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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 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 19 de ene. de 2024 · In the first of two miniatures added to the codex made for Raphael de Mercatellis (d. 1508) in Bruges, the elegantly dressed Juno bends over to instruct Argus, who holds the heifer next to him, tied with a rope. All three figures are depicted in a landscape with some broad-leaved plants, and are identified by name.

  6. 12 de dic. de 2012 · One of those men, Raphael de Mercatellis, was a wealthy bibliophile abbot of the church of Saint Bavo in Ghent, which, then as now, also housed Jan and Hubert van Eyck’s Ghent Altarpiece. The abbot owned at least one other manuscript containing illuminations by van Wulfschkercke and Bruynruwe that shares much in common with our ...

  7. Published as a companion to the exhibition 'De bibliotheek van Raphaël de Marcatellis (1437-1508)', organized at the University Library of Ghent from 17 September to 26 October 1979 in honour of Professor Dr. K. G. van Acker Review: J.J.G. ALEXANDER, Medium Aevum, 50 (1981), pp. 324-325