 ). Here Judith’s disproportionately large,
muscular arms thrust her weapon skyward and deposit Holofernes’s head in the bag. By
hiding Judith’s lovely face in the shadows and equipping her with powerful limbs,
Parmigianino emphasizes the role of Judith’s heroic strength—rather than her
appearance—in her triumph over Holofernes.
38 linka ublack, “Wench and Maiden: Women, War and the Pictorial Function of the Feminine in
German Cities in the Early Modern Period,” History Workshop Journal, no. 44 (October 1, 1997): 5; Peggy
L. Curry, “ epresenting the Biblical Judith in Literature and Art: An Intertextual Cultural Critique” (PhD
diss., University of Massachusetts Amherst, 1994), 9-10; Bernadine Ann Barnes, “Heroines and Worthy
Women,” in Eva/Ave: Woman in Renaissance and Baroque Prints, ed. H. Diane Russell (Washington,
D.C.: National Gallery of Art / Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 1990), 32-33; Weigert,
“Judith et Holopherne,” 101.
39 Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 57.
40 Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 57.
74
Originally, Donatello’s Judith and Holofernes stood opposite his David in the
garden of the Palazzo Medici. Both Judith and David were physically weak by nature, but
God gave them the strength to save their people and behead their enemies. David was just
a boy when he battled the giant Philistine warrior Goliath, but David felled him with a
stone from his slingshot and cut off his head. Armed with matching swords and severed
heads as their attributes, Judith and David sometimes formed a couple representing
humility, prefigurations (respectively) of the Virgin and Christ triumphing over the devil,
or civic virtues.41 Cosimo de’ Medici commissioned both statues of the tyrant-slaying
biblical heroes at a time when the Medici family wished to convey its “low social origins
and opposition to the despotism of princes and tyrants.”42 Judith and David both
functioned as visual metaphors for the Medici, who believed themselves to be the
defenders of Florence and the city’s people. Ironically, in 1494 when the Medicis were
exiled from their beloved city, Donatello’s Judith and Holofernes was moved to the front
of the Palazzo Vecchio and reinterpreted as the embodiment of republican ideals. The
Medicis were no longer Judith, but Holofernes, in the metaphor.43 As arrogant despots
from small states in central and northern Italy threatened the independence of free Italian
cities, Judith and David were increasingly called upon as personifications of just
tyrannicide and republican virtues.44 According to Jan Białostocki, “their drawn swords
were a warning to anyone who might want to disrupt the law, equality, and freedom of
their societies.”45
During
the
turbulent
years
that
characterized
the
Reformation
and
Counterreformation, both Protestants and Catholics compared themselves to Judith.
Believing that God was with them, Martin Luther and the reformers imagined themselves
Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image, and Symbol,” 121; Susan L. Smith, “A Nude Judith from Padua and
the eception of Donatello’s Bronze David,” Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies
25, no. 1 (1994): 66.
42 Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image, and Symbol,” 120.
43 Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 101; Curry, “ epresenting the Biblical Judith,” 10-11.
44 Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image, and Symbol,” 122; Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian
Tradition,” 58.
45 Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image, and Symbol,” 122.
41
75
as Judith, armed with the strength of their faith, defeating Holofernes, the tyrannical,
corrupt Catholic Church.46 Like the Jewish widow, the Protestants fought for religiouspolitical independence.47 Of course, the Catholics considered themselves the heroic
defenders of the Church, “protect[ing it] against the demon Protestants.”48 They, too,
adopted Judith as a symbol of their righteous battle against blasphemous usurpers. As the
conflict between the two religious factions escalated, members of both groups were
killed. Ciletti and Lähnemann write, “In each case, the assassin, whether Protestant or
Catholic, was hailed by his proponents as a new Judith.”49 After all, Judith’s narrative
justifies the murder of tyrants and heathens.50 In the 1530s Catholic writers extended the
Judith allegory to the impending threat of invading Turks (Holofernes); confronted with
real pagan warriors, the Catholics and Protestants became a collective Judith! 51 Clearly
Judith and Holofernes really could “stand for almost any adversarial relationship.”52
Although sixteenth-century women were taught to emulate Judith’s desirable
feminine viruses, they were most certainly not encouraged to imitate her heroic
behaviors: her leadership, meting out of justice, or tyrannicide. In fact, the Book of Judith
itself is very clear about Judith’s active role being temporary: she carries out God’s plan,
and then she returns to her quiet life as a good widow in Bethulia.53 The central gender
inversion in Judith’s story is “momentary,” reminds Ciletti, who writes, “whatever her
power as a civic symbol, the virago is no exemplar for actual women.” 54 Recall how
German women—who had been active preachers, warriors, and iconoclasts during the
early years of the Reformation—were told to return to their proper roles within the
household once the Protestants firmly established their new church. Yet those women had
Barnes, “Heroines and Worthy Women,” 32.
Straten, Das Judith-Thema, 29.
48 Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 104.
49 Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 58.
50 Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 101.
51 Barnes, “Heroines and Worthy Women,” 32; Straten, Das Judith-Thema, 28.
52 Barnes, “Heroines and Worthy Women,” 32.
53 Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 102.
54 Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology,” 66.
46
47
76
proven that they were, as Sara Matthews-Grieco writes, “as capable of soundly beating
their spouses as they were capable of mounting city walls to defend their homes against
an attacking army.”55 Perhaps because such fearsome women existed, some men worried
that images of Judith “might give a more literal-minded and unsophisticated female
public undesirable ideas.”56
This type of Judith is a hero for the oppressed and a representation of justice; this
Holofernes, on the other hand, is a domineering tyrant. It is possible that someone
viewing Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes could imagine her heroic
deeds and her symbolic association with some religious or political group, but that would
be one of the least interesting ways to think about the image. Instead, I propose that
Beham’s nude Judith belongs in the subcategory closely associated with Weibermacht
images. Moreover, Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes specifically recalls
depictions of Phyllis riding Aristotle—a well-known battle of the sexes.
The Femme Fatale and the Fool
The Book of Judith characterizes its heroine’s courageous acts as unquestionably
positive and divinely sanctioned, but in the late medieval and early modern visual and
textual traditions, her actions “assum[ed] new carnality and sensuality.”57 Seduction and
sexual desire had always been central to Judith’s narrative; after all, the clever widow
Sara F. Matthews-Grieco, “Pedagogical Prints: Moralizing Broadsheets and Wayward Women in
Counter eformation Italy,” in Picturing Women in Renaissance and Baroque Italy, ed. Geraldine A.
Johnson and Sara F. Matthews-Grieco (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1997), 70.
56 Matthews-Grieco, “Pedagogical Prints,” 70. Matthews-Grieco provides an interesting example of
selective Judith printing in footnote 21, page 265. She writes: “The refusal to represent Judith on the part of
printmakers catering to lower and middle echelons of the urban market is confirmed by a comparison of the
Vaccari and Lafréry print catalogues, as well as by a number of inventories of printshop stock drawn up by
sixteenth- and seventeenth-century notaries.” Apparently, Antoine Lafrery, who primarily catered to
“educated clientele,” carried several prints of Judith and Lucretia. But the Vaccari printshop, which
“addressed a more general public,” carried images of Lucretia and her self-sacrifice, but did not carry any
prints of the murderous Jewish widow.
57 Henrike Lähnemann, “The Cunning of Judith in Late Medieval German Texts,” in The Sword of Judith:
Judith Studies across the Disciplines, ed. Kevin R. Brine, Elena Ciletti, and Henrike Lähnemann
(Cambridge, U.K.: Open Book Publishers, 2010), 239; Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian
Tradition,” 56.
55
77
ultimately defeats Holofernes by exploiting his lust for her. Yet from St. Jerome on, the
Church underscored Judith’s chastity and suppressed her troubling sexuality. 58 While
God and His church approved of Judith’s cunning plan—which relied on her sex appeal
for its success, fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Christians were particularly suspicious of
Judith’s sexual morality and skeptical about what exactly took place in Holofernes’s
tent.59 Remember, in the minds of early modern audiences, Judith and every other woman
constantly struggled to control their sexual desires, so it is unsurprising that Christian
observers recognized the problematic, lust-dependent nature of Judith’s tactics. The
potential for reading Judith as an immoral woman had always been present.
Because Judith cunningly used her beauty as a weapon against her male
adversary, her actions were sometimes categorized as Weiberlist (women’s wiles), an
element found in all Weibermacht texts and images.60 “Cunning,” a crucial component of
Weiberlist, was a trait considered “typical of women,” writes Barnes, “and, like their
sexuality, it could be used as a powerful weapon against men.”61 Judith, like her sly
sisters Phyllis and Delilah, recognized the power of her beauty and used it to manipulate
and conquer a man. Yet the wise and beautiful widow stands out as one of the cleverest
women among the Weibermacht women because her plan took such a great deal of
forethought and wit. First, Judith dressed to inflame Holofernes’s lust and infiltrate his
camp. Then, for multiple days, she deceived the Assyrian general with her words and
appearance. Under the guise of piety, Judith laid the groundwork for her escape by
praying and eating kosher food each day. Finally, she executed both her enemy and a
flawless getaway from a military camp! Holofernes did not stand a chance against
Judith’s alluring body and lethal mind.
Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 60.
Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 60; Lähnemann, “The Cunning of Judith,”
242; Susan Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened: Old Testament Women in Northern Prints, Harvard
University Art Museums Gallery Series 6 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Art Museums, 1993), 8.
60 Lähnemann, “The Cunning of Judith,” 239.
61 Barnes, “Heroines and Worthy Women,” 33.
58
59
78
In conjunction with Judith’s initiation among the Weibermacht women,
Holofernes joined the ranks of men defeated by seductive, cunning women. This is yet
another instance of the zero-sum early modern power dynamic: Judith gains power, so
Holofernes necessarily loses power. Notably, the High Middle German poet Frauenlob (c.
1260-1318) lists Holofernes with other tricked men from the Bible, history, and legend in
a stanza from his poem “Langer Ton”:
Adam, the first man, was deceived by a woman;
Samson himself was blinded by a woman,
David was put to shame.
By a woman, king Solomon was deprived of God's kingdom.
Absalom's beauty did not succeed, a woman had him dazzled.
Mighty as Alexander was, no different.
Virgil was deceived by false means.
Holofernes was chopped up,
same as Aristotle was ridden by a woman.
Troy, city and country alike, were destroyed by a woman.
Achilles suffered the same.
The fast Asahel became tame.
The shaming of Arthur originated from women,
and Perceval had many troubles.
Since love conquered them all what does it matter if a pure woman burns
and chills me? 62
Here, Holofernes’s experience is the central focus—not Judith’s victory.63 Male
audiences who encountered this stanza—which must have been popular because it
existed in many versions and contexts throughout the late medieval and early modern
periods—may have sympathized with Holofernes and the other duped men.64 They might
have agreed with the poem’s narrator who concludes in the final lines that he cannot be
expected to resist women’s charms when the greatest men in history could not.
Essentially, in this example and many others, a narrative about a God-fearing woman
Stanza from Frauenlob’s, “Langer Ton” found in German Miscellany, early 15th century. Washington,
D.C., Library of Congress, Rosenwald Collection, MS 4, fol. 8r, as translated by Lähnemann in “The
Cunning of Judith in Late Medieval German Texts,” 243, 245 (my italics).
63 Lähnemann, “The Cunning of Judith,” 245.
64 Lähnemann, “The Cunning of Judith,” 243.
62
79
who saves her people from tyranny was repurposed as an example of women’s power
victimizing men.
Just as other Weibermacht narratives and images could be didactic or amusing—
providing moments of laughter or opportunities for erotic perusal, so too could Judith’s
story and visual representations provide both moral teaching and entertainment. In the
previous sections, I discussed how Judith could represent virtues for women to emulate
and heroism from which groups drew inspiration. When Judith was categorized with the
women from Weibermacht narratives, her story warned men against the power of
women—reminding them to be on guard against female sexuality and cunning. This is
particularly true in the stanza above: Holofernes is characterized as yet another casualty
in a long line of men duped by deceitful beauties.
But, as I observed in chapter 1, each Weibermacht narrative possesses both an
empowered woman and a weakened man. Therefore, in certain interpretations,
Holofernes’s excessive desires and lost masculinity could convey lessons about men’s
weaknesses and vices. For example, a stanza from Frauenlob’s “Goldene Ton”
reprimands male pride:
When Judith slew Holofernes,
her womanly sense was clever.
She dared it to save the people,
she carried home the head,
indeed, these are the ways of the world.
Since all the prince's people
could not help him
against God's will at all,
you should consider now
what God's power can bring about;
they should take care day and night,
ever since their sinful desire first began
that He will make them suffer for it.
My Lords, if you are weakened by
the boldness of pride
you should overcome yourselves.
How can you achieve divine help
80
if you allow it to grow to great height?
He who is weakened by pride,
will be struck down by God.65
The poem warns “my lords” against the vice of pride. Men who are “weakened by pride”
will surely be “struck down by God”—just as Holofernes was. Here, Holofernes takes up
his usual mantle of sin personified, but he is not compared to the devil. Instead, a
comparison is drawn between the Assyrian general and late medieval men.
While previous scholarship tends to focus on Judith’s role in Holofernes’s
destruction, the military commander was not blameless in his own demise. After all, it
was the general’s excessive drinking that left him vulnerable to attack. True, Holofernes’s
defenses were weakened by blinding lust, but if he had drunk moderately that night,
Holofernes might have prevented his own slaughter. In fact, the general’s excessive
drinking is a crucial plot point.66 Because he drank more than he had in his entire life,
Holofernes passed out and gave Judith the perfect opportunity to slay him. Now, recall
that drunkenness was one of the most disruptive sins in sixteenth-century German cities.
Consider also that drinking was central to male bonding and proving one’s masculinity—
specifically by testing the boundaries of one’s self-control. I propose that early modern
German men, who were abundantly familiar with the effects of alcohol, could relate to
Holofernes and his overly-enthusiastic imbibing. Holofernes’s fatal miscalculation may
have served as a warning against their own drinking habits—or, it may have been a
source of amusement.
Stanza from Frauenlob’s, “Goldene Ton,” 15th century, as translated by Lähnemann in “The Cunning of
Judith in Late Medieval German Texts,” 241 (my italics).
66 Holofernes’s drunkenness and decapitation are mentioned together in the twentieth stanza of the “JudithSong” (c. 1560): “Like their master Holofernes / The servants were completely sloshed. / Her servant-girl
did guard the doors. / His head she cut off him, sound asleep, / she gave it to her servant for her sack; /
there nobody could guess it.” Thus, the poem directly links Holofernes’s death with his drinking. Because
he was too drunk to remain conscious, he could not defend himself against a woman. Ironically, sixteenthcentury German men probably sang the “Judith-Song” while drinking at a tavern or some social gathering.
The entire “Judith-Song” is translated in Lähnemann, “The Cunning of Judith,” 252-258).
65
81
Excessive drinking robs a man of his masculinity in more ways than one. When a
man drinks too much alcohol, the demon drink can take away his rationality and turn him
into a base animal. But the Germans, whose culture called for near-boundless social
drinking, knew from experience that alcohol consumption had both mental and physical
effects. Too much wine, beer, or liquor can result in a man’s inability to perform in the
bedroom. Thus, no matter how enticing Judith’s body was, after drinking so much wine,
it is unlikely that Holofernes was physically capable of consummating his relationship
with the Jewess. Surely this all-too-familiar, alcohol-related loss of masculinity was
something for sixteenth-century German men to laugh about or mock. In Holofernes’s
case, the possibilities for derision are endless. I could imagine them joking about how
Judith took hold of Holofernes’s “sword” (penis) and cut off his “head” (castrated him)
because he did not fulfill her sexual desires—a pressing concern that men had about real
living women and their needy wombs. In the end, Holofernes failed to perform his
masculinity, which left an opening for Judith to take control of the relationship.
ndoubtedly, the story of Judith’s triumph over Holofernes could communicate
both moralizing messages and lewd humor. But by the end of the fifteenth and beginning
of the sixteenth centuries, the beautiful widow also became a source of sexual amusement
as she was “absorbed into the eroticism of the enaissance.”67 Artists specifically sought
themes with potentially erotic connotations that might justify the inclusion of nude
women in their compositions.68 Like other women condemned of Weiberlist (e.g.
Bathsheba), Judith’s questionable sexual conduct gave artists the opportunity to depict
her semi- or completely nude. Humanists’ interest in the nude, artists’ desire to
demonstrate their skill with the female form, and collectors’ demand for erotic images all
influenced the number of nudes available on the art market, but the appearance of so
many appealing figures likely “caus[ed] the viewer to sympathize more with the
67
68
Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image, and Symbol,” 123.
Białostocki, “Judith: Story, Image, and Symbol,” 126.
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heroine’s conquered foe than with the heroine herself.”69 Unfortunately for Judith, she
and her story existed in a man’s world where male solidarity trumped biblical categories
of good and evil.70 It is thus unsurprising that male audiences viewing the voluptuous and
enticing bodies of exposed Judiths would side with Holofernes—despite the fact that the
apocryphal text insists Judith “was chaste when she entered Holofernes’s tent and chaste
when she left with his head in her sack.”71 Furthermore, Judith’s nudity in sixteenthcentury images suggests that she would do anything—including perform sexual acts—to
secure the safety of her people: an admirable trait for a man, but an undesirable one for a
(supposedly) chaste woman. As Elena Ciletti explains, “Once a sexual dimension is
acknowledged for the female character, her identity as a legitimate, active heroine is
simply not possible.”72 Thus, artists stripped away Judith’s heroism along with her fine
garments.
As I mentioned in the introduction, the Italian artists were the first to depict Judith
in various states of undress, but it was in Germany that nude Judiths became popular. It
seems that Conrat Meit created the earliest nude Judith north of the Alps about 15121514 (fig. 12).73 His Judith with the Head of Holofernes, a small alabaster statuette,
shows the pleasantly plump widow with high breasts, narrow sloping shoulders, fleshy
hips and thighs, and a round stomach. Judith stands between Holofernes’s downturned
sword and a short column on which she rests the general’s head.
ndeterred by death
Holofernes sneaks a sideways glance at Judith’s pudenda. His eyes direct the viewer
toward his—and possibly their—object of desire. The small, private nature of this work is
reminiscent of devotional objects—treasured objects viewed from intimate proximity.74
69 Ciletti and Lähnemann, “Judith in the Christian Tradition,” 60-61; Barnes, “Heroines and Worthy
Women,” 29.
70 Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology,” 252.
71 Barnes, “Heroines and Worthy Women,” 33.
72 Ciletti, “Patriarchal Ideology,” 52.
73 Of course, it is possible that an earlier nude Judith existed in Germany, but Meit’s is the earliest
surviving example.
74 Many thanks to Joan A. Holladay for her observations on Conrat Meit’s Judith with the Head of
Holofernes, which enriched my thinking about the viewers’ experience of the object.
83
When held in the hand, the statue’s creamy stone flesh likely absorbed heat from the
viewer, giving “life” to the tiny female nude.75 Like Pygmalion, the sixteenth-century
male viewer may have wished that his beloved statue would transform into a living
woman. Without question, this sensuous object is not a representation of Judith as a
heroine or personified virtue.
Similarly, no one would mistake Hans Baldung Grien’s Judith with the Head of
Holofernes (fig. 13) as a painting for moral edification. Baldung’s full-length nude holds
a small knife and severed head, as well as a diaphanous cloth that does nothing to cover
her body. Here, Judith’s strangely twisted legs draw attention to the shadowy apex of her
thighs: the viewer sees less of Judith’s genitalia, but the effect is all the more tantalizing.
Notably, Baldung’s Judith was one of three strikingly similar panel paintings that he
created in 1524 and 1525. The identity of those other full-length female nudes is most
remarkable: Eve (fig. 49) and Venus (fig. 50). Eve is sometimes considered the first
woman to employ Weiberlist; it is often implied that she used her sexuality to persuade
Adam into sin—actions that certainly earn her story a place among the Weibermacht
narratives. Venus is the goddess of love and lust who could use her power to manipulate
men. Baldung seems to be interested in the seductive power of the female body, but, as I
will argue in the next chapter, it is unclear whether viewers should fear or enjoy women’s
sensuous power and tempting bodies.
Although Meit’s statue and Baldung’s painting are appealing examples of nude
Judiths in Germany, it is impossible to know how many people encountered those works.
Instead, it is far more likely that wider audiences came across nude Judiths in prints by or
after Sebald and Barthel Beham. The Beham brothers created a total of four designs
featuring nude Judiths. In both of Sebald’s prints, which date sometime between 1520
75
I considered the physical experience of the alabaster statuette after discussing medieval manuscript
covers with Holley Ledbetter. Ledbetter suggests that manuscript covers, which were originally adorned
with velvet, embroidery, and precious stones or gems, must have warmed to the touch and provided the
viewer with a specific physical experience of the object. According to Ledbetter, the different covers may
have functioned as a memory device; specific covers reminded owners of the text and imagery inside.
84
and 1530, Judith is shown standing and accompanied by her maid (figs. 14-15). In my
opinion, in Figure 14, the arches of drapery extending from Judith and her companion, as
well as the pronounced lines around Judith’s breasts and stomach, suggest that Sebald
knew Nicoletto da Modena’s c. 1500 engraving of Judith (fig. 7). Similarly, I wonder
which print came first: Sebald’s Figure 15 or Barthel’s Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes. The sharp turn of Judith’s head and the direction of her flowing hair indicate
some relationship between the two works, but I am unsure how to date them.
Regardless of how they relate chronologically or stylistically to Sebald’s works,
Barthel’s nude-Judith engravings are particularly innovative because they depict the
beautiful widow in a seated position (figs. 16-17). Before Barthel’s 1523 print of Judith,
in which the heroine sits on a stone ledge (fig. 16), artists had not shown the victorious
Jewess on her bottom. However, not long after his prints began to circulate, other
printmakers adopted Barthel’s new position for their Judiths (figs. 51-52). In fact, both of
Barthel’s 1523 and 1525 Judiths were copied: his brother Sebald modified and republished the 1523 Judith (fig. 53) and the Monogrammist RB produced a reverse copy
of the 1525 Judith (fig. 54). Yet the question needs to be asked: why did Barthel seat
Judith in the first place? One possibility is that he wished to provide his patrons with a
slightly larger female nude and, thus, a closer encounter with her exposed body. Barthel
was perfectly capable of depicting standing nudes in the same amount of space that he
designed seated nudes (approximately 55 x 37 millimeters), but his standing Cleopatra
from 1524 (fig. 55) is necessarily smaller and further from the foreground than his seated
Judiths. Consider also how Barthel’s Judiths would no longer fit in the pictorial space if
they stood. Here, what I find interesting is that Barthel revisited the seated position in
1525 for his Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, but instead of a neutral stone ledge,
he chose to place Judith’s nude behind on the bare chest of her newly-deceased enemy—
why?
85
Judith Riding Holofernes: Barthel Beham’s Weibermacht Print
Scholars have written very little on Beham’s 1525 representation of Judith and
Holofernes. In 1990,
ussell wrote, “The sexuality of Judith is heightened in this
engraving by having her sit on top of Holofernes’s nude body,” but her analysis of the
position and its eroticism went no further.76 In 2011, Alexandra Schellenberg briefly
described the 1525 Judith as a mighty figure that “almost fills the entire pictorial
space.”77 She notes how Judith “sits upright” on top of Holofernes, “heroically look[ing]
down at his severed head.”78 For Schellenberg, Judith’s “eyes convey contempt and
disgust, but also the triumph of a champion.”79 What is represented is a “moment of
satisfaction, of the triumph of the heroine who selflessly brought about the salvation of
her people,” explains Schellenberg, yet perhaps Judith is also “disgusted by her own
act.”80 This nude Judith is erotic but aloof. I cannot deny the accuracy of Schellenberg’s
observations: this is a fearsome and victorious Judith. Yet, like Russell, Schellenberg
barely addresses the eroticism of Judith’s position, and I believe that decoding Beham’s
placement of a nude Judith—however formidable—atop a nude Holofernes is essential
for understanding his image.
In many respects the 1525 engraving is very similar to the one dated to 1523, but
two years later, Beham totally changed the tone of the composition and the character of
his heroine. In the 1523 image, Judith “exudes a Madonna-like loveliness;” she looks
down into the face of her victim, her sword points skyward, and her hair is modestly
braided around her head—only a single curl falls near her cheek.81 Like the sword she
brandishes, Judith’s temperament has been turned 1 0 degrees in the second version.82
76
Russell, Eva/Ave, 67.
Alexandra Schellenberg in the catalogue section of Thomas Ulrich Schauerte and Jürgen Müller, eds.,
Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg: Konvention und Subversion in der Druckgrafik der Beham-Brüder
(Emsdetten, Germany: Edition Imorde, 2011), 249-250; my translations from the modern German.
78 Schellenberg, Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg, 249.
79 Schellenberg, Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg, 249.
80 Schellenberg, Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg, 249.
81 Schellenberg, Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg, 250.
82 Schellenberg, Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg, 250.
77
86
Judith is fiercer; her head is turned more sharply, her gaze is darkened, her grimly-set
mouth suggests “cruelty,” and her hair whips in the wind. 83 Interestingly, Beham replaces
the soft curl framing the 1523 Judith’s face with a tongue-like strand of hair near the chin
of the 1525 Judith. Has the hair been repurposed to suggest a devilishly serpentine
tongue?84 Taking into account the wildness of the 1525 Judith, perhaps it is unsurprising
that Beham places her in a more natural setting up against a grassy knoll; similarly, the
quieter 1523 Judith appears to sit just outside a building with a fence—she has yet to
succumb to Nature.
Beyond the details of each Judith and her setting, the greatest divergence between
the 1523 and 1525 prints is the inclusion and placement of Holofernes’s headless torso. It
is this game-changing element that separates Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes
from every other Judith image. In fact, decoding the clever references and multiple
potential meanings of this outrageously intimate comingling of bodies is the primary goal
of this thesis. In the pages that follow, I present various ways a sixteenth-century German
man may have interpreted this engraving. This is not an exhaustive analysis, but an
exploration of the iconography through the lens of early modern gender roles and
relationships and the artistic sources available to Beham. This chapter includes the first of
four explanations I propose for the presence of Holofernes underneath Judith.
To the best of my knowledge, Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes
is the only late medieval or early modern representation of a nude woman sitting on the
nude torso of a dead man. But it is not the only Weibermacht print featuring a female
figure atop a male figure: Phyllis is shown seated on Aristotle (figs. 38-40). Since Judith
could be included among the Weibermacht women, it is entirely possible that Beham
drew upon widely available Phyllis-and-Aristotle iconography for his rendering of
Judith.85 As one of the most popular examples of the power of women, depictions of
83
Schellenberg, Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg, 250.
I pursue this devious detail at greater length in a section on witches in the next chapter.
85 Davis, “Women on Top,” 161-162. Martin Knauer’s Dürers unfolgsame Erben: Bildstrategien in den
Kupferstichen der deutschen Kleinmeister, Studien zur Internationalen Architektur- und Kunstgeschichte
84
87
Phyllis riding Aristotle were easily recognized, so the audience viewing Judith Seated on
the Body of Holofernes could just as easily make the connection between the two
cunning, highly sexual women and their “mounts.” Moreover, this particular position,
which spotlights female dominance, likely reminded contemporary viewers of women’s
power in general. Thus, this image could potentially carry with it all the connotations of
“Battle for the Pants” and Weibermacht images—the didactic, humorous, and sexual
meanings. As I discussed in chapter 1, these prints were open for multiple interpretations.
Perhaps two early sixteenth-century German Phyllis Riding Aristotle prints
contributed to the design of Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes. Beham
may have been inspired to place a nude Judith on a nude Holofernes after seeing Hans
Baldung Grien’s lascivious engraving (fig. 40). Baldung’s Phyllis dons only a headcoving for her ride around the garden; Aristotle is outfitted with a bridle—nothing more.
Both Phyllis and Judith have thick torsos and limbs, wield weapons (a whip, a sword) in
their right hands, and occupy their left hands with the heads of their “steeds.” Here, there
is distance between Phyllis’ hand and Aristotle’s head, but in the Master M.Z.’s version
(fig. 38), Phyllis tightly grasps the reigns over the philosopher-pony’s head—much like
Judith grabs a handful of Holofernes’s hair. Despite the presence of clothing in the
Master M.Z.’s work, the design is undeniably erotic: Phyllis’ bountiful breasts are
difficult to miss; the drapery over her lap indicates that the courtesan’s knees are spread
apart; and Aristotle eagerly cranes his neck backwards—in what must be an
uncomfortable position—to see her. Truthfully, Aristotle’s head appears disconnected
from his body—could this have reminded Beham of Judith with the head of Holofernes, a
theme he returned to on multiple occasions? If nothing else, this Phyllis’ abundant and
flowing curls could have inspired Judith’s untamed locks.
101 (Petersberg: Michael Imhof, 2013), 34, includes an image of Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes
next to an image of Georg Pencz’s Phyllis Riding Aristotle, but the author does not comment on the
similarity. He merely states that Judith’s triumph over Holofernes earned her a position in the pictorial
tradition alongside Phyllis. Knauer visually implies a connection but does not verbalize one.
88
Despite these many shared elements, it is important to note that Beham’s Judith is
not sitting on Holofernes back. Instead, she is seated on his upturned chest—a position
without any other late medieval or early modern comparanda. So how might one interpret
this strange position without obvious iconographical connections? In the next chapter I
look beyond the Weibermacht tradition in search of Beham’s source material. What I find
are striking similarities between Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes and images of
witches, Venus, and sex positions. The constant in all of the images I explore in this
thesis—from the Battle of the Sexes to the sex positions—is the concept of women’s
power, of female dominance over men. But was that power always disastrously negative?
Not Everyman: The Educated, Affluent, and Visually Literate (Ideal) Male Viewer
Undoubtedly, prints depicting Judith as “an object of sexual delight” appealed
to—and aroused—male viewers.86 But in his Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes,
Beham provides his audience with a female nude and so much more: he presents them
with a clever iconographical challenge. The number of early modern viewers with the
level of intellectual sophistication and visual literacy required to decode and fully
appreciate Beham’s tiny paper-and-ink enigma were “almost certainly very limited.”87
The “common folks” of the “lower strata of society” likely recognized the story of Judith,
her connection to the Weibermacht tradition, and the eroticism of her position, but I
propose that the print has many more layers of meaning that would have surpassed the
scope of “Everyman’s” perception.88
Barnes, “Heroines and Worthy Women,” 33; for more on “Arousal by Image,” see David Freedberg, The
Power of Images: Studies in the History and Theory of Response (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1991), 317-344.
87 Peter Parshall, “Prints as Objects of Consumption in Early Modern Europe,” Journal of Medieval &
Early Modern Studies 28, no. 1 (Winter 1998): 22; Alison G. Stewart, Before Bruegel: Sebald Beham and
the Origins of Peasant Festival Imagery (Aldershot, U.K.: Ashgate, 2008), 85.
88 Stephen H. Goddard, “The Origin, se, and Heritage of the Small Engraving in enaissance Germany,”
in The World in Miniature: Engravings by the German Little Masters, 1500-1550, 1st ed. (Lawrence:
Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, 1988), 17; Knauer, Dürers unfolgsame Erben, 23.
86
89
Before I close this chapter on the three faces of Judith and their audience, it is
imperative that I identify and describe the viewing habits of the main consumers of fine
miniature prints. It is from their elite perspective that I continue to interpret the meaning
of Judith’s provocative position in the next chapter. The “well educated, often welltraveled, urban, and at least moderately affluent” merchants and patricians who bought
“upscale engravings” were familiar with classical, religious, and contemporary themes
from their studies, travels, and engagement with local and foreign prints.89 These
perceptive viewers enjoyed the game of recognizing “quotations” from and references to
ancient and contemporary sources. As Stocker points out, early modern Europe had “a
culture that delighted in the clever manipulation of iconography to diverse ends, not least
sexual.”90 I have no doubt that the members of Barthel Beham’s ideal intended audience
would have called upon their knowledge of German and Italian prints to decipher this
artist’s clever design.
Scholars agree that Beham and the other Little Masters—printmakers known for
their remarkably small works—produced engravings “for an educated and literate
audience upon whom complex allegories and recondite references to Roman history and
mythology, and Latin quotations, would not be lost.”91 Many of the Little Masters’ most
important patrons “came from a burgeoning class of professional men” who were
university-educated “in classical languages and history (the humanist curriculum)” and
worked as civil servants, doctors, or merchants with international businesses.92 Jeffrey
Chipps Smith explains that during the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, some
Jeffrey Chipps Smith, “Kleinmeisters and Kleinplastik: Observations on the Collectible Object in
German enaissance Art,” in The Register of the Spencer Museum of Art, vol. 6, 6 (Lawrence: University
of Kansas, 1989), 46; Knauer, Dürers unfolgsame Erben, 23.
90 Stocker, Judith, 30.
91 Goddard, “The Origin, se, and Heritage,” 17; see also: Smith, “Kleinmeisters and Kleinplastik”; Giulia
Bartrum, German Renaissance Prints, 1490-1550 (London: British Museum Press, 1995), 8; Knauer,
Dürers unfolgsame Erben, 23. In early modern Germany, Goddard notes, “Literacy has been estimated to
ten to thirty percent in towns (perhaps five percent on a national scale).” Alison Stewart also cites these
percentages in Before Bruegel, 85, attributing them to Rolph Engelsing, who suggests that the definition of
sixteenth-century literacy be expanded to include listening and looking, not just reading and writing. Here,
I am much more interested in collectors’ visual literacy than their ability to read or write.
92 Goddard, “The Origin, se, and Heritage,” 13; Bartrum, German Renaissance Prints, 8.
89
90
German merchants and scholars worked or were educated in northern Italy; he writes,
“They admired and often envied some of their Italian colleagues’ learning and knowledge
of the ancient world.”93 It is thus understandable that the Germans wished to demonstrate
their own sophistication and cultural appreciation by collecting Italian prints and
analyzing works of art.
Unfortunately, little documentation survives about print collecting practices and
the print market in Germany prior to 1550.94 But evidence from the late fifteenth century,
when prints primarily represented devotional themes, indicates that people pasted
religious prints into their prayer books and even some secular texts.95 It is reasonable to
assume that collectors continued this practice into the sixteenth century, and that “the
habit of gluing small prints into books…led to the practice of collecting them in albums
or folders.”96 While a few print-filled albums survive from the second half of the
sixteenth century, it is impossible to know if albums were used decades earlier. 97 What
we do know is that the Little Masters’ miniature prints were the perfect size for
“insert[ing] in letters or interleav[ing] or mount[ing] in even the smallest books without
being folded or trimmed.”98 Because of their small size, it is highly unlikely that the
Little Masters’ prints—excluding their larger friezes—were displayed on walls. Instead,
they were probably arranged in books or early albums and stored in drawers or on shelves
in collectors’ libraries.99 Unlike continuously displayed paintings or sculptures, prints
were only seen on occasion. As Peter Parshall thoughtfully observes, “the experience of
looking at a print was bound to be a determined occasion, one requiring a deliberate
Smith, “Kleinmeisters and Kleinplastik,” 47.
David Landau and Peter W. Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 1470-1550 (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1994), 354; Parshall, “Prints as Objects,” 21; Goddard, “The Origin, se, and Heritage,” 19;
Dackerman, Chaste, Chased & Chastened, 2.
95 Knauer, Dürers unfolgsame Erben, 23.
96 Goddard, “The Origin, se, and Heritage,” 1 .
97 Knauer, Dürers unfolgsame Erben, 23; for more on the development of albums in late sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries, see: Peter Parshall, “Art and the Theater of Knowledge: The Origins of Print
Collecting in Northern Europe,” Harvard University Art Museums Bulletin 2, no. 3 (April 1, 1994): 7-36.
98 Goddard, “The Origin, se, and Heritage,” 1 .
99 Parshall, “Prints as Objects,” 20; Bartrum, German Renaissance Prints, 8.
93
94
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pretext.”100 For instance, if a collector wished to enjoy his discretely stored images, he
had to deliberately seek them out—a process that surely added a degree of anticipation to
the encounter.101
Considering the small scale of many prints, the experience of viewing them was
necessarily intimate.102 One simply could not see the fine details of the tiny images—or
their nude figures—from very far away. Therefore, for the full effect, viewers had to hold
the prints mere inches away from their eyes. From my experience studying Judith Seated
on the Body of Holofernes at the Art Institute of Chicago, I know that viewing the
smaller-than-a-business-card print from two feet away is very different from seeing it five
inches from my face. Seen in such close proximity, Judith’s nude body dominates both
Holofernes and the viewer’s field of vision; it is absolutely possible to immerse yourself
in a 55 x 37 millimeter print. Whether the owner enjoyed his collection privately or
among friends, he almost certainly did so from less than an arm’s length away.103 Held in
the palm of a hand or mounted on the page of a book, small prints were perfect for
personal use: for enjoying “their beauty or their erotic value,” or for exercising one’s “wit
in inventing interpretations.”104 As Bette Talvacchia notes, it was the “intimate format,
reproducibility, relatively low cost, and discreet (if necessary, furtive) storage” of prints
that helped “[encourage] the development of a genre of explicit erotic representation.”105
During the first half of the sixteenth century, prints conveyed increasingly
complex messages—and the well-educated, visually literate print collectors whom I have
described in this section relished the intellectual challenge they presented.106 According
Parshall, “Prints as Objects,” 20.
Parshall, “Prints as Objects,” 20.
102 Goddard, “The Origin, se, and Heritage,” 13
103 Bodo Brinkmann, “Witches’ Lust and the Fall of Man,” in Hexenlust und Sündenfall: Die seltsamen
Phantasien Des Hans Baldung Grien, ed. Bodo Brinkmann, 2. Aufl (Petersberg: Michael Imhof, 2007), 44;
Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 109.
104 Barnes, “Heroines and Worthy Women,” 29; Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 297.
105 Bette Talvacchia, Taking Positions: On the Erotic in Renaissance Culture (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1999), 74.
106 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 297.
100
101
92
to David Landau and Peter Parshall, “It was a delight for [elite Italian] buyers that prints
offered obscure and mysterious subjects, puns, subtle allusions, and quotations from
antique sources or contemporary literature.” Several scholars grant the Little Masters and
their German customers a similar level of intellectual sophistication. Stephen Goddard
writes that some of the Little Master’s more inventive prints “offer[ed] viewers a cocktail
of erudition and wit, with a choice, it seems, of a moral, subversive, or lusty twist.”107 In
her article on erotic engravings, Janey Levy demonstrates how the Behams “expected
their audience to recognize [Italianate motifs and compositional formulas], and to
appreciate the artists’ fusion of northern themes with Italian formal elements.”108 Levy
goes on to write that the Behams “play[ed] with their subjects, reinterpreting
conventional themes and self-consciously ‘quoting’ familiar images in new contexts.”109
Similarly, Bodo Brinkmann insists that certain German audiences enjoyed ambiguous
images for their discursive potential: the less straightforward the meaning, the longer and
richer the discussion.110 In his book Brinkmann addresses Hans Baldung Grien’s 1523
painting of two witches rather than one of the Little Masters’ prints, but his description of
the small, clever work could be applied to Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes: it
“triggers certain chains of associations which wrap themselves around a core like the
skins of an onion, in layers of various thickness.”111 Select German audiences enjoyed
multidimensional prints; Barthel Beham created visual cocktails surrounded by layers of
meaning; and as I continue my analysis of Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, I join
a long list of experts who agree that sixteenth-century Germans and their works of art
demand closer and more careful consideration.
Goddard, “The Origin, se, and Heritage,” 1 .
Janey L. Levy, “The Erotic Engravings of Sebald and Barthel Beham: A German Interpretation of a
enaissance Subject,” in The World in Miniature: Engravings by the German Little Masters, 1500-1550,
1st ed. (Lawrence: Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, 1988), 45.
109 Levy, “The Erotic Engravings,” 49-50.
110 Brinkmann, “Witches Lust,” 44.
111 Brinkmann, “Witches’ Lust,” 36.
107
108
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Conclusion
Judith is a perfect example of the complex and contradictory nature of gender
roles and relations in late medieval and early modern Germany. The same beautiful
widow could alternately stand for the Virgin Mary, just tyrannicide, and dangerous sexual
desire—and all those “faces” of Judith coexisted! Thus, in a very real way, Judith
“embody[ed] every woman”: the pious widow, the bold heroine, and the alluring
seductress.112 On a daily basis sixteenth-century men encountered living Judiths: dutiful
housewives, brave reformers, and clever temptresses. Just as men’s perceptions of Judith
changed to fit the occasion, so too did their thoughts on the women in their lives. Yet
each type of Judith—and, thus, type of woman—possessed a feminine power. Whether
that power was good or evil changed depending on the “face” she assumed, but it all
boiled down to fluid power dynamics. Since Barthel Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body
of Holofernes is a Weibermacht image, the power she exerts would generally be
perceived as negative. But that is only one way to interpret the dynamics between the
fearsome female figure and the headless man beneath her.
In the final chapter of this thesis, I attempt to interpret Beham’s Judith Seated on
the Body of Holofernes from the perspective of the ideal male print collectors described
in this chapter. How did those well-educated, well-traveled men read Judith’s provocative
position? Obviously, it is impossible to shed my modern American female bias and
analyze the print through the eyes of its male contemporaries. But through careful
consideration of male viewers, the complexity of gender dynamics, and the ambiguity of
Judith, I propose multiple potential meanings that may enrich both our interpretation of
Beham’s print and his place in the history of art. Admittedly, much of the next chapter is
speculative, but I base my observations on historical facts, the sources available to
sixteenth-century artists and print collectors, and an in-depth study of early modern
gender and Judith.
112
Weigert, “Judith et Holopherne,” 87.
94
~ Chapter 3 ~
The Provocative Position
Very little is known about Barthel Beham, the creator of Judith Seated on the
Body of Holofernes (fig. 17).1 Beham, a sixteenth-century German painter and
printmaker, was born in Nuremberg in 1502 and died in Italy in 1540.2 The details of his
early life and training before 1525 are uncertain; such information was either never
recorded or has been lost.3 Yet art historians can determine Beham’s artistic interests and
influences from his surviving works. For example, no written evidence proves that he or
his older brother Sebald trained under Albrecht Dürer, but “there can be no doubt that
[both brothers] were fully steeped in Dürer’s art.”4 The subjects, compositions, and
techniques that Beham employed throughout the 1520s exhibit Dürer’s strong influence,
but it is unclear if he knew Dürer personally or, like countless other artists, he studied the
German master’s prints.5 Additionally, from as early as 1524, Beham’s designs show the
influence of Italian masters, such as Raphael and Marcantonio Raimondi.6 His
classically-inspired and erotic figures most likely derive from Italian prints, which were
For more on Barthel Beham, see Kurt Löcher’s monograph Barthel Beham: Ein Maler aus dem
Dürerkreis, Kunstwissenschaftliche Studien, Bd. 81 (Munich: Deutscher Kunstverlag, 1999); Thomas
Ulrich Schauerte and Jürgen Müller, eds., Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg: Konvention und Subversion
in der Druckgrafik der Beham-Brüder (Emsdetten, Germany: Edition Imorde, 2011); and Stephen H.
Goddard, ed., The World in Miniature: Engravings by the German Little Masters, 1500-1550, 1st ed
(Lawrence: Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, 1988).
2 The year of Barthel Beham’s birth is confirmed by a 1531 portrait of Beham by Ludwig Neufahrer (d.
1563), which gives his age as 29. Jeffrey Chipps Smith, Nuremberg, a Renaissance City, 1500-1618, 1st ed.
(Austin: University of Texas Press, 1983), 196.
3 Alison Stewart, “Sebald Beham: Entrepreneur, Printmaker, Painter,” Journal of Historians of
Netherlandish Art 4, no. 2 (September 2012).
4 Goddard, The World in Miniature, 221; Stephen H. Goddard, “The Origin, se, and Heritage of the Small
Engraving in enaissance Germany,” in The World in Miniature: Engravings by the German Little
Masters, 1500-1550, 1st ed. (Lawrence: Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, 1988), 15.
5 Alison Stewart, “Beham,” Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press, accessed
March 31, 2013,
http://www.oxfordartonline.com.ezproxy.lib.utexas.edu/subscriber/article/grove/art/T007324pg2; Smith,
Nuremberg, 196.
6 Stewart, “Beham.”
1
95
“widely available in engraved form” in the sixteenth century. 7 Undoubtedly, both Beham
brothers encountered foreign prints since their compositions depict subjects—such as
classical mythology, history, and everyday life—“previously peripheral in German art,”
but regularly found in Italian designs.8 Artists and artisans commonly learned their craft
by copying masters’ works.9
The best documented event from Barthel Beham’s life occurred in the same year
that he produced his provocative image of Judith and Holofernes. On January 16, 1525,
the Beham brothers and their colleague Georg Pencz were interrogated by “a committee
consisting of Christoph Scheurl, two other city lawyers, and five local preachers.”10
During questioning the young artists “refused to acknowledge the validity of the
sacraments of mass and baptism”; they declared that they believed in God, but not in
Christ; and they stated that they did not consider the Scriptures holy.11 Furthermore,
“when asked whether they recognized the authority of the Nuremberg city council, they
said that they did not.”12 As a result of their blasphemy, heresy, and failure to accept the
authority of the city council, all three men were exiled from Nuremberg on January 26. 13
During their banishment the artists “petitioned frequently” to return to the city,
and they were allowed to do so by November 16, 1525.14 “Whether [the artists’]
statements were prompted by youthful intemperance or by strong personal convictions
cannot be determined,” writes Jeffrey Chipps Smith.15 Yet, as Alison Stewart points out,
the men were certainly “young enough to be caught up in the excitement and turmoil of
Stewart, “Beham.”
Stewart, “Beham.”
9 Alison G. Stewart, Before Bruegel: Sebald Beham and the Origins of Peasant Festival Imagery
(Aldershot, U.K.: Ashgate, 2008), 18.
10 Smith, Nuremberg, 32
11 Keith P. F. Moxey, “The Beham Brothers and the Death of the Artist,” in The Register of the Spencer
Museum of Art, vol. 6, 6 (Lawrence: University of Kansas, 1989), 25.
12 Moxey, “The Beham Brothers,” 25.
13 Giulia Bartrum, German Renaissance Prints, 1490-1550 (London: British Museum Press, 1995), 99;
Smith, Nuremberg, 32.
14 Bartrum, German Renaissance Prints, 99; Goddard, The World in Miniature, 221.
15 Smith, Nuremberg, 32.
7
8
96
the changing religious and political scene in
eformation Nuremberg.”16 Since Barthel
was twenty-three years old and both Sebald and Georg were twenty-five in 1525, it is
easy to imagine them being swept away by religious fervor and driven by the bold
nonconformity of youth.
In any case, it seems that the Nuremberg city council did not view them as a
serious threat. Keith Moxey observes that “temporary expulsion was not the sort of
punishment meted out by the council to those whom it perceived as its enemies.”17
Apparently, “in the same year, another pair of artisans who had spoken out against the
council and its right to levy taxes was beheaded in the marketplace!”18 Yet, again in
1526, the Beham brothers—as well as the poet shoemaker Hans Sachs and others—were
questioned about their “deviant religious views.”19 Finally, Barthel permanently left
Nuremberg in 1527 and spent the rest of his short life as the court painter for the
staunchest Catholic princes in Germany: Ludwig X and, later, Wilhelm IV, dukes of
Bavaria.20 It is possible that Barthel’s radical beliefs changed over time or that he
tempered them—or gave them up entirely—to accommodate his patrons. Alternatively,
the artist’s personal beliefs may have had little to no impact on his body of work.21
Despite the trial’s overwhelming presence in Beham scholarship—and this
introduction, my final chapter is not about Barthel Beham’s legal problems or the accused
Stewart, “Sebald Beham,” 4.
Moxey, “The Beham Brothers,” 26.
18 Moxey, “The Beham Brothers,” 26-27.
19 Goddard, The World in Miniature, 221.
20 Smith, Nuremberg, 196.
21 In Jörg Breu the Elder: Art, Culture, and Belief in Reformation Augsburg, Histories of Vision
(Aldershot, Hants, U.K.: Ashgate, 2001), 136-209, Andrew Morrall describes both Jorg Breu’s wellrecorded thoughts on religion and several works he produced during the height of the Reformation. Morrall
argues that Breu’s artistic production subtly demonstrates his ideology, but what is important here, is the
fact that Breu continued to produce woodcuts that were used interchangeably to illustrate Catholic and
Protestant texts. Unlike the printers who produced them, “[Breu] attached no personal importance or
sentiment to [the content of either sect’s treatises].” (152) Thus, it seems to me that Breu was a businesssavvy artist who knew that he could not limit his clientele by only catering to customers with his point of
view—even though his personal beliefs were strong. This may have been the same for Barthel Beham
during that era of divisive religious debates—after all, why produce works for only half the potential
costumers?
16
17
97
artists’ infamous moniker: “the godless painters.” I agree with Stewart that “this episode
was indeed crucial, but it was not all defining” for the Beham brothers and Georg
Pencz.22 Too many scholars make the mistake of fixating on isolated events in artists’
lives simply because they were documented—sometimes remarkably well, as is the case
here.23 In my opinion, it is unwise to base one’s interpretation of an artist’s work on
which set of records happen to survive the roulette wheel of time. Instead, for me, what
the 1525 trial amplifies are the artists’ rebellious natures and willingness to push the
envelope—characteristics well supported in the visual evidence.
If I clung to the fact that the trial and Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes
date to the same year, I could potentially argue that Beham created the work after he
returned to Nuremberg, and that Judith represents “the godless painters” triumphing over
the tyrannical Nuremberg city council. But, as I argued at length in chapter 2, Beham’s
1525 Judith is not a Triumphant Heroine; rather, she is a seductive Femme Fatale who
belongs among the Weibermacht women. Such an artist-centric, heroic interpretation fails
to account for the eroticism of the odd little print. Moreover, interpreting a sixteenthcentury print as an expression of the artist’s beliefs or feelings is anachronistic. True, due
in large part to Dürer’s efforts to elevate the status of German artists, printmakers were
more regularly recognized as artists rather than artisans. But, however personally
satisfying or expressive the finished product, printmaking was first and foremost a
professional trade that artists practiced to support themselves and their households. To be
clear, I am not suggesting that medieval or early modern artists did not express
themselves in their works; I am merely reminding that self-expression was secondary to
attracting customers and making a profit in the Reformation era. For example, Beham
may have felt some kinship with the persecuted widow in 1525, but his choice to depict
Judith nude and atop Holofernes suggests that he had his potential patrons’ interests in
mind rather than his desire to document his victory over “tyranny.”
22
23
Stewart, “Sebald Beham,” 2.
Stewart, “Sebald Beham,” 2.
98
My engagement with Barthel Beham’s biography is limited to exploring how his
historical context—where he lived, who the prominent artists were, which sources were
available to him, etc.—impacted his print production. I rely on Beham’s artistic output
for evidence of his interests and stylistic “teachers.” Throughout this chapter, my
argument carefully shifts back and forth between intentionality and reception. On one
hand, I propose that Beham deliberately included references from German and Italian
sources in his Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes to intrigue and entertain his
potential patrons. On the other hand, I argue that well-educated, well-traveled patrons
were capable of reading clever messages in the works, whether the artist deliberately
supplied them or not. Essentially, I attribute great intellectual strength to both Barthel
Beham and his ideal audience based on a combination of historical and visual evidence.
To a certain extent, I believe, like Moxey, that “instead of identifying the final meaning
of a work by establishing the artist’s intended meaning, the historian can merely suggest
the significance of the work within the broader context of the culture of the period as a
whole.”24 However, I do not abandon Beham; instead, I incorporate him as an (obviously)
vital element of the print’s historical context—along with sixteenth-century gender
dynamics, the early modern art market, and artistic exchange north and south of the Alps.
In this final chapter, I consider the pressures Barthel Beham faced as a young
artist in sixteenth-century Nuremberg: the changing art market, the overwhelming
presence of Dürer, and the imperative to not only engage, but also compete, with Italian
artists. The intrepid printmaker responded to those challenges by producing erotic
engravings that cleverly combined German elements with Italian figures and themes. In
the following pages, I demonstrate how images of witches, Venus, and sex positions may
have inspired Beham’s depiction of Judith atop Holofernes. Admittedly, it is impossible
to prove that Beham “quoted” different types of powerful women in his Judith Seated on
the Body of Holofernes, or that he did so in order to convey a richer message about the
power of women. Nevertheless, I am inclined to give Beham credit for seating Judith atop
24
Moxey, “The Beham Brothers,” 2 -29.
99
her enemy like a witch riding a goat; for denuding his heroine and depicting her crouched
like Venus; and for (nearly) illustrating the “reverse-cowgirl position” using two figures
from biblical Apocrypha. By mischievously juxtaposing references to various examples
of powerful women, Beham seems to suggest that the power of women may be painful or
pleasurable—either way, men are at the mercy of the fairer sex. Furthermore, in my
opinion, the well-educated, affluent patrons, whom Beham wished to entice and amuse,
would have recognized his playful use of well-known sources and appreciated his witty
visual commentary on the complex dynamics between men and women.
The Sixteenth-Century German Art Market and the Little Masters
During the early modern period, Nuremberg was one of “the leading metropolitan
center[s]” in southern Germany.25 At a time when the typical German town consisted of
500 to 2,000 inhabitants, Nuremberg boasted “40,000-50,000 people within its walls and
another 40,000 in its territories.”26 Yet, as Stewart rightly notes, the bustling city was
“small by European standards, especially when compared to Paris and North German and
Italian cities.”27 Nuremberg owed much of its wealth and prominence to commerce and
trade with cities as close as Augsburg and as far away as the Levant.28
But the city gained more than affluence from its many business contacts.
“Through its international trade,” writes Smith, “Nuremberg had access to the latest ideas
and innovations throughout the continent.”29 Some of the most influential cultural
imports making their way north were Italian prints and ideas, which “arrived in Germany
through numerous channels.”30 For example, German merchants brought Italian
engravings back from Venice, one of the many cities along Nuremberg’s trading routes.
Similarly, visiting scholars and teachers, whom Nuremberg welcomed, may have also
25
Stewart, Before Bruegel, 34.
Stewart, Before Bruegel, 34.
27 Stewart, Before Bruegel, 34.
28 Stewart, Before Bruegel, 34.
29 Smith, Nuremberg, 39.
30 Goddard, The World in Miniature, 14.
26
100
carried prints with them on their travels.31 Plus, “young members of the important
Nuremberg families had long traveled to Italy or elsewhere for their higher education”;
therefore, it is likely that they, too, purchased Italian prints and transported them over the
Alps.32 Of course, cultural and artistic exchange was a two-way street. German merchants
and artists who ventured south to Italy undoubtedly brought their own prints, ideas, and
culture with them; thus, international trade and travel provided exposure for both Italian
and German workmanship well beyond the artists’ “local market audience.”33
The best example of this reciprocal exchange is the career of Albrecht Dürer. The
native Nuremberg painter, printmaker, and intellectual spent time training in Italy; then,
he brought Italian Renaissance ideas back to Germany where he “combin[ed] Italian
concepts of human form, spatial construction, and iconography with the underlying
naturalism of German late Gothic art.”34 Dürer went on to sell his prints in Italy and
influence Italian masters’ works, but his impact on Italian art is outside the scope of my
thesis. Here, Dürer’s impact on German artists is more important. No records give the
exact number of students or journeymen in Dürer’s workshop.35 No written documents
indicate that Dürer “had any pupils as engravers.”36 But the Nuremberg master’s
influence is undeniable: countless sixteenth-century German prints include “figures or
entire compositions borrowed from Dürer.”37 Smith notes, “Almost every major painter
and printmaker active in Nuremberg between 1500 and 1528 trained with Dürer or
worked in his atelier.”38 Even the young German artists who did not train under Dürer’s
Guy Fitch Lytle, “The enaissance, the eformation, and the City of Nuremberg,” in Nuremberg, a
Renaissance City, 1500-1618, by Jeffrey Chipps Smith, 1st ed. (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1983),
Nuremberg, 19.
32 Lytle, “The enaissance, the eformation, and the City of Nuremberg,” 19.
33 Lytle, “The enaissance, the eformation, and the City of Nuremberg,” 1 .
34 Smith, Nuremberg, 4.
35 Smith, Nuremberg, 48?
36 E. Maurice Bloch, The Golden Age of German Printmaking (Los Angeles: Grunwald Center for the
Graphic Arts, UCLA / Dickson Art Center, UCLA, 1983), 18.
37 Smith, Nuremberg, 48; Christine Vogt, Das druckgraphische Bild nach Vorlagen Albrecht Dürers
(1471-1528): zum Phänomen der Graphischen Kopie (Reproduktion) zu Lebzeiten Dürers Nördlich der
Alpen, Aachener Bibliothek, Bd. 6 (Munich: Deutscher Kunstverlag, 2008).
38 Smith, Nuremberg, 46.
31
101
watchful eye inevitably copied the master’s prints—“which found their way into every
studio of engraving”—often line by line.39 By studying Dürer’s works the younger artists
learned to appreciate and utilize the “current innovation[s] in northern Italian and Roman
art.”40 Fortunately for the next generation of northern artists, Dürer “translated the lessons
of Italian art into a pictorial language that northern masters could comprehend.”41
Furthermore, he demonstrated how they might use Italian figures in their works (see, for
example, how Dürer employed the Apollo Belvedere in his 1504 Adam and Eve).42
It is easy to detect Dürer’s influence in engravings by the Little Masters, a group
of early sixteenth-century German artists known for their exceptionally small prints.43
According to Goddard, the list of men included among the Little Masters “has varied
considerably from author to author,” but “there is universal agreement that the core group
consists of the three Nuremberg artists: Sebald Beham, Barthel Beham, and Georg
Pencz.”44
nfortunately, no documentation confirms that the members of Nuremberg’s
“unholy triad” actually trained in Dürer’s workshop.45 Nevertheless, even if they never
set foot in his shop, the Little Masters lived and worked in Dürer’s hometown, so they
were undoubtedly exposed to his oeuvre no matter where they apprenticed.46 Moreover,
the Little Masters’ prints show distinct signs that they copied Dürer’s techniques,
compositions, and use of Italian figures.
39
Bloch, The Golden Age of German Printmaking, 18; Smith, Nuremberg, 48
Smith, Nuremberg, 4.
41 Smith, Nuremberg, 4.
42 Smith, Nuremberg, 45.
43 Goddard explains that the Little Masters’ prints all fall into roughly coherent size groups of about 117 x
75 mm and smaller. Notably, their largest prints—with the exception of their friezes—were about the same
size as Dürer’s small format prints. One could approximate the four popular Little Master engraving sizes
by “continuing to halve Dürer’s smallest standard-size print three times.” (Goddard, “The Origin, se, and
Heritage,” 14).
44 Goddard, “The Origin, se and Heritage,” 13.
45 David Landau and Peter W. Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 1470-1550 (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1994), 315; Smith, Nuremberg, 46.
46 Bloch, The Golden Age of German Printmaking, 19; Smith, Nuremberg, 46.
40
102
As Maurice Bloch astutely remarks, “Dürer was obviously a tough act to
follow.”47 No one—not even his students—could compete with the complexity and
draftsmanship of Dürer’s prints. Thus, it may have actually been to the benefit of the
Little Masters that the demands of the art market shifted in the 1520s when the
eformation “took hold” in Nuremberg.48 With the city’s official adoption of
Lutheranism on March 17, 1525, came “new attitudes about the function and even the
morality of religious art.”49 Many Protestant reformers and theologians insisted that
traditional religious works of art, such as altarpieces and devotional statues, were
idolatrous.50 In countless German towns and cities paintings and sculpture were destroyed
by iconoclasts.51 Fortunately, the “iconoclasm was minimal” in Nuremberg where
wealthy merchants and patricians had “richly decorated local churches with paintings,
sculptures, and liturgical objects during the first quarter of the century.”52 But the arrival
of the
eformation in Nuremberg meant that “the adornment of churches ceased
immediately.”53 And because patrons stopped commissioning religious works, which had
been “the major source of revenue for most artists,” the post-Reformation artists faced
financial ruin.54 They could either abandon their trades for “want of traditional
patronage,” or they could “[develop] new artistic ideas.”55 Indomitable and businesssavvy artists who quickly embraced secular themes and reworked traditional ones were
able to weather the storm.56
The Beham brothers were among the artists who successfully forged ahead and
produced secular works with “narrative, allegorical, and emblematic subjects of striking
47
Bloch, The Golden Age of German Printmaking, 18.
Lytle, “The enaissance, the eformation, and the City of Nuremberg,” 19.
49 Smith, Nuremberg, 30, 4.
50 Smith, Nuremberg, 4.
51 Bartrum, German Renaissance Prints, 12.
52 Smith, Nuremberg, 30, 4.
53 Smith, Nuremberg, 33.
54 Smith, Nuremberg, 30.
55 Smith, Nuremberg, 36.
56 Smith, Nuremberg, 4.
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originality.”57 What was “catastrophic for many painters and sculptors” actually freed the
Behams from directly competing with Dürer.58 For instance, Dürer, who represented an
earlier generation immersed in humanism and religious fervor, produced more
conservative and primarily religious prints, whereas the Beham brothers created
secularized images—“with sometimes renegade independence”—in order to appeal to art
collectors with evolving tastes.59 Essentially, Sebald and Barthel had to entice art patrons
who usually spent their money on religious works to redirect their capital toward
procuring new visual experiences on paper. To do this the brothers expanded their
oeuvres to include images of Old Testament stories, everyday life, and lewd or erotic
subjects.60 But it is important to remember that the Behams’ prints were not designed for
any one patron—they were not discussed and commissioned like the religious works had
been. Instead, the Nuremberg artists experimented with themes that they hoped small,
select groups of patrons would find intriguing enough to collect and larger, broader
audiences would find amusing enough to hang on their walls.61 Fortunately, prints were
not very expensive to make or purchase, so the Behams could afford to create risky,
envelope-pushing designs that may not have resonated with every customer.62 But
overall, the Behams provided their audiences with unique and clever images that were
appealing both for their suggestive and comic themes, as well as their reduced scale.
Since Sebald and Barthel’s early prints share similar artistic approaches, styles,
and themes, it is possible that the brothers worked together—perhaps in Sebald’s
workshop—before Barthel left the city in 1527.63 But however similar their engravings
were, and however closely they worked with Dürer or each other, “Barthel Beham was
57
Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 316.
Bartrum, German Renaissance Prints, 12.
59 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 316.
60 To be clear, the Behams and their contemporaries continued to produce religious works, but they
responded to the demands of the new art market by designing works beyond the scope of traditional
religious themes.
61 Stewart, “Sebald Beham,” 7.
62 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 350.
63 Stewart, “Sebald Beham,” 3. ecords indicate that Sebald Beham was a journeyman in 1521 and a
master painter with his own shop in Nuremberg by 1525.
58
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undoubtedly the most inspired of [the Little Masters].”64 Like Landau and Parshall, I find
that Barthel’s prints are often “charged with coy wit and a clever sense of parody.”65
Despite the dearth of biographical information available on the younger Beham, his
surviving body of work speaks to his inventiveness, which Landau and Parshall describe
as “brilliant and idiosyncratic.66 Even Barthel’s earliest dated engravings from 1520—
created when the artist was only eighteen years old—“demonstrate remarkable technical
virtuosity and an interest in complex figural poses that often demand an ability to render
foreshortened limbs convincingly.”67
Yet Alison Stewart and other scholars tend to champion Sebald over Barthel.
Perhaps they prefer the elder Beham, in part, because more of his works are
monogrammed and more information is available about his life. Alternatively, scholars
who wish to study scenes of everyday life and peasants might naturally favor Sebald,
whereas someone like me, who analyzes erotic imagery, instinctively prefers Barthel.
Here, it is important to note that many of the most inventive and erotic prints attributed to
Sebald are actually copies he made after his brother’s plates.68 The elder Beham likely
inherited his brother’s stock of copper plates in 1540, the year Barthel died in Italy.69
Sebald went on to rework several of the plates and to monogram many of those modified
versions.70 Still, both Beham brothers “responded boldly to the dual challenges of the
eformation and the High
enaissance,” and they succeeded in an environment where
other artists could not.71 In fact, in 1547, Johann Neudorfer wrote that the Behams and
64
Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 316.
Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 316; for more on Beham’s wit, see Schauerte and Müller,
Die gottlosen Maler von Nürnberg.
66 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 316.
67 Goddard, The World in Miniature, 221.
68 Bartrum, German Renaissance Prints, 100. From my study of the Beham brothers and their erotic prints,
it is quite apparent to me that Barthel was largely—if not solely—responsible for the most erotic Behambrother prints. A longer and more detailed study is required to prove my hypothesis.
69 Goddard, The World in Miniature, 223. After years of studying and imitating Italian works, Barthel
Beham traveled to Italy around 1536 on a trip paid for by his Catholic patrons. He died there in 1540.
70 Goddard, The World in Miniature, 223; Smith, Nuremberg, 176; Stewart, “Beham.”
71 Smith, Nuremberg, 4.
65
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their colleague Georg Pencz were famous artists, and that “their entire print oeuvres, as
well as individual prints, were available in good supply.”72
In this section I have briefly introduced the sixteenth-century Nuremberg art
market and the artistic sources that were available there in the 1520s. It is crucial to
realize how many different external forces may have influenced Barthel Beham’s Judith
Seated on the Body of Holofernes—whether the artist consciously realized their impact or
not. For example, the boom in international trade brought Italian prints north and German
prints south; Albrecht Dürer’s body of work molded the minds and oeuvres of artists near
and far; and the Reformation cut commissions for religious art, forcing artists to adapt or
“die out.” Because other scholars have marveled at Barthel Beham’s brilliant, tiny works,
it should not be difficult to imagine that he could have integrated lessons from Italian and
German prints into his engravings in effort to secure more patronage—and to prove
himself against those exemplars. In the remainder of this chapter, I present evidence from
Beham’s body of work that suggests he deliberately responded to both German and
Italian designs in effort to compete in the international art market. His resulting print of
Judith and Holofernes provides food for thought on the dynamics between men and
women—as well as the demands of the men who enjoyed viewing women.
Judith the Witch
As demonstrated in chapter 2, Barthel Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes does not conform to traditional Judith iconography. Instead, Beham’s Judith
is nude, and she sits atop the nude torso of her slain enemy. In this instance Judith is
neither a personified virtue nor an emblem of heroism; rather, she is a Femme Fatale with
strong textual and visual connections to the Weibermacht topos. The only other
Weibermacht character positioned on top of a man is Phyllis, the clever courtesan who
rode on Aristotle’s back. Clearly, the power of women is an important theme in Beham’s
Bartrum, German Renaissance Prints, 100; Stewart, “Sebald Beham,” 10; Goddard, “The Origin, se,
and Heritage,” 15.
72
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1525 engraving. But it is my contention that ideal sixteenth-century male viewers (see
chapter 2) would look beyond the obvious Weibermacht connections and consider
additional visual sources for Judith’s provocative position. They, too, would have
recognized that Judith’s intimate placement on Holofernes’s chest is problematic and
unique—a sign that the artist wanted them to engage more closely with the unusual
image. But which depictions of seated female nudes did both Beham and his potential
customers know? As it turns out, very few prints prior to 1525 show seated female nudes
in a manner similar to Beham’s Judith—but it is very likely that the ones that do
circulated in Nuremberg. What is more impressive is how each “quoted” source enriches
the message of Beham’s engraving. The clever references enhance the intellectual
viewing experience of those who recognize them, yet Judith’s narrative and nudity are
displayed simply enough for any viewer to enjoy.
The more discerning eye might recognize elements of Judith Seated on the Body
of Holofernes as references to Dürer’s Witch Riding Backwards on a Goat (fig. 56). In
truth, Dürer’s Witch is one of the closest iconographical matches I found—beyond
Baldung’s Phyllis Riding Aristotle (fig. 40)—for Beham’s Judith. Despite the obvious
age difference (Dürer’s witch is old, and Beham’s Judith is young), the two nude female
figures share strikingly similar poses: Judith sits on Holofernes like the witch sits on her
male goat. Both women also have prominently displayed left thighs, and their torsos are
turned to showcase their breasts and stomach. Furthermore, Judith grips Holofernes’s
head by his hair much like the witch grabs the he-goat’s head by its horn. Although the
witch’s arm is further extended, it is noticeable that both of the female figures’ left arms
are bent at the elbow. Each woman also holds a phallic tool: the witch clutches her
distaff, which protrudes from between her legs like a penis, and Judith grasps
Holofernes’s sword, which may symbolize Holofernes’s lost—or, as I suggest below,
exhausted—manhood.
Since Dürer’s evil figure found her way into prints by both German and Italian
masters, it is safe to say that Witch Riding Backwards on a Goat circulated widely and
107
that the witch theme was fairly popular. For example, Hans Baldung Grien, one of
Dürer’s documented students, references his master’s goat-riding witch in The Witches’
Sabbath (fig. 57). Here, Baldung replaces the old hag with a beautiful, young witch
whose curls whip behind her in the wind. It is entirely possible that Beham knew
Baldung’s print in addition to Dürer’s—though, in my opinion, Beham had Dürer’s witch
in mind when he posed Judith’s left arm. South of the Alps, Marcantonio aimondi, the
famed Italian printmaker, borrowed Dürer’s seated witch for his The Witches’ Procession
(Lo Stregozzo, fig. 58).73 Marcantonio’s witch sits on a skeletal carriage conveyed by
strapping young Michelangelesque men. Like Dürer, Marcantonio includes goats in his
composition—evidence that certain witch iconography was becoming more standardized.
I mention The Witches’ Procession to demonstrate the international popularity of Dürer,
as discussed above, but also to support my claim that Beham had access to Witch Riding
Backwards on a Goat. Since a copy of the print made its way down to Italy and the
workshop of Marcantonio, it stands to reason that Beham probably saw it in Nuremberg.
So if Beham intended for his elite viewers to recognize Judith as an
iconographical descendant of Dürer’s witch, what was he saying about her? What did it
mean to be a witch in the 1520s in Germany? In the early sixteenth century, witches were
prevalent in popular literature: poetry, plays, pamphlets, and broadsides—many of which
were illustrated.74 One of the most widely available anti-witch guides was the Malleus
Maleficarium (Hammer of Witches), which two Dominican inquisitors published in
1486.75 Between 1487 and 1520, presses in Germany, Italy, and France printed thirteen
Latin editions of the Malleus—a sure sign that contemporary audiences were interested in
73
Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 348.
Jane P Davidson, The Witch in Northern European Art, 1470-1750 (Freren, Germany: Luca Verlag,
1987), 31; Charles Zika, The Appearance of Witchcraft: Print and Visual Culture in Sixteenth-Century
Europe (London: Routledge, 2007).
75 Laura Weigert, “Autonomy as Deviance: Sixteenth-Century Images of Witches and Prostitutes,” in
Solitary Sex: A Cultural History of Masturbation, ed. Paula Bennett and Vernon A. Rosario II (New York :
Cambridge, MA: Zone Books / MIT Press, 2003), 40.
74
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learning more about witches and their craft.76 But Jane Davidson suggests that witch
literature was popular “due to the viewers’ morbid fascination and not just to fear”—
audiences found the “sensational” pamphlets irresistible.77 Notably, it was not until the
second half of the sixteenth century, about 1560, that widespread fear of witches and the
corresponding witch-hunt craze took hold in Germany. And even when the trials began,
“Nuremberg, like many German economic and cultural centers, was quite temperate in its
persecution of witches.”78
In truth, early sixteenth-century depictions of witches, such as Dürer’s Witch
Riding Backward on a Goat, and the corresponding witch lore had little to do with the
later, bloodier developments. Linda Hults explains:
From Dürer and Baldung’s early sixteenth-century images of witches…we
learn that witches are indeed women at the symbolic level. We find no
simple and necessary correspondence between the images and the
chronological peaks of the European witch-hunts; instead, their visual
rhetoric…is more far-reaching. It emerges from the ideals, fantasies,
anxieties, and competitive demands of early modern models of
masculinity—in particular, that of the visual arts.79
Male artists designed images of witches, which were often based on texts written by men,
for male audiences. It is unsurprising that men in patriarchal German cities (see chapter
1) delighted in misogynistic witch mythology and capitalized on yet another opportunity
to depict and view the female nude. Furthermore, writes Hults, “Images of witchcraft
helped male artists enhance their status by proving their imaginative intellectual prowess
to peers or superiors.”80
ndoubtedly, Dürer’s engravings—including those about
witches—target “an elite male audience,” and Baldung’s “often erotic drawings of
witches…were intended for a small group of male friends.”81 Although records do not
Linda C. Hults’ The Witch as Muse: Art, Gender, and Power in Early Modern Europe (Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania, 2005), 60.
77 Davidson, The Witch in Northern European Art, 31.
78 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 66.
79 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 107 (my italics).
80 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 24.
81 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 24.
76
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say who owned which witch prints and drawings, we do know that both Dürer’s
Nuremberg patrons and Baldung’s Strasbourg patrons were “respected humanists and
members of the noble and imperial courts.”82 Thus, the coterie of male viewers that
sixteenth-century artists wished to “shock, confound, and amuse” with their witch
imagery was likely “the political and religious leadership of southern German society.”83
Creative depictions of witches provided “fodder for learned discussion” while also
“resonating with their audience through scatology, misogynistic humor, eroticism, and
above all their reinforcement of various masculine identities.”84 Whether they found the
witch images amusing or abhorrent—or a combination of both, the type of men viewing
Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes knew the iconography, as well as the
connotations, associated with the deviant female figures.
Essentially, witches were women—women with unbridled lust who had
intercourse with the devil and caused various social ills, including, but not limited to,
impotence, bad weather, sickness, and death.85 Women were categorically understood to
be the “weaker sex”; thus, they were deemed “more easily seduced by the devil”—just as
Eve had been seduced by the serpent.86 By the beginning of the fifteenth century, people
generally thought that a witch’s power came from a pact she had made with the devil,
which she then “sealed with illicit sexual relations.”87 According to the misogynistic lore
promoted in the Malleus Maleficarium, Part I, Question 6: “All witchcraft comes from
carnal lust which is in women insatiable.”88 It was thus their overwhelming sexual urges
that drove unsatisfied women straight into the devil’s arms. Here it is important to
remember that early modern men feared that they could not satisfy women’s hunger for
Weigert, “Autonomy as Deviance,” 41.
Hults, The Witch as Muse, 46; Weigert, “Autonomy as Deviance,” 41.
84 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 42, 93.
85 Some men were tried as witches later in the century, but I cannot think of a single early sixteenth-century
image of a male witch.
86 Heide Wunder, “He Is the Sun, She Is the Moon”: Women in Early Modern Germany (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1998), 148.
87 Wunder, “He Is the Sun, She Is the Moon”, 148.
88 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 69.
82
83
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seminal fluid and that their wives would turn them into cuckolds by seeking fulfillment
elsewhere. Thus, the extreme female deviance that led to witchcraft was inherent in
women but also partially a response to men failing to perform their proper gender roles
within the household and/or community. Broadly speaking, if men could not control their
women (whether mother, wife, or other relative), then “the devil [would] usurp [their]
authority.”89
Truthfully, witch mythology and imagery is just another variation on a familiar
theme: the complexity of sixteenth-century gender roles and dynamics—a subject
perpetually linked with sex and sexuality. Like texts and images on the “Battle of the
Sexes” and the Weibermacht, descriptions and representations of witches express male
anxiety about female sexuality and power—while (potentially) amusing or arousing male
viewers. For example, in his The Witches’ Sabbath (fig. 57), Baldung drapes limp
sausages over a pitchfork on the left side of the image; the droopy meat almost certainly
alludes to penises—possibly penises that the witches “conjured away.”90 According to
contemporary treatises and popular sermons on witchcraft, “witches were a primary
source of impotence.”91 They were thought to “focus their vehement hatred of society on
procreation,” wreaking havoc on conception, pregnancies, births, lactation, and the health
of children and mothers.92 Since the early sixteenth century was a time when “procreation
was declared necessary for the maintenance of social order,” a man’s failure to perform
was not only humiliating, but considered bad for the community.93 Interestingly, Lyndal
oper notes, “Impotence was the bodily ill for which men most often appear to have
sought magical assistance, and which they feared women had brought about.”94
89
Hults, The Witch as Muse, 69.
Davidson, The Witch in Northern European Art, 24; Bodo Brinkmann, “Witches’ Lust and the Fall of
Man,” in Hexenlust und Sündenfall: Die seltsamen Phantasien des Hans Baldung Grien, ed. Bodo
Brinkmann, 2. Aufl (Petersberg: Michael Imhof, 2007), 56.
91 Weigert, “Autonomy as Deviance,” 36; Lyndal Roper, Oedipus and the Devil: Witchcraft, Sexuality, and
Religion in Early Modern Europe (London ; New York: outledge, 1994), 188.
92 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 22-23.
93 Weigert, “Autonomy as Deviance,” 36.
94 Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 188.
90
111
Of course, men’s inability to function sexually probably had more to do with their
excessive drinking habits and less to do with the power of women. It is my belief that
clever intellectuals—and probably a fair number of less educated men—would find
Baldung’s lifeless pseudo-appendages humorous rather than frightening. Again, this is an
example of men (hypothetically) mocking other men’s failure to perform their
masculinity. Alternatively, they might attribute the flaccidity of the sausages to the
repulsive actions of the witches or to the hideous appearance of the old crone in the
center of the print. After all, there are certainly non-magical ways to “steal manhood” or
temporarily “castrate” a man.
But witches did not always steal penises; sometimes (at least in images) they stole
pants. For example, in another of Baldung’s witch prints, which illustrates Johann Geiler
von Kayserberg’s sermon against witches, a group of three witches has taken a man’s
trousers (fig. 59). The nearly nude man climbs the tree on the left and unsuccessfully
reaches for his breeches, which fly like a flag on the end of one witch’s pitchfork.
Symbolically, the absence of a penis or a pair of pants is similar: the man has been
stripped of his power, authority, and sexual potency.95 This is an important example of
the kind of overlap that is possible between two different types of Power of Women
images: “Battle for the Pants” and witches. The witches are literally powerful women,
supplied with supernatural abilities by the devil, yet Baldung involves his witches in a
“Battle for the Pants”—normally a domestic dispute between spouses. If Baldung’s
witches could be embroiled in a battle for the pants, then it seems to me that Beham’s
Judith, represented as a Weibermacht figure, could be positioned like a witch. What I
propose is a degree of fluidity between the various types of powerful women images.
Since the power of women was such a popular theme (e.g. Weibermacht, “Battle of the
Sexes,” witches, etc.), and the message was basically the same in each subcategory
(“beware the power of women”), then it is logical that some amount of exchange was
possible. Furthermore, the type of elite male patrons collecting Power of Women images
95
Weigert, “Autonomy as Deviance,” 22.
112
may have enjoyed piecing together and interpreting the complex networks of
references—especially since so many of them were sexually charged and humorously
misogynistic.
Notably, much of witch lore (and, thus, imagery) is unmistakably sexual: witches
fly on phallic brooms or pitchforks, sleep with the devil, and dance naked with sexual
abandonment at the witches’ sabbaths.96 For instance, in Dürer’s Witch Riding
Backwards on a Goat, the ugly old hag specifically rides a goat, “a symbol of lust and the
animal form most often taken by the devil,” her alleged consort.97 She also grasps the hegoat’s horn, which was “often a sign of the fool or the cuckolded husband.”98 Even her
backwards positions carries deviant and sexual connotations: riding backwards “signified
ostracism and derision (as, for example, of the cuckolded husband or unruly woman).”99
Furthermore, four winged putti appear below the witch; they may signify “the lusty
tendencies of witches in general.”100
By echoing the loaded imagery from Dürer’s Witch Riding Backwards on a Goat,
I propose Beham wanted his audience to think about Judith in the same suggestive
terms—without forgetting her connection to Phyllis or her own apocryphal narrative.
Admittedly, this is a multilayered exercise that requires a rich visual literacy, but I
believe, like Brinkmann, that Beham’s ideal audience enjoyed complex images that
“trigger[ed] chains of associations.”101 It is my contention that Judith Seated on the Body
of Holofernes is exactly the kind of image that they looked forward to decoding. For
example, a first level of meaning might come directly from the Book of Judith:
Holofernes lusted after the beautiful widow—perhaps one could say he was as lusty as a
goat. With her beauty and cunning words, she cast a spell over the Assyrian general.
Next, the viewer might associate Judith’s seated position with that of Phyllis riding
96
Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, 202.
Hults, The Witch as Muse, 74.
98 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 74.
99 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 74.
100 Davidson, The Witch in Northern European Art, 18.
101 Brinkmann, “Witches’ Lust,” 44.
97
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Aristotle—a comparison that is both visually and thematically similar. Like Aristotle,
Beham’s dead general is, in a way, being ridden like a horse. And it just so happens that
horses were “symbols of the passions (especially lust) that human beings attempt to rein
in.”102 Since Judith rides her horse-man backwards, like the witch rides her randy billy
goat, she also symbolizes the unruly woman—a woman who dominates men. The
overlapping of meanings from all levels of interpretation strengthens the overall effect of
the image: Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes is a highly sexual print that focuses
on women’s power over men. By visually implying that Judith is witch-like, both her
sexuality and power are heightened—and cast in a supernatural, negative light. It is thus
unsurprising that Beham would combine his Weibermacht Judith—a powerful women
who used her beauty and cunning to overthrow a man—with witches—powerful,
hypersexual women who spurned patriarchal authority.
Actually, Beham’s Judith is like a witch in many ways. The more a well-educated,
visually literate viewer contemplates Judith as she relates to early sixteenth-century witch
lore and iconography, the stronger the connection between the beautiful widow and the
heretical hags becomes. Take, for instance, the fact that witches were believed to cause
impotency, robbing men of their masculine authority and, in some cases, their penises.
After charming Holofernes with her lovely appearance and wise words, Judith stole his
sword—a well-recognized phallic symbol of masculinity, and she cut his head off. While
Judith did not remove her enemy’s genitalia, it would be easy to associate Holofernes’s
beheading with castration and, thus, impotency.
Importantly, Judith employed both well-crafted phrases and her alluring beauty to
cast a devastating spell over Holofernes. In the early sixteenth-century, Johann Geiler von
Kayserberg, the humanist and Dominican preacher of Strasbourg Cathedral, insisted that
women were ten times more likely to be witches than men due to their “instability of
spirit, because they are understood better by demons, and because of their
102
Hults, The Witch as Muse, 102.
114
talkativeness.”103 Geiler went on to explain how women “have slippery tongues, and are
unable to conceal from their fellow-women those things which by evil arts they know.”104
It is certainly no coincidence that an early modern man would point to women’s speech
as one of the chief reasons for the spread of witchcraft. Recall, for instance, how St.
Jerome’s writings warned against the disruptiveness of women’s speech, and how early
modern women were taught to be “chaste, silent, and obedient.” Moreover, as Diane
Wolfthal writes, sixteenth-century men were very concerned with the gossip of women
and the negative effects of women’s speech—especially among other women.105 It is an
obvious misogynistic jab against women to blame the spread of witchcraft on “the female
tongue pass[ing] along evil knowledge.”106
Here, I draw attention to the dangerous speech and untrustworthy tongues of
women—especially as they relate to witchcraft, due to an easily-overlooked detail in
Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes. Below Judith’s frowning mouth,
Beham includes an oddly placed curl of hair (fig. 60). As I mentioned above, the two
small lines come together in a manner that resembles a serpent’s long, flexible tongue. As
a woman Judith, too, possessed a “slippery” tongue that men (rightly) feared. Perhaps by
giving Judith a pseudo-tongue Beham subtly reminds his viewers that the widow’s words
helped her topple Holofernes. Additionally, Beham may have had witch lore in mind
when he drew the wisp of hair at Judith’s chin. Combined with her dark gaze and
downturned mouth, Judith’s countenance is foreboding and frightening, like a witch. Yet,
on another level, Beham may be alluding to the first narrative in many Weibermacht
series: The Fall. Before Eve convinced Adam to eat the forbidden fruit, the serpent
persuaded Eve to taste it. Quite often in late medieval art, the serpent has a female head
(fig. 61)—sometimes it was identical to Eve’s. Obviously depicting the serpent with a
103
Hults, The Witch as Muse, 84-85 (my italics).
Hults, The Witch as Muse, 69.
105 Diane Wolfthal, “Women’s Community and Male Spies: Erhard Schön’s How Seven Women Complain
about Their Worthless Husbands,” in Attending to Early Modern Women, ed. Susan Dwyer Amussen and
Adele F. Seeff, Center for Renaissance and Baroque Studies (Newark, NJ: Associated University Presses,
1998), 117–54.
106 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 69.
104
115
woman’s head is typical medieval misogyny, but it also visually connects Eve—and all
her daughters, all womankind—to the serpent and to false speech. Thus, all women—
including Judith—have the capacity for deceptive and dangerous speech. Since Judith is
positioned like a witch in this engraving, the serpentine tongue may reference demonic
incantations or the evil gossip that purportedly spread witchcraft.
Typically, witches are shown practicing their blasphemous craft outdoors (figs.
56-59). Whether they are riding goats backwards or circling around a cauldron, the oftennude witches inhabit spaces beyond proper society and culture.107 The wild women
embrace nature, shedding their clothes and sitting directly on the ground in the forest.
Perhaps the witches are depicted at home in the untamed, natural world because they
were believed capable of manipulating the weather and the crops—generally causing
terrible storms that resulted in poor harvests and famine. Whatever inspired the artists to
place their witches in an outdoor setting, it seems Beham followed suit by situating Judith
on the ground near a grassy hill. For Judith’s narrative, it would be logical to show the
Assyrian camp or Holofernes’s tent and bed in the background; instead, Beham places his
completely nude figures in an outdoor setting.
Regardless of the wicked words they used or the settings they inhabited, early
sixteenth-century witches were often armed with beautiful, voluptuous bodies that cast
their own spells over male viewers. But the witches’ beauty was deceptive; inside they
had rotten souls that the devil owned. Likewise, Judith used her beauty as a disguise for
her murderous intent; she relied on her captivating appearance to deceive Holofernes and
leave him vulnerable to attack. Many early modern men could relate to the overwhelming
appeal of beautiful women, as well as the “helplessness” they felt when exposed to the
107 Ancient Greek women left the confines of the city each year to perform fertility rites. According to
Ancient Greek ideology, women were inherently closer to Nature, and men were inherently closer to
Culture/Society. I wonder if the same ideology applies to witch lore—if, like the Maenads who went wild
for Dionysus in the forest, witches were women who lost themselves to the devil in the forest. This
deserves further exploration.
116
“magic of the female body.”108 Because women’s bodies threatened to bewitch the minds
and bodies of men, all women were “potential sorceresses.”109 But however “dangerous”
the female form, men continued eagerly collecting images of female nudes, including
witch prints. In fact, it was one of Dürer’s witch engravings that “established early on the
trend of using witches as vehicles for erotic representations.”110 The Nuremberg master’s
Four Witches (fig. 62) showcases various angles of the female body, nearly offering its
audience a 360º view of the female nude in a single print. Of course, any real danger of
looking at the female form was absent from prints of fictional nude women; the printed
witch could not cast a spell or turn her evil on the voyeuristic print collector. Thus, the
engraved nudes were pleasing pictures for male viewers that posed no real threat to their
masculinity.
Barthel Beham capitalized on the art market’s demand for images of nude
women. He produced print after print featuring erotic representations of the female nude,
including an engraving after Dürer’s Four Witches. In his Three Women and Death from
about 1525-1527 (fig. 63), Beham copied Dürer’s composition of four women in a circle,
but he altered the figures. Instead of four young beauties, Beham replaced one woman
with a skeletal representation of Death; he transformed the other three female nudes into
representations of the three ages of women: the youngest on the right and the oldest on
the left. Beham’s Three Women and Death is evidence that the younger Nuremberg artist
had access to Dürer’s prints, studied them, and copied elements from the master’s
originals into his compositions. Three Women and Death is not an exact copy after Four
Witches, but it is similar enough that contemporary viewers may have recognized its
source and considered the added layers of meaning such a relationship brought (i.e. the
connection between women of all ages and witches, etc.). It is my belief that the design
of Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes may be similar enough to Dürer’s Witch
Riding Backwards on a Goat that a well-educated, visually literate audience may have
Wunder, “He Is the Sun, She Is the Moon”, 151.
Wunder, “He Is the Sun, She Is the Moon”, 151.
110 Davidson, The Witch in Northern European Art, 18.
108
109
117
recognized Beham’s borrowing from Dürer. And if those perceptive viewers recognized
the reference, then they could associate Beham’s Judith with the dreaded power of
women embodied by witches.
Judith as Venus
Of course, Barthel Beham did not just study Albrecht Dürer’s works, and witches
were not the only seated female nudes he encountered before 1525. It is important to
remember that Beham had access to prints from Italy. In fact, according to Jürgen Müller
and Kerstin Küster, the Beham brothers belonged to the first generation of Northern
European artists who had access to the “achievements of antiquity and the Italian High
enaissance…in more printed examples than just the ancient coins.”111 In addition to
Dürer’s Italian-inspired designs, the Little Masters had “the engravings of their Italian
contemporary, Marcantonio Raimondi, as a basis for learning about the Italian
enaissance.”112 As a matter of fact, Marcantonio’s prints were a sort of “textbook on
aphael, Michelangelo and the antique” for Barthel Beham, Master I.B., and Georg
Pencz.113 But the Little Masters “tended to appropriate isolated figures or general themes
rather than whole compositions or technical traits” from the Italians.114 For example,
Beham borrowed a seated female nude from The Judgment of Paris, a print with over
twenty figures designed by Raphael and executed by Marcantonio (figs. 64-65). The
Nuremberg printmaker transformed a water nymph, who sits to the right of the three
standing goddesses, into A Nude Woman Seated on a Cuirass (fig. 66). The spine of
Beham’s nude is straighter, but she rests her elbow near her knee and turns her head to
Jürgen Müller and Kerstin Küster, “Der Prediger als Pornograf? Konvention und Subversion in der
Bildpoetik Sebald und Barthel Behams,” in Dürers unfolgsame Erben: Bildstrategien in den
Kupferstichend der Deutschen Kleinmeister, ed. Martin Knauer, Studien zur Internationalen Architekturund Kunstgeschichte 101 (Petersberg: Michael Imhof, 2013), 28.
112 Patricia A. Emison, “The Little Masters, Italy, and ome,” in The World in Miniature: Engravings by
the German Little Masters, 1500-1550, 1st ed. (Lawrence: Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas,
1988), 30.
113 Emison, “The Little Masters, Italy, and ome,” 33.
114 Emison, “The Little Masters, Italy, and ome,” 33.
111
118
look at the viewer just as the water nymph does. This is only one strong—and especially
relevant—example of Beham working from Marcantonio’s designs.
Although it may seem strange today, artistic imitation (imitatio artis) was
encouraged in the sixteenth century.115 Artists, such as the Beham brothers, strove to
integrate elements from well-known works into their compositions in a way that did not
“immediately jump off the page and catch the eye.”116 As Müller and Küster explain, “the
ability to keep the references to other works disguised show[ed] the craftsmanship of the
artist or graphic designer.”117 Well-executed imitatio artis maintained a constant balance
between “showing and hiding,” and it assumed “a certain audience”—an audience of
visually literate connoisseurs capable of recognizing the quoted elements.118 But the
imitatio artis method “systematically favored the same art and artists over and over
again”: the Italian masters.119 So, “for the Behams,” write Müller and Küster, “Italian art
was always both a model and the competition.”120 On one hand, the brothers participated
in imitatio artis, using
aphael or Marcantonio’s figures in their prints. On the other
hand, the rebellious Nuremberg printmakers brought their own “decidedly anti-classical”
spin to their creations and used their “depravity-filled minds” to produce works that
“pok[ed] fun at authority” and the classical canon.121 Müller and Küster suggest that the
Behams used Italian sources in an unorthodox manner because the brothers associated the
southern masters with “the Popes and the cultural leadership of the Catholic Church.”122
Janey Levy argues that the Behams chose to imitate their German predecessors and
contemporaries rather than Italian sources in their erotic prints as a reflection of “the
For more on the Behams’ artistic imitation, see Müller and Küster, “Der Prediger als Pornograf?”; and
Janey L. Levy, “The Erotic Engravings of Sebald and Barthel Beham: A German Interpretation of a
enaissance Subject,” in The World in Miniature: Engravings by the German Little Masters, 1500-1550,
1st ed. (Lawrence: Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, 1988), 40–53.
116 Müller and Küster, “Der Prediger als Pornograf?” 29; my translations from the modern German.
117 Müller and Küster, “Der Prediger als Pornograf?” 29.
118 Müller and Küster, “Der Prediger als Pornograf?” 29.
119 Müller and Küster, “Der Prediger als Pornograf?” 29.
120 Müller and Küster, “Der Prediger als Pornograf?” 29.
121 Müller and Küster, “Der Prediger als Pornograf?” 30, 25.
122 Müller and Küster, “Der Prediger als Pornograf?” 30.
115
119
nationalist sentiment that ran through the German enaissance.”123 While it is impossible
to determine what Barthel Beham was thinking when he borrowed from either Italian or
German sources, what is clear is that artistic imitation was a common, international
practice that targeted the type of well-educated, visually literate male viewers who would
have bought and interpreted Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes.
Audiences who were familiar with prints depicting ancient sculpture may have
perceived the position of Beham’s Judith as a reference to the Crouching Venus (fig.
67).124 Like the pagan goddess of love and lust, Judith is nude; she turns her neck to look
over her shoulder; and her prominent thigh is parallel to the ground, which is only a short
distance away from her bare bottom. Although most sixteenth-century Germans never set
eyes on a sculpted crouching Venus, it is quite possible that northern print collectors and
artists either owned or encountered images of the nude deity. They may have acquired
Marcantonio’s engraving of the Crouching Venus (fig. 68), which depicts Venus
accompanied by Cupid. The Italian printmaker’s goddess is outdoors; she leans against a
short pillar and rests her weight on her right foot. Alternatively, German print collectors
and artists may have studied Albrecht Altdorfer’s copy after Marcantonio’s Crouching
Venus (fig. 69). According to Janey Levy, it was Altdorfer’s print that introduced
“images of Venus after her bath...into northern art” in the early 1520s. 125 In the German
master’s version, the goddess appears in reverse: her left thigh is in the foreground and
her head turns to face the right edge of the print. With both Marcantonio’s original and
Altdorfer’s copy circulating in Germany, it is very likely that Beham and his ideal
audience were familiar with the crouching Venus figure.
Whether he worked directly from Marcantonio’s design or Altdorfer’s copy, I am
convinced that Beham imitated the Crouching Venus’ body and head position in his
Levy, “The Erotic Engravings,” 51.
It appears that I am not the first art historian to recognize Venus in the Behams’ images of female
nudes. Janey Levy suggests that the Beham brothers’ depictions of solitary bathing women may “[recall]
Italian depictions of Venus after her bath.” See “The Erotic Engravings,” 47.
125 Levy, “The Erotic Engravings,” 47.
123
124
120
Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes. Consider what Altdorfer’s Venus would look
like if she extended her left arm toward the artists’ monogram: her shoulder would fall
back, her torso would twist, and her breasts would be visible—especially if she used her
right hand to hold a sword. Furthermore, with her left arm and shoulder repositioned,
Venus could turn her head more sharply to the left—as Judith does in Beham’s print. It
seems to me that Beham combined the body and head positions of Crouching Venus with
the extended arms and seated pose of Dürer’s Witch Riding Backwards on a Goat.
I wonder if Beham’s juxtaposition of witch and goddess originated from his study
of Dürer’s Four Witches (fig. 62). If a demon was not peering through the doorway in the
background, it would be easy to identify Dürer’s four nude women as “something other
than witches.”126 For Hults, they may be figures from classical mythology: Venus and the
Three Graces. Hults notes that the central figure “wears a wreath of myrtle, a plant
associated with Venus.”127 Furthermore, the wreath-wearing nude is “viewed from the
back in a pudica pose recalling the Capitoline, Medici, and ultimately the Knidian
Aphrodites.”128 This is a good example of Dürer employing imitatio artis: he borrows a
female nude from classical antiquity, turns her 180º, and hopes his audience will
recognize the reference. Similarly, the Nuremberg master alludes to the Three Graces, a
triad typically depicted dancing in a circle, by arranging his female nudes in a circular
group.129 Dürer set out to impress his well-educated patrons with his technical skill while
also “challeng[ing] them with his subject matter,” intending for his elite viewers “not
only to recognize layers of meaning but also to construct meaning from [his] clues.”130 I
believe that this is precisely the exercise Beham expected from his audience when they
viewed Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes.
126
Davidson, The Witch in Northern European Art, 18.
Hults, The Witch as Muse, 62.
128 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 62.
129 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 62.
130 Hults, The Witch as Muse, 64.
127
121
Undoubtedly, Venus was a popular figure to imitate in sixteenth-century prints.
But were artists simply referencing Venuses to accomplish imitatio artis? Or, since the
goddess of love and lust was almost always represented as a female nude, were they just
copying available models of the female form? Venus was a convenient figure to quote
and a useful exemplar to study at a time when artists rarely drew nude women from life,
but the goddess carried her own strong connotations. For many sixteenth-century
Germans, Venus represented “evil, bestial love,” or carnal love.131 She supposedly
appealed to “the senses and the imagination,” inspiring “debauchery” and instilling lust in
men’s minds.132 Thus, both conceptually and visually, Venus was comparable to other
(sometimes supernaturally) powerful women, including witches and the wily women of
Weibermacht narratives.
Notably, several late medieval and early modern artistic representations pair
Venus with the seductive women in Weibermacht series. This relationship is perhaps best
demonstrated by an illustrated page from an early fifteenth-century German miscellany
(fig. 70). In the lower right corner of the page, Lady Love, or Venus, stands under
Frauenlob’s stanza that lists men duped by women (see chapter 1). A queue of famous
men waits for an audience with the mostly nude Venus—her full-length cloak only serves
to conceal her shoulders. The banderoles separating Venus from her suitors reads:
Alexander, Salomon, Samson and Absalom, Aristotle, and Virgil all
together say thus: No master ever became so wise not to join the train of
fools. I hope I will be successful with my beloved!133
Basically, as Henrike Lähnemann writes, Venus “is causing all this mess.”134 It is Venus’
power over love and lust that aids women in their Weiberlist and in their creation of a
“train of fools.” It is Venus’ power that helps Judith conquer Holofernes. In fact, in the
131
Hults, The Witch as Muse, 65.
Hults, The Witch as Muse, 65.
133 Banderole text found in German Miscellany, early 15th century. Washington, D.C., Library of Congress,
Rosenwald Collection, MS 4, fol. 8r, as translated by Lähnemann in “The Cunning of Judith in Late
Medieval German Texts,” 244.
134 Lähnemann, “The Cunning of Judith,” 245.
132
122
upper right corner diagonally across the page from the standing Venus, the manuscript
illustrator drew Judith holding Holofernes’s head. Here, Lähnemann notes, “Judith
becomes a prop of Venus.”135
nfortunately, no man’s heart is safe against the power of Venus—whether he is
an Assyrian general or a sixteenth-century German man. This concept is graphically
illustrated in Master Caspar of
egensburg’s colored woodcut about 1485 (fig. 71). A
nude, flesh-colored Venus stands at the center of the composition, towering over the
kneeling man to the right. The goddess is surrounded by abused, red hearts—each of
which suffers a different torture. There are hearts pierced by a spear, a sword, and an
arrow; burned in a fire; and sawed in half—just to name a few of the cruelties exacted on
the tender organs. The overarching message is clear: Venus (who usually acts through
women) could manipulate and punish men’s hearts, causing emotional suffering or—as
recounted in Weibermacht narratives—causing men’s demise. Yet, as the German
miscellany illustrates, the men keep lining up for more!
Essentially, Venus embodies the power of women—a power that tramples men’s
hearts, manipulates their bodies and minds, and turns them into fools. As yet another
variety of “powerful woman,” Venus is seamlessly incorporated into images of witches
and Weibermacht—proving again how fluidity and exchange was possible between
Power of Women subcategories.136 It is important that there was a long, lasting history of
Venus-Weibermacht overlap. The German miscellany and its Venus-Judith pairing dates
back to the early fifteenth century, and the trend to match Venus with Weibermacht
women continued well into the sixteenth century. For example, around 1525, Hans
Baldung Grien paired his voluptuous Venus (fig. 50) with both the first woman to employ
Weiberlist, Eve (fig. 49), and one of the most popular Weibermacht recruits, Judith (fig.
13). Both the fifteenth- and sixteenth-century examples linking Venus and Judith suggest
Lähnemann, “The Cunning of Judith,” 245.
Although I do not have a ready example, it would be logical if certain “Battle of the Sexes” imagery
alluded to Venus, too.
135
136
123
that it would not take much of an intellectual leap for audiences to read Beham’s Judith
as a type of Venus.
By positioning Judith like the Crouching Venus, Beham added another layer of
meaning to his print. In fact, the new layer could direct viewers to ignore the meanings
established by the other layers (i.e. the Book of Judith, etc.) in favor of interpretations
that build on an overarching message about the power of women. For example, instead of
being empowered by God to save the Jewish people, Beham’s Judith, who so closely
resembles Venus, could be understood as a woman empowered by the pagan goddess—
just as the page from the German miscellany suggests. Yet, I am skeptical about how
negatively Barthel Beham viewed Venus. In a drawing of Venus with Cupid (fig. 72)
assumed to be more or less contemporaneous with the 1525 Judith, Beham shows the
full-length goddess with large, outstretched, angelic wings. Her countenance is calm,
even ethereal. Is it a coincidence that both Beham’s seated Judith and winged Venus tilt
their heads with downcast eyes toward the right, extend their left arms toward the right,
and share the same plush body type? The young artist’s own body of work reveals his
interest in Venus and supplies evidence that he may have had Venus in mind when he
designed Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes.
Beham’s winged Venus with Cupid is the only readily identifiable image of the
goddess that he created, but I propose that he also intended for A Nude Woman Seated on
a Cuirass to represent Venus (fig. 66). I wonder if Beham created his Nude Woman after
studying Marcantonio’s Judgment of Paris and Crouching Venus. While Nude Woman is
most assuredly taken from the Judgment of Paris print—the reuse of the exposed back,
confrontational gaze, and arm-to-knee position is indisputable, it would be easy for
Beham to think of the Crouching Venus when he saw another similarly positioned female
nude. By adding Venus iconography to his borrowed water nymph, Beham transformed
his classical (albeit less muscular) nude into a goddess.
124
Because Beham’s nude woman is not accompanied by Cupid, other scholars have
not interpreted her as Venus. But Beham’s seated nude holds a double-sided convex
mirror—a symbol of vanity or beauty often associated with the goddess of love (see fig.
73), and she sits on a man’s armor—an attribute, I propose, signifies her affair with Mars,
the god of war.137 When Venus is not crouching or bathing in sixteenth-century prints,
she is often shown in intimate proximity to Mars. Sometimes the martial deity is covered
in head-to-toe armor (fig. 74), but other times he is as nude as Venus, having already
shed his protective attire for more pleasurable activities (fig. 75). In Marcantonio’s Mars,
Venus, and Cupid, Mars’ discarded cuirass, shield, and battle ax lay at his feet. In
Parmigianino’s illicit print Venus and Mars near Vulcan at his Forge (fig. 76), the cuirass
of the god of war rests on a helmet in the foreground while Mars has sex with Venus in
the background. I cannot say for sure if Beham had access to these images of the gods,
but there was certainly a contemporary iconographic link between Venus and the cuirass
through her relationship with Mars.
By seating his nude Venus atop Mars’s discarded cuirass, Beham alludes to the
symbolism of Venus and Mars’ coupling: Love (or Lust) conquers War. This theme is, in
my opinion, best illustrated in Sandro Botticelli’s Venus and Mars (fig. 77). In the Italian
master’s painting, the nearly-nude Mars reclines in a post-coital slumber as baby satyrs
play with his forgotten armor—his cuirass is tucked under his crooked arm. Venus
watches her dead-tired lover sleep. It is cheeky of Beham to depict Venus admiring her
beauty in a mirror from atop Mars’ cuirass—for it was her beauty that disarmed him! It is
as if Beham is purposely displaying the seductive body that conquered war and asking,
“Do you blame Mars for succumbing to her charms?” What man would not remove his
armor at the promise of love-making with that woman?
Levy, “The Erotic Engravings,” 47; according to Levy, the Beham brothers’ inclusion of mirrors in
images of nude women bathing “may be an allusion to Venus.” Even though the mirror “was not usually
part of the conventions for depicting Venus after her bath, it was a familiar attribute of Venus in other
contexts.” For Levy, this was the type of “visual quotations that the Behams expected their audience to
recognize and appreciate.”
137
125
Within Beham’s own oeuvre, A Nude Woman Seated on a Cuirass is the closest
figural and thematic match to Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes. Since Beham did
not include the year of its creation on Nude Woman, I cannot say if she pre- or post-dates
the 1525 Judith. But I would like to argue that Beham could have been thinking of Love
and War when he chose to place Judith atop Holofernes. Like Venus, the beautiful widow
used her appearance to seduce and topple a man of war—here, she literally has him on
his back. Holofernes’s bare torso lies on the ground like the cuirass and his head rests in
the same lower, right corner as the helmet in Nude Woman. Instead of resting her bottom
on sculpted metal, Judith sits on the bare, muscular chest of her slain lover-enemy. The
general’s armor is missing in Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, but Holofernes’s
cuirass was sometimes depicted near his headless body (fig. 78)—perhaps linking the
Assyrian general with the god of war in Beham’s mind. If an observant viewer associated
Judith with the Crouching Venus—or even Beham’s seated Venus—then it is possible
that he, too, would associate Holofernes with the seduced and sexually exhausted Mars.
Clearly, this is not an obvious interpretation of the Judith print—or an interpretation that
the print readily presents. There is no cuirass and, as far as I can tell, Beham was the first
artist to sit Venus atop Mars’ armor. Because crucial iconography is missing and the
artist employs a unique position, it would have been difficult for the majority of viewers
to decode. Nevertheless, I find Beham’s clever use of figures and thoughtful intra-oeuvre
reference amusing and revealing—both about the potential meanings of Judith and the
caliber of mind that Beham may have possessed. In my opinion, if a viewer caught the
allusion, he would find that the Venus-Judith reference enriched the image and added to
his enjoyment of the ambiguous piece.
Sex Positions and Censorship
In addition to powerful women, the late medieval and early modern “Battle of the
Sexes,” Weibermacht, witches, and Venus themes have something else in common: sex.
As a matter of fact, sex is at the heart of each Power of Women subcategory that Beham
126
may have incorporated into his Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes. Phyllis offers
Aristotle sexual gratification in exchange for letting her ride him around the garden.
Witches conjure away men’s sex organs—or at least their ability to perform. Venus
piques men’s sexual interest and has a torrid affair with Mars. Even Judith’s own
narrative depends upon her sex appeal—and, remember, Holofernes fully intends to have
sex with the alluring widow after dinner! It seems to me that sex, as much as the power of
women, unites Beham’s various visual references; therefore, I propose that the young
artist may have chosen to imitate works that encouraged his viewers to read Judith’s
provocative position as a reference to sex.
It is possible that Beham’s visually literate audience recognized Judith as an
iconographical descendant of a lusty female satyr from an ancient Roman sarcophagus
(fig. 79). On the far left side of a relief depicting scenes from a bacchanalia, a satyress
with hairy goat legs readies herself to take a satyr-herm’s stone penis (fig. 80). The seminude female figure steadies herself by extending her right arm and grasping the satyrherm’s horns. By reaching for her inanimate partner’s head, the female satyr’s torso
twists to reveal both of her breasts—although her head remains in profile. Since the
satyress’ right leg is elevated to better align her genitals with that of her stoic paramour,
the female figure’s leg is parallel with the ground. By now, each of these elements is a
familiar characteristic of Beham’s Judith.
Of course, I am not suggesting that Beham or his audience had ready access to the
original sculpture. Like the Roman Crouching Venus, the sarcophagus frieze was the
subject of sixteenth-century Italian prints. Sometime between 1510 and 1520,
Marcantonio created an engraving after
aphael’s drawing of the debaucherous
mythological festivities (figs. 81-82). In Marcantonio’s print the scene is reversed: the
satyress’ left leg is prominently raised and her left arm is extended. Notice also how the
face of Marcantonio’s female satyr matches that of Beham’s Judith: both female nudes
gaze downward.
127
But missing from Marcantonio’s engraving—yet present in the original
sculpture—is the satyr-herm’s penis. Either Marcantonio removed the herm’s shaft or
Raphael censored his original drawing before giving it to the famed printmaker. For me,
it does not matter who castrated the statue; instead, I am more interested in how that
mutilated male figure may have influenced Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes. In my opinion Beham’s decapitated Holofernes could be the satyr-herm’s
twin: both male figures have curly, dark hair and beards, large noses with pronounced
nostrils, and—from what is visible in each print—muscular torsos. Furthermore, like the
satyr-herm’s shaft, Holofernes’s penis is not depicted. Or is it? In Marcantonio’s print
the satyress uses her right hand to reach between her legs for the statue’s missing
manhood. In Beham's print Judith firmly grasps Holofernes’s sword with her right hand.
Because the position of Judith’s right thigh is unclear, it is impossible to determine
whether the sword stands suggestively between her knees. Nevertheless, I am convinced
that Beham’s clever audience would recognize his jocular symbolism: Holofernes’s penis
is not missing after all—Judith is holding it.
Although Beham’s Judith and Holofernes are positioned very similarly to
Marcantonio’s satyress and satyr-herm, it is important to note that Judith sits whereas the
satyress stands. It is possible, of course, that Beham rotated the bodies without the benefit
of a source depicting the exact position of his figures. But around the time that the
Nuremberg printmaker designed his Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, an Italian
print featuring a crouching female nude above a reclining male nude circulated in Europe.
In my opinion Position 14 (fig. 83) from I Modi (The Positions), a series of sixteen prints
depicting sex positions, may have inspired Beham’s suggestive placement of Judith.
Position 14, which imitates the
oman sarcophagus’ satyr-herm and satyress, depicts a
man and woman copulating on a cart pulled by a winged cupid.138 The female figure
ichard Aste, “Giulio omano as Designer of Erotica: I Modi, 1524-1525,” in Giulio Romano, Master
Designer: An Exhibition of Drawings in Celebration of the Five Hundredth Anniversary of His Birth, ed.
Janet Cox-Rearick (New York: The Bertha and Karl Leubsdorf Art Gallery / Hunter College of the City
University of New York, 1999), 47. Position 14 is not the only sarcophagus-inspired coupling featured in I
138
128
crouches backwards over her lover as he supports his body in what is known as the “crab
position” today. The man’s arms are bent under the weight of the woman on top of him.
His muscular torso is parallel to the ground, as is the female figure’s prominent left thigh.
The woman extends her left arm behind her back, twisting her torso to reveal her bare
breasts. Instead of grasping with her lover’s head, her fist hovers above his tousled hair
and well-kempt beard. She seems to hold some sort of garment or strap in her left hand.
As in the previous print this woman’s head remains in profile and she gazes downward
with her eye in shadows. Fortunately for this lascivious female figure, her partner’s shaft
is still attached. She boldly reaches between her legs to position his penis where she
wants it. To the best of my knowledge, this is the only early sixteenth-century image of a
nude man on his back with a crouching nude woman above him—other than Judith
Seated on the Body of Holofernes. But the series of illicit—and sometimes downright
acrobatic—sex positions is not documented in Germany. Could Barthel Beham have seen
the erotic prints?
According to Bette Talvacchia, the veritable expert on all things I Modi, Giulio
omano gave Marcantonio
left
aimondi sixteen drawings of “erotic embraces” before he
ome to work in Mantua at Federico Gonzaga’s court.139 Since it probably took
Marcantonio a few months to produce the “sixteen finely worked plates” after omano’s
drawings, Talvacchia suggests that the first appearance of I Modi “might have occurred
early in 1525”—though 1524 has also been suggested as the original date of
publication.140 Either way, it is chronologically possible that Beham could have seen
Position 14 before creating his engraving.
nfortunately, the explicit prints, “each of
which displayed a heterosexual couple engaged in the sexual act,” provoked the wrath of
the Catholic Church.141 Pope Clement VII confiscated and destroyed as many copies of I
Modi. “The Naples sarcophagus was a source of formal quotations and allusions” for Giulio omano’s
preparatory I Modi drawings, writes Aste.
139 Bette Talvacchia, Taking Positions: On the Erotic in Renaissance Culture (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1999), 84, 4.
140 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 4; Levy, “The Erotic Engravings,” 42.
141 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 4.
129
Modi as he could root out.142 As Landau and Parshall write, “It is a tribute to the
efficiency of the Pope’s power of suppression that the Modi were more or less stamped
out of
ome.”143 Additionally, the Pope had Marcantonio imprisoned for several
months.144 Luckily, the Italian printmaker had friends in high places. In his Vita of
Marcantonio, Vasari describes how “Cardinal de’ Medici and Baccio Bandinelli, who
served the Pope in
ome,” were able to “rescue” the jailed artist. 145 Yet, despite the
large-scale destruction of the licentious prints, “it is clear that many sets of I Modi in
various forms and versions found their clandestine way around Europe.”146
For several reasons I believe Barthel Beham would have either seen the original I
Modi or a hastily-made copy after them. First, because Nuremberg traded with Venice,
there was a well-documented pathway for and tradition of bringing the most popular
Italian prints—a category to which I Modi certainly belonged—north to Germany.
Second, as Levy demonstrates, erotic images appealed to the same audiences in Germany
as they did in Italy: affluent, well-educated, visually literate humanists, patricians, and
clergymen.147 For example, in 1516, Cardinal Bibbiena commissioned painters—perhaps
Giulio Romano—to paint Raphael-designed sexually explicit frescoes in his bathroom.
Similarly, around 1532, Albrecht Altdorfer “painted murals depicting men and women
bathing together on the walls of the so-called Caesar’s Bath in the bishop’s residence at
egensburg.”148 It is thus logical to assume that German collectors, like their southern
counterparts, desired and did everything in their power to procure copies of I Modi.
Third, erotic art was extremely popular in Europe during the early modern period.149
From as early as the 1460s, “every printmaking center across Europe” produced and
142
Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 298; Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 4
Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 298.
144 Levy, “The Erotic Engravings,” 42.
145 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 6.
146 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 4.
147 Levy, “The Erotic Engravings,” 41.
148 Levy, “The Erotic Engravings,” 41.
149 Miriam Hall Kirch, “Looking into Night: An Erotic Engraving by Sebald Beham in Context” (M.A.
thesis, The University of Texas at Austin, 1998), 36.
143
130
copied erotic works. And, as Landau and Parshall write, “there is hardly [an erotic
engraving] by an Italian artist that was not mimicked somewhere in Germany or the
Netherlands, and vice versa, within a few years from the date of its production.”150 I
cannot believe that the most highly sought-after, blatantly erotic images from the first
quarter of the sixteenth century were not available somewhere in Nuremberg. And,
finally, considering the content of their oeuvres, I am convinced that the Beham brothers
would have been particularly interested in studying Marcantonio’s I Modi.
Barthel Beham’s body of work clearly demonstrates his interest in erotic imagery,
especially profane, sensual depictions of female nudes. As Lisa Kirch points out, both
Barthel and Sebald “took special care in composing figures so that their genitalia would
be most prominently displayed.”151 For example, in his Death and the Sleeping Woman
(fig. 84), Barthel unreservedly splays his sleeping nude’s legs. By parting her thighs, the
artist gives his audience a clear view of her vulva—a better view than he grants the
voyeuristic Death. Similarly, he positions his Bathing Nude (fig. 85) with her vulva on
display. Oblivious to the viewer’s gaze, she looks at herself in a convex mirror and
unconsciously raises her leg—a pose that reveals her hairless genitalia to the hungry eyes
of male print collectors. Both as an artist who specialized in erotic prints and as a man
who enjoyed viewing wanton female nudes, Barthel Beham would have been a prime
candidate to seek out the infamous I Modi prints. He may have owned copies,
encountered them in the collections of a patron, or heard about them from travelers or
merchants. Ultimately, where there is a will, there is a way—and I think Beham would
have desperately wanted to study those prints.
So if erotic art was popular and widely copied throughout Europe, why were
Marcantonio and his I Modi dealt with so harshly? It seems that the authorities were
particularly offended by “the explicit portrayal of sexual activity.”152 Instead of
150
Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 298.
Kirch, “Looking into Night,” 52.
152 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 298.
151
131
“cloaking” the sixteen couples in mythology, identifying each pair as a god or goddess
and his or her consort, Romano’s drawings harkened back to a more blatantly sexual
antique tradition featuring unidentified lovers.153 Unfortunately for Marcantonio, during
the
enaissance the accepted practice was to “[present] scenes of sexual dalliances as
exploits of the pagan gods” because the thin mythological veneer “deflect[ed] accusations
of impropriety.”154 By publishing works without the “sanctioning cover of high culture,”
the Modi had no iconography to “cushion its reception.”155
Considering how forcefully the Catholic Church attacked Marcantonio and his I
Modi, as Landau and Parshall note, “one might assume it would not have been prudent to
issue a similar set [of erotic prints] straight away.”156 But the demand for explicit
imagery was too profitable for artists to resist, so in 1527, Jacopo Caraglio created prints
after
osso Fiorentino and Perino del Vaga’s erotic drawings of the Loves of the Gods.
The artists “toned down” the sexual display with clever folds of drapery, “slung legs,”
and “less detailed descriptions of conjugal gymnastics”—they even added a few “mildly
allusive verses” about the gods to some of the plates.157 Apparently, their modifications
made the erotic images acceptable since the censors did not destroy them. In fact, the
Loves of the Gods became “one of the most successful series in the
enaissance” and
survives in as many as five different sets of copies.158 The remains of I Modi are, by
contrast, as Talvacchia puts it, “stunningly scarce”: at least two engravings of Position 1,
the least profane position; a woodcut of Position 2; and a set of nine censored fragments
survive.159 Talvacchia explains:
Our present knowledge of the sequence of I Modi rests on woodcuts
printed in a sixteenth-century book...These prints copied the engravings
(or some version of them) without much finesse, purely to render a hot
153
Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 46, 49-50.
Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 4.
155 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 49-50.
156 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 298.
157 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 298.
158 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 298.
159 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 5.
154
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property in a commercially viable way that paid no attention to quality,
detail, or refinement of style.160
It is likely that the more liberal printing presses in Venice published the sub-par woodcut
copies about 1527 (for example, fig. 83). Still, Pope Clement VII was doubtless not the
only person in the last five hundred years who wished to eradicate the erotic prints.
During the early part of the
enaissance, censorship was “so mixed and
inconsistent as to defy summary.”161 Because the different regions, courts, and city
councils determined what was acceptable to print—and their enforcement of those rules
varied in efficiency, enaissance censors could “severely [limit] freedom of expression”
or allow “openness” and novelty.162 In Nuremberg in the mid-1520s, the rise of political
and religious unrest—accompanied by increased pamphleteering—“led to further
impositions of official censorship.”163 For example, in 1524, the Diet of Nuremberg
“granted municipal authorities the right to search printing shops and confiscate banned
material.”164 The “conservative and often paternalistic leadership” in Nuremberg had
“long assumed the right to control any form of public activity in the city,” but it was not
until the religious uprisings and after the Peasants’ War in 1525 that the city council
exercised control over publications.165 Of course, it is difficult to determine the efficiency
of the increased censorship. One later, but particularly relevant, example of the
Nuremberg council’s censorship in action involves the Nuremberg publisher Hans
Guldenmund. Apparently, in 1535, the council discovered that Guldenmund had, as the
council described it, “a most shameful and sinful little book, containing many obscene
pictures of unconventional lovemaking.”166 The printer confessed to having nine copies
of the book in his possession but claimed that he did not intend to keep them. According
to Guldenmund, the Augsburg woodblock cutter Hans Schwarzenberger had given them
160
Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 5.
Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 74.
162 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 74.
163 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 225
164 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 225
165 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 225.
166 Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 225.
161
133
to him on consignment to sell in Frankfurt, although he “disposed of them later in
Leipzig.”167 Although the Nuremberg council expressed its concern that “lustful images
alone can provoke great scandal and incite the young to sinful vices,” according to
Landau and Parshall, their desire to eliminate such imagery and the low survival rate of
erotic prints “says nothing certain about the availability of such prints at the time.”168
What this information about Nuremberg’s censorship does suggest is that Barthel Beham
may have had good reason to cloak his reference to a sex position in the guise of Judith
slaying Holofernes.
Of all the sex positions that Beham could have referenced in his engraving, he
daringly chose to imitate the most “unnatural” and “immoral” of them all: woman on top.
During the Middle Ages and
enaissance, religious authorities harshly condemned “a
range of sexual postures [that] fell within the canonic definition of ‘contrary to nature’ or
‘unnatural.’”169 According to Pierre Payer, there were “two dimensions to this natural
way”: form and position.170 The natural form required vaginal intercourse; the natural
position dictated that the woman lie on her back with the man lying over her—the
standard “missionary position.”171 In fact, the Church forbade all sex positions except
missionary position, “[the formation] considered best for impregnation.”172 It was
because all other positions were “liable to frustrate [procreation], the only redeeming
justification for unsinful coitus,” that they were banned.173 Yet even among the abhorrent
positions, some were considered more offensive than others. The thirteenth-century
theologian Albert the Great ranked five categories of positions by escalating sinfulness:
missionary position, lying laterally beside one another, sitting, standing, and, finally,
167
Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 225.
Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, 225.
169 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 115.
170 Pierre J. Payer, The Bridling of Desire: Views of Sex in the Later Middle Ages (Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1993), 76.
171 Payer, The Bridling of Desire, 76.
172 Patricia Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe: A Cultural History, Cambridge Social and
Cultural Histories (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 198.
173 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 117, 115.
168
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copulating like animals with the man entering from behind.174 But sometimes woman on
top was included as a sixth forbidden sex position; when mentioned, it was deemed
“worse than all but coitus from behind.”175
In addition to potentially deterring pregnancy, the woman on top position was
considered to be intensely pleasurable—a problem for medieval and early modern
religious authorities who “defin[ed] sexual desire under any circumstances as a
manifestation of lust, one of the seven deadly sins.”176 The Church was so obsessively
concerned about sexual sin that it trained confessors to ask married penitents about their
coital positions—for even spouses were forbidden from “having sex in an illicit
manner.”177 Truly, Marcantonio’s I Modi—as well as Beham’s Judith Seated on the Body
of Holofernes—were produced “in a culture with a far-reaching system of religious
values that viewed sexuality as an arena for committing major sins.”178 It is really no
wonder, then, that Pope Clement VII reacted so vehemently against the Modi. The erotic
prints not only “represent[ed] a state of sin,” but they almost certainly caused viewers to
have sinful thoughts and probably led some devil-may-care couples to attempt the wicked
positions.
Although woman on top was supposedly bad for procreation and worse for the
purity of one’s soul, what was particularly unsettling about the position, which was
referred to as “the horse” in Greco-Roman societies, was its symbolic subordination of
men.179 Talvacchia explains:
Throughout all eras, the reversal of the symbolic positions of domination
and subordination assumed by the woman on top with man beneath was
feared as a literal overturning of the social order and stability.180
174
Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 120.
Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 120.
176 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 122, 117.
177 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 119, 115.
178 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 115.
179 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 44.
180 Talvacchia, Taking Positions, 122.
175
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Again, I question if the prospect of pleasurable fornication actually struck “fear” in the
hearts of men. Nevertheless, it is logical that fascination with and concern about
dominant women would extend to coital positions. After all, in most sixteenth-century
Power of Women images, the source of women’s power is sex. For example, cunning
women use their sexually appealing bodies to manipulate men into doing their bidding.
And, with the promise of sex, women make men vulnerable to humiliation or attack. Still,
it is interesting to this modern feminist that sixteenth-century men persistently villainized
women’s use of sex. Armed with sex women manipulate, humiliate, and destroy their
male adversaries—as if, when empowered, a woman’s only desire is to attack men. Of
course, in reality, without the benefit of brute force, forged steel, or a voice on any
governing council, medieval and early modern woman had little more than their bodies to
leverage to effect change—and even that could be taken by force. By producing images
of female dominance that were inevitably met with derision, male artists in patriarchal
Germany helped neutralize the disconcerting power of female sexuality: laughing at
improper women and the weak-willed men who fell at their feet preserved the idea that
the power of women was absurd.
Keeping in mind that the “horse position” was frowned upon for its subordination
of the male partner and that the power of women was something a man might find
humorous, it is useful to revisit sixteenth-century Phyllis riding Aristotle imagery. Recall,
for instance, how Phyllis used Aristotle’s lust for her to transform him into her willing
horse. Although the narrative and corresponding imagery uniformly show the foolish
philosopher down on his hands and knees with the beautiful courtesan perched on his
back (figs. 38-39), in my opinion, it would have been very easy for sixteenth-century
men, who were accustomed to word play and bawdy metaphors, to think of the horse sex
position. Since his figures are nude, this may have been the not-so-subtle meaning of
Hans Baldung Grien’s Phyllis Riding Aristotle (fig. 40). Furthermore, the symbolic effect
would remain the same regardless of exactly how intimately Phyllis rode Aristotle. Either
way, the philosopher assumed a subordinate position under a dominate woman. This
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“new” interpretation heightens the eroticism of Judith’s position on top of Holofernes:
one could say that she’s “riding”—or rode—the general like a horse.
It is logical to conclude that Barthel Beham hid the woman on top position in Old
Testament Apocrypha to get it through the censors and into the hands of collectors under
the noses of religious authorities. But I wonder if he also positioned Judith atop
Holofernes as a wonderfully clever joke. Remember, before sixteenth-century artists
corrupted her, Judith was depicted as a prefiguration of the Virgin Mary or a
personification of multiple virtues. Thus, by showing the pious and chaste widow in a
compromising position, Beham cheekily questions the legitimacy of Judith’s claim that
“it was my face that seduced [Holofernes] to his destruction, and that he committed no
sin with me, to defile and shame me.”181 Perhaps Beham and his patrons found Judith
Seated on the Body of Holofernes to be a more believable portrayal of Judith’s success—
and an exponentially more amusing and arousing one, too. Additionally, by imitating
either the highly desired Modi or the satyress with the satyr-herm from the Roman
sarcophagus, Beham not only demonstrated his wit but also his craftsmanship and ability
to compete on the art market.
The bottom line is that seeing Judith’s nude posterior pressed against
Holofernes’s nude torso probably triggered sexual associations in the minds of the men
viewing the print—and not just the minds of elite viewers either. The equation was
simple enough for the least intellectual men to understand: a naked woman plus a naked
man equals sex. No erudite explanations required for immediate enjoyment! Yet, Beham
does not depict nameless figures. His Judith and Holofernes are identifiable characters, a
widow and a warrior, involved in a battle for a besieged city. Taking into consideration
that most sixteenth-century Germans would have been familiar with the metaphors that
compared sexual intercourse to jousting, battling, and conquering a castle, I propose that
Beham wanted his viewers to think of the two nudes as participants in a “nocturnal
181
Judith 13: 15-16 NRSV.
137
battle”—the most intimate “battle of the sexes.”182 Furthermore, since men were often
described as wielding phallic weaponry during their sexual battles, my interpretation of
Holofernes’s sword as his symbolic penis falls in line with the prevalent and violent
metaphors.183 Here, both literally and figuratively, the cunning widow has used the
warrior’s weapon against him. But it is important to note that Beham does not actually
show the sex act. In fact, Judith’s vagina is nowhere near Holofernes’s groin.
Instead, I propose that the print may actually depict a post-coital scene similar to
the one presented in Botticelli’s Venus and Mars. Notice, for instance, that Holofernes’s
face shows no signs of distress or struggle. He looks peaceful. His eyes are closed and the
muscles in his face are relaxed as if he were asleep. True, his head is separated from his
torso, but it is not far from his body or hanging from Judith’s hand. One might imagine
that this is the face of a man exhausted, yet satisfied, from having sex in the “crab
position”—a posture that certainly requires considerable strength and exertion. The
knowing male viewer might also recognize the sleeping Holofernes’s exhaustion as a
result of recent ejaculation, not just a difficult pose. After all, according to Aristotle, “the
sequel to sexual intercourse is exhaustion and weakness rather than relief.” 184 The
orgasm, which “was envisaged as a male phenomenon,” brought about “fundamental
loss” and weakness.185 Importantly, in some ancient medical and theological treatises
sexual exhaustion was compared to death. For example, the Pseudo-Aristotelian
Problems (4.1) “note[s] a similarity between sexual intercourse and death, for eyes were
cast upwards in each event as though following the direction of expiring heat.”186 In the
same vein, Tertullian, the third-century Christian apologist, wrote: “...in the last breaking
wave of delight, do we not feel something of our soul go out from us?”187 Following their
libidinous battles, men were described as “killed,” “finished off,” and “spent as though
182
Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 112, 115.
Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 113.
184 Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 168.
185 Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 168.
186 Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 168.
187 Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 168.
183
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dead.”188 Here, in his clever way, Barthel Beham alludes to la petite mort, “the little
death” of orgasmic release, by staging Holofernes’s literal death in a woman-on-top sex
position—an enjoyable position that presumably resulted in a death-like, post-coital
languor.189
Conclusion
It is impossible to determine the exact sources Barthel Beham studied prior to his
creation of Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes in 1525. Without an inventory of
Beham’s print collection or any documentation describing the works he encountered, I
admit that my interpretations are speculative. Nevertheless, in this chapter, I have
presented a combination of historical evidence and visual analysis to suggest three
potential sources for Judith’s provocative position: witches, Venus, and sex positions.
Each of the three potential sources was published before or during 1525 and circulated
widely, both north and south of the Alps. Each also depicts a female nude in a “seated”
position. Personally, I am inclined to believe that Beham intentionally imitated powerful
female figures from German and Italian sources to produce a visually and symbolically
rich print for the amusement of his intellectual audience.
But even if Beham never saw the works discussed in this chapter and never
intended for viewers to associate Judith with witches, Venus, sex positions, or Phyllis, for
that matter, I believe visually literate, well-educated male print collectors could have read
those references into Beham’s engraving on their own. They were familiar with the
concept of imitatio artis, and thus, they were on the lookout for references to well-known
works. Those ideal audiences were also familiar with witty wordplay and bawdy
metaphors, and they were always ready to demonstrate their intellectual prowess by
decoding multivalent imagery. Spotting—or imagining—disguised quotations from
ancient or contemporary sources was part of the game of viewing.
188
189
Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 168.
Simons, The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe, 168.
139
For the sixteenth-century German men who read Judith Seated on the Body of
Holofernes as I have, the overarching message was a pointed one about the power of
women to captivate and conquer their male adversaries, a power inextricably linked with
sex. It seems to me that the 1525 engraving may showcase both the painful and the
pleasurable aspects of being topped by a woman. On one hand, from witches to
goddesses, wives to Weibermacht, women were capable of destroying men through
humiliation, impotency, or death. On the other hand, those same women were also able to
arouse and seduce them. For example, Judith literally kills Holofernes by beheading him,
but Beham symbolically suggests through her provocative pose that Judith also gives
Holofernes la petite mort. Early modern print collectors would have both recognized and
appreciated such loaded double entendres. By embracing the changing art market and
providing explicit, yet clever, secular designs, Barthel Beham became a successful
printmaker during a period when many artists simply could not keep up with the times.
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~ Conclusion ~
Why did Barthel Beham seat Judith atop Holofernes? This question has been the
guiding force behind my hermeneutical exploration of Beham’s 1525 engraving. Yet after
three long chapters of research and analysis, it is impossible for me to provide a single,
definite answer. Instead, what my thesis demonstrates is that the young Nuremberg
printmaker probably intended for his puzzling and erotic image to inspire multiple
interpretations. In efforts to better understand Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, I
approached the print with three different questions, each of which establishes the
foundation of a chapter in this thesis. First, how might a sixteenth-century German
audience interpret the relationship between Beham’s Judith and Holofernes? Second,
what type of Judith is Beham’s voluptuous widow? And, third, what is the meaning of
Judith’s provocative position? As I worked through each of these queries by
contextualizing the print and its artist and looking closely at contemporary works of art, I
may not have provided comprehensive answers to every question raised, but my thesis
provides new insights into how a well-educated, visually literate sixteenth-century
German man may have engaged with and read the tiny printed image.
By stripping away most of the narrative elements associated with the Book of
Judith, Barthel Beham produced a representation of Judith and Holofernes depicting a
relationship between a man and a woman. But what did it mean to be a man or a woman
in early modern Germany? In order to begin to comprehend the meanings a contemporary
viewer may have drawn from Beham’s print, one must first appreciate the complexity of
sixteenth-century German gender roles—including both the ideal and “lived” versions of
masculinity and femininity. Understanding that gender roles and relationships were
complicated and fluid led me to suggest that scholars should nuance the way they read
Weibermacht (Power of Women) imagery. Like gender dynamics, the Power of Women
theme is too complex to reduce to a single, straightforward meaning: it could be didactic,
141
humorous, or erotic—sometimes simultaneously. Yet, in a patriarchal society like early
modern Germany, it was unlikely that men truly feared women; thus, I proposed that the
popularity of Weibermacht narratives and images most likely stemmed from their ability
to entertain viewers—either with laughter or arousal.
Exploring contemporary gender discourses and reevaluating the Weibermacht
imagery in chapter 1 was crucial because I went on in chapter 2 to argue that Judith
Seated on the Body of Holofernes is a Weibermacht print. Like women living in
sixteenth-century Germany, Judith could represent ideal femininity or the destructive
power of female cunning and sexuality.
nfortunately for Beham’s Judith, she is neither
a personification of virtues nor a symbol of righteousness toppling tyranny. Instead, she
is best categorized as a Femme Fatale or a Weibermacht figure. With that designation
comes a level of villainization that encourages viewers to laugh at Holofernes and the
absurdity of women’s power while allowing artists the opportunity to eroticize Judith and
arouse audiences. Moreover, the nudity of Beham’s Judith suggests that the 1525 print
was intended for male viewers’ enjoyment, not the moral edification of women or the
rallying of people for a specific cause. True, men of any intellectual level could
appreciate Judith’s nude beauty, but I proposed that Beham’s target audience consisted of
affluent, well-educated, well-traveled humanists, patricians, merchants, and artists. The
ideal type of men that Beham wanted to decode his multivalent image would have
appreciated his clever allusions and jocular metaphors—whether they viewed the image
privately or in groups.
I made my first foray into unraveling Beham’s layers of meaning in chapter 2 by
comparing Judith to Phyllis riding Aristotle, but it was in chapter 3 that I more fully
explored the potential sources for the Nuremberg printmaker’s design. Some might be
discouraged by the dearth of biographical information about Barthel Beham, but the
details of his personal life were of little consequence to me. Broadly speaking he was a
young artist working in the shadow of Albrecht Dürer during the heat of the Reformation
when the art market’s demands changed and during the international artistic exchange of
142
the Renaissance when Italian sources traveled north to Nuremberg. Rather than
interpreting Beham’s work from the perspective of his limited biography, it was more
productive for me to study his oeuvre for clues about his interests and sources of
inspiration. Beham and the other Little Masters learned their craft by studying the works
of Dürer and Italian masters, such as Raphael, Michelangelo, and Marcantonio Raimondi.
When they produced their own works, many of them imitated figures or compositions
from the famous masters’ designs. By trying to pinpoint the source or sources that Beham
referenced in his Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, I hoped to determine the
hidden message behind Judith’s provocative position. What I discovered were three
different types of potential iconographic sources for the nude seated Judith: witches,
Venus, and sex positions.
Although it is impossible to know exactly which prints Beham studied prior to or
during 1525, after analyzing his Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes alongside other
sixteenth-century prints, I am inclined to believe that he knew Hans Baldung Grien’s
Phyllis Riding Aristotle, Dürer’s Witch Riding Backwards on a Goat, Marcantonio’s
Crouching Venus (either the Italian print or Albrecht Altdorfer’s copy), and Position 14
from Marcantonio’s I Modi. Each of the potential sources speaks to the power of
women—a power linked to their sexuality and to sex. By integrating multiple types of
powerful women into his Judith and Holofernes composition, Beham enriched the
meaning of the relationship between his male and female figures. It seems to me that he
has provided a witty visual commentary on the pains and pleasures associated with being
topped by a woman—and that he laughingly questioned the lengths to which Judith went
to achieve success!
Sixteenth-century German men may have had anxieties about their performance
as masters of their households or lovers in their beds, but overall, I am unconvinced that
they feared women or the fairer sex’s ability to overthrow the patriarchy. Instead, the
Power of Women was a ridiculous and provocative theme that artists profited from and
male print collectors enjoyed. Barthel Beham capitalized on the popularity of Power of
143
Women imagery and the increasing demand for erotic art in his Judith Seated on the
Body of Holofernes, producing an amusing and enticing “puzzle” for the erudite patrons
he wished to attract and challenge with his work.
144
~ Figures ~
Figure 1: Judith Beheading Holofernes, Latin Bible, Salzburg, c. 1428-1430. Munich,
Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Cod. Lat. 15701, fol. 174v.
Figure 2: Guyart Desmoulins, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes, Bible
Historiale, France, end of 14th century. Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS. Bodl. 971, fol.
202v.
145
Figure 3: Jacopo de’ Barbari, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Italy, c. 1498.
Engraving, 185 x 123 mm. London, British Museum.
Figure 4: Judith, Midas-Objekt, Naples, c. 1350-1360. Berlin, Staatliche Museen zu
Berlin, Kupferstichkabinett, 78 E 3, fol. 183r.
Figure 5: Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Speculum Humanae Salvationis (Mirror of
Human Salvation), Germany, c. 1473. Woodcut, fol. 164v.
146
Figure 6: Attributed to Bartolomeo Bellano or workshop, Judith with the Head of
Holofernes, Padua, c. 1500. Bronze, 8.4 cm. Formerly Berlin, Kaiser-Friedrich Museum.
Figure 7: Nicoletto da Modena, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Italy, c. 1500.
Engraving, 92 x 58 mm.
Figure 8: Michelangelo Buonarroti, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes,
Rome, 1508-1512. Fresco. Rome, Sistine Chapel.
147
Figure 9: Donatello, Judith and Holofernes, Florence, c. 1456-1457. Partially gilt bronze,
236 cm. Florence, Palazzo Vecchio.
Figure 10: Sandro Botticelli, Return of Judith to Bethulia, Italy, c. 1470. Tempera on
wood, 31 x 24 cm, right half of diptych. Florence, Galleria degli Uffizi.
Figure 11: Georg Pencz, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes, Nuremberg,
c. 1541. Engraving, 49 x 78 mm. London, The British Museum.
148
Figure 12: Conrat Meit, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Germany, c. 1512-1514.
Alabaster with gilding, 30 cm. Munich, Bayerisches Nationalmuseum.
Figure 13: Hans Baldung Grien, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Germany, c. 1525.
Oil on panel, 208.8 x 74 cm. Nuremberg, Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nürnberg.
149
Figure 14: Sebald Beham, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes, Nuremberg,
c. 1520-1530. Engraving, 109 x 68 mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 15: Sebald Beham, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes, Nuremberg,
c. 1520-1530. Engraving, 114 x 71 mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 16: Barthel Beham, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Nuremberg, 1523.
Engraving, 58 x 40 mm. London, The British Museum.
150
Figure 17: Barthel Beham, Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, Nuremburg, 1525.
Engraving, 55 x 37 mm. London, The British Museum.
151
152
Figure 18: Attributed to Cornelis Anthonisz, The Wise Man and the Wise Woman (“Come and behold me, I
signify a wise man; all behold me, for I am a wise woman”), Amsterdam, second quarter of the 16th century.
Woodcut, Amsterdam, Rijksprentenkabinet.
Figure 19: Anton Woensam, A Wise Woman, Germany, c. 1525. Woodcut. Vienna,
Graphische Sammlung Albertina.
153
Figure 20: Erhard Schön, The Four Effects of Wine, Germany, 1528. Woodcut. Coburg,
Kunstsammlungen der Veste Coburg, Kupferstichkabinett.
Figure 21: Sebald Beham, Peasants behind the Hedge from the Peasants’ Feast or the
Twelve Months, Germany, c. 1546-1547. Engraving, 5 x 7.3 cm. New York, The
Metropolitan Museum of Art.
154
Figure 22: Erhard Schön (image), Hans Sachs (text), Seven Wives Complaining about
their Husbands, Germany, 1531. Woodcut. Gotha, Herzogliches Museum.
155
Figure 23: Erhard Schön (image), Hans Sachs (text), Seven Men Complaining about their
Wives, Germany, 1531. Woodcut. Gotha, Herzogliches Museum.
156
Figure 24: Erhard Schön (image), Hans Sachs (text), There is No Greater Treasure on
Earth than an Obedient Wife who Covets Honor, Germany, c. 1533. Woodcut. Gotha,
Herzogliches Museum.
Figure 25: Israhel van Meckenem, Battle for the Pants, Germany, c. 1495-1503.
Engraving, 160 x 109 mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 26: Monogrammist MT, A Mistreated Husband, Germany, c. 1540-1550.
Engraving, 74 x 59 mm. London, The British Museum.
157
158
Figure 27: Hans Schäuffelein, Diaper Washer, Germany, c. 1536. Woodcut to lost poem Ho, Ho, Diaper Washer
by Hans Sachs. Coburg, Kunstsammlungen der Veste Coburg, Kupferstichkabinett.
Figure 28: Housebook Master, Coat of Arms with Peasant on his Head, Germany, c. 1470-1500. Engraving, 137
x 85 mm. London, The British Museum.
159
Figure 29: Barthel Beham (image), Hans Sachs (text), The Nine Hides of an Angry Wife,
Germany, c. 1520-1540. Woodcut. Gotha, Schlossmuseum.
160
Figure 30: Albrecht Dürer, Design for Decoration in the Town Hall of Nuremberg, Germany, 1521. Pen and
brown ink with watercolor, silhouetted and mounted on another sheet (probably by artist), 256 x 351 mm. New
York, The Morgan Library & Museum.
161
Figure 31: Master ES, Samson and Delilah, Germany, c. 1460-1465. Engraving, 13.8 x 10.7 cm.
Figure 32: Hans Burgkmair, Samson and Delilah, from Weiberlisten, Germany, c. 1519. Woodcut, 118 x 95 mm.
London, The British Museum.
162
Figure 33: Lucas van Leyden, Solomon Adoring the Idol of Moloch, Leiden, c. 1514. Engraving, 171 x 135 mm.
Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago.
Figure 34: Master MZ, Solomon Worshipping False Gods, Germany, 1501. Engraving, 18.5 x 15.7 cm. Washington,
D.C., National Gallery of Art.
163
Figure 35: Hans Burgkmair, Solomon’s Idolatry, from Weiberlisten, Germany, c. 1519. Woodcut, 118 x 94 mm.
London, The British Museum.
Figure 36: Georg Pencz, David and Bathsheba, German, c. 1531. Engraving, 47 x 76 mm. London, The British
Museum.
164
Figure 37: Hans Burgkmair, David and Bathsheba, from Weiberlisten, German, 1519. Woodcut, 119 x 94 mm.
London, The British Museum.
Figure 38: Master MZ, Phyllis Riding Aristotle, German, c. 1500-1503. Engraving, 180 x 130 mm. London,
The British Museum.
165
Figure 39: Housebook Master, Phyllis Riding Aristotle, Germany, c. 1483-1488. Drypoint, 159 mm. Amsterdam,
Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, Rijksprentenkabinet.
Figure 40: Hans Baldung Grien, Phyllis Riding Aristotle, Germany, c. 1515. Woodcut, 33.3 x 23.8 cm. Berlin,
Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Kupferstichkabinett.
Figure 41: Judith, Humilitas, and Jael, Speculum Virginum, c. 1140. London, British
Library, MS Arundel 44, fol. 34v.
Figure 42: The Virgin Mary Overcomes the Devil/Judith Kills Holofernes, Speculum
Humanae Salvationis, Southwest Germany or Austria, c. 1330-40. Vienna,
Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Cod. S.N. 2612, fol. 32v.
166
Figure 43: Erhard Schön, Eve, Sarah, Rebecca, Rachel, Leah, Jael, left sheet of The
Twelve Famous Women of the Old Testament, Germany, c. 1530. Woodcut, 198 x 383
mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 44: Erhard Schön, Ruth, Michal, Abigail, Judith, Esther, Susanna, right sheet of
The Twelve Famous Women of the Old Testament, Germany, c. 1530. Woodcut, 196 x
382 mm. London, The British Museum.
167
.
168
Figure 45: Jost Amman, Judith the Moderate, from Celebrated Women of the Old Testament, Germany, c. 1568-1596.
Etching, 84 x 56 mm. London, The British Museum
Figure 46: Jost Amman, Susanna the Chaste, from Celebrated Women of the Old Testament, Germany, c. 1568-1596.
Etching, 84 x 56 mm. London, The British Museum.
169
Figure 47: Attributed to Baccio Baldini, Judith and Holofernes, Florence, c. 1465-1480. Engraving, 115
mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 48: Parmigianino, Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes, Italy, c. 1503-1540. Etching,
154 x 92 mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 49: Hans Baldung Grien, Eve, Strasbourg, c. 1524-1525. Oil on panel, 208 x 83.5
cm. Budapest, Szépművészeti Múzeum.
Figure 50: Hans Baldung Grien, Venus and Cupid, Strasbourg, c. 1525. Oil on panel, 208
x 84 cm, Otterlo, Kröller-Müller Museum.
170
171
Figure 51: Jacob Binck, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Germany, c. 1520-1559. Engraving,
45 x 31 mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 52: Hans Ladenspelder, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Germany, 1535. Engraving,
68 x 47 mm. London, The British Museum.
172
Figure 53: Sebald Beham after Barthel Beham, Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Germany, 1547.
Engraving, 175 x 48 mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 54: Monogrammist RB after Barthel Beham, Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes, Germany,
c. 1530-1550. Engraving, 63 x 38 mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 55: Barthel Beham, Cleopatra, Germany, 1524. Engraving, 58 x 39 mm. London,
The British Museum.
173
174
Figure 56: Albrecht Dürer, Witch Riding Backwards on a Goat, Nuremberg, c. 1500-1502. Engraving, 115 x 72
mm. Chicago, the Art Institute of Chicago.
Figure 57: Hans Baldung Grien, The Witches’ Sabbath, Germany, 1510. Woodcut, 375 x 259 mm. London, The
British Museum.
Figure 58: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael or Giulio Romano, Lo Stregozzo (The
Witches’ Procession), Italy, c. 1520s. Engraving, 30 x 63 cm. Austin, The Blanton
Museum of Art.
Figure 59: Hans Baldung Grien, Weather Spell, in Johann Geiler von Kayserberg’s Die
Emeis, fol. 37v. Strassburg, 1516. Woodcut, 8.8 x 14.2 cm. Frankfurt,
Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg.
175
Figure 60: Barthel Beham, detail of Judith Seated on the Body of Holofernes,
Nuremburg, 1525. Engraving, 55 x 37 mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 61: The Serpent Tempting Eve, Spiegel Menschlicher Behaltnuss (Mirror of
Human Salvation), Germany, c. 1481. Woodcut, fol. 2r, col. 1.
176
177
Figure 62: Albrecht Dürer, The Four Witches, Germany, 1497. Engraving, 190 x 132 mm. London, The British
Museum.
Figure 63: Barthel Beham, Three Women and Death, Germany, c. 1525-1527. Engraving, 73 x 54 mm. London,
The British Museum.
Figure 64: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael, Judgment of Paris, Italy, c. 1510-1520.
Engraving, 29.1 x 43.7 cm. New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Figure 65: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael, detail of Judgment of Paris, Italy, c.
1510-1520. Engraving, 29.1 x 43.7 cm. New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Figure 66: Barthel Beham, A Nude Woman Seated on a Cuirass, Nuremberg, c. 15201540. Engraving, 51 x 35 mm. London, The British Museum.
178
Figure 67: Crouching Venus (Lely’s Venus), Rome, 2nd century AD. Marble sculpture,
1.120 m, Roman copy after Hellenistic original from 200 BC. London, Royal Collection,
on long-term loan to The British Museum.
179
180
Figure 68: Marcantonio Raimondi, Crouching Venus, Italy, c. 1510-1527. Engraving, 223 x 146 mm.
London, The British Museum.
Figure 69: Albrecht Altdorfer, Crouching Venus, Germany, c. 1525-1530. Engraving, 61 x 40 mm.
London, The British Museum.
Figure 70: Power of Women, German Miscellany, early 15th century. Washington, D.C.,
Library of Congress, Rosenwald Collection, MS 4, fol. 8r.
181
182
Figure 71: Master Caspar of Regensburg, Venus and the Lover, Regensburg, c. 1485. Colored woodcut,
25.7 x 36.5 cm. Berlin, Staatliche Museen Berlin, Kupferstichkabinett,.
Figure 72: Barthel Beham, Venus and Cupid, Germany, c. 1525. Drawing, 180 x 135
mm. Leiden, Rijksuniversiteit, Prentencabinet.
183
Figure 73: Monogrammist IB, Venus and Cupid, Germany, c. 1523-1530. Scabbard
design engraving, 180 x 24 mm. London, The British Museum.
184
185
Figure 74: Allaert Claesz, Mars, Venus, and Cupid, Netherlands, c. 1520-1530. Engraving, 65 mm. London,
The British Museum.
Figure 75: Marcantonio Raimondi, Mars, Venus, and Cupid, Italy, c. 1508-1510. Engraving, 296 x 211 mm.
London, The British Museum.
Figure 76: Enea Vico after Parmigianino, Venus and Mars Embracing near Vulcan at his
Forge, Italy, 1543. Engraving, 225 x 335 mm. London, The British Museum.
Figure 77: Sandro Botticelli, Venus and Mars, Italy, c. 1485. Tempera on panel, 69.2 x
173.4 cm. London, The National Gallery.
186
187
Figure 78: Judith and her Maid with the Head of Holofernes, Bible, Germany, c. 1478. Woodcut.
188
Figure 79: Sarcophagus with Scenes of a Bacchanalia, Italy, c. 140-160 AD. White marble, 204 x 510 x 66 cm. Naples,
Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli.
Figure 80: Detail of Sarcophagus with Scenes of a Bacchanalia, Italy, c. 140-160 AD.
White marble, 204 x 510 x 66 cm. Naples, Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli.
Figure 81: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael, fragment of Bacchanal, Italy, c. 15101520. Engraving, 143 x 175 mm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, Rijksprentenkabinet.
189
190
Figure 82: Marcantonio Raimondi after Raphael, Bacchanal, Italy, c. 1510-1520. Engraving, 150 x 505 mm. Oxford,
Ashmolean Museum.
Figure 83: After Marcantonio Raimondi after Giulio Romano, Position 14, from I Modi,
Venice, c. 1527. Woodcut after I Modi. After Lynne Lawner, I Modi: the Sixteen
Pleasures, page 87.
191
Figure 84: Barthel Beham, Death and the Sleeping Woman, Nuremberg, c. 1520s.
Engraving, 54 x 77 mm. Paris, Musée du Louvre, Département des Artsgraphiques,
Collection Edmond de Rothschild.
Figure 85: Barthel Beham, Bathing Woman, Nuremberg, c. 1520s. Engraving, 67 x 42
mm. Coburg, Kunstsammlungen der Veste Coburg.
192
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~ Vita ~
Kendra Jo Grimmett was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. In 2007, she entered the
University of Chicago in Chicago, Illinois. During her years as an undergraduate,
Grimmett held internships at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, the Oriental Institute
Museum, the Smart Museum of Art, the Smithsonian Institute’s National Portrait Gallery,
and the Art Institute of Chicago. In September 2010, she traveled to Oxford to study the
Bohun Psalter-Hours at the Bodleian Library. Under the supervision of Aden Kumler,
Grimmett wrote her honors thesis, entitled “Messages for a Medieval Bride: Counseling
Mary de Bohun on Marriage and Motherhood,” on the Bohun Psalter-Hours’ rich visual
program. In June 2011, she graduated with honors from both the Department of Art
History and the College. Then, in August 2012, Grimmett entered the Graduate School at
the
niversity of Texas at Austin pursuing a master’s degree in Medieval to Early
Modern Art History. During the spring of 2014, she helped organize the Vagantes
Medieval Graduate Student Conference, which took place in Austin, Texas, and she
curated a special manuscript exhibition at the Harry Ransom Center for conference
participants. Grimmett also served as Jeffrey Chipps Smith’s graduate research assistant
and helped edit the final manuscript of Smith’s Visual Acuity, a selection of essays from
the Frühe Neuzeit Interdisziplinär conference, “Visual Acuity and the Arts of
Communication in Early Modern Germany.”
Email: Kendra.Grimmett@gmail.com
This thesis was typed by the author.
201