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  1. Raphael de Mercatellis, also known as Raphael of Burgundy (1437 – 3 August 1508), was a church official, imperial counsellor and bibliophile. He was the illegitimate son of Duke Philip the Good of Burgundy and a woman of Venetian origins, the wife of a merchant.

  2. Raphaël de Borgoña, también llamado Raphaël Marcatellis o Mercatellis, nació alrededor de 1437 en Brujas y murió el 4 de agosto de 1508, hijo del duque de Borgoña Philippe le Bon, es un monje que fue abad de San Bavón de Gante.

  3. 23 de abr. de 2024 · Raphael de Mercatellis (1437-1508) – one of many (some 26) bastard children of the duke of Burgundy – was one of the most important Renaissance bibliophiles of the Low Countries. He inherited his love for books from his father, Philip the Good (d. 1467), and shared this with his half-brother, Antoine the "Grand Bâtard" (d. 1504).

  4. 24 de mar. de 2017 · Eventually, the end of the fifteenth century saw affluent nobles and clergymen, such as Raphael de Mercatellis, establishing the first exclusively humanist libraries in Northern Europe. Mercatellis was the patron of Commentaries on Plato (MS Hunter 206) , one of the few Northern humanist manuscripts in Special Collections.

  5. RAPHAEL DE MERCATELLIS* reveal an extensive interest in what we call Renaissance ideas. Even if manuscripts were rapidly becoming an old-fashioned of communication, those in Raphael de RAPHAEL DE MERCATELLIS (de Mercatellis's Marcatellis; library were right up to date in Mercatel) was born in Bruges in 1437. A their humanistic content.

  6. Raphaël de Mercatellis (1437–1508), one of the non-marital children of Duke Philip of Burgundy (1396–1467), became abbot of St. Bavo’s in Ghent in 1478. He patronized artists in colloquial workshops while assembling his library, rather than commissioning paintings from celebrated, and more expensive, master illuminators.

  7. They are so-named for their most notable patron Raphaël de Mercatellis (1437–1508), an illegitimate son of Philip the Good of Burgundy who served as abbot of Saint Bavo in Ghent and became the most important humanistic bibliophile in the Low Countries.