‘Only the strangest and most horrible cases’: The Role of Judicial Violence in the Work of Jan Luyken

In 1685, Dutch Calvinist publishers brought to the market a new edition of the Anabaptist martyrology Het bloedig tooneel. Marketed mainly towards wealthy Dutch Anabaptists, the book included 104 high-quality etchings made by the Amsterdam artist Jan Luyken. Famous for their explicit depiction of e...

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Main Author: Michel van Duijnen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Journals 2018-12-01
Series:Early Modern Low Countries
Subjects:
Online Access:https://test.openjournals.nl/emlc/article/view/7200
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spelling doaj-86d6d5815bf244649355f7a40f882af82021-07-02T19:05:10ZengOpen JournalsEarly Modern Low Countries2543-15872018-12-0122‘Only the strangest and most horrible cases’: The Role of Judicial Violence in the Work of Jan LuykenMichel van Duijnen In 1685, Dutch Calvinist publishers brought to the market a new edition of the Anabaptist martyrology Het bloedig tooneel. Marketed mainly towards wealthy Dutch Anabaptists, the book included 104 high-quality etchings made by the Amsterdam artist Jan Luyken. Famous for their explicit depiction of executions, these images of martyrdom have been studied and explained mainly with reference to Luyken’s Anabaptist leanings, older illustrated martyrologies, and the textual elements of Het bloedig tooneel. However, Luyken matched his work on martyrdom with an impressive production of secular execution prints that are often indistinguishable from their religious counterparts. Taking these similarities as a point of departure, this article will argue that Luyken’s work was not solely concerned with religious and political views, but also with judicial violence as a visual theme in its own right. Besides partisan or sacred readings of violence, Luyken’s prints framed executions in terms of diversity and specificity, leading to the production of a wide variety of explicit and unique images of beheadings, hangings, and burnings. Within this context, Luyken’s execution prints turned scaffold violence into a marketable theme that was eagerly exploited by Amsterdam publishers across a wide variety of illustrated books. https://test.openjournals.nl/emlc/article/view/7200martyrdombook illustrationsexecutionsJan Luykenviolenceprinted image
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michel van Duijnen
spellingShingle Michel van Duijnen
‘Only the strangest and most horrible cases’: The Role of Judicial Violence in the Work of Jan Luyken
Early Modern Low Countries
martyrdom
book illustrations
executions
Jan Luyken
violence
printed image
author_facet Michel van Duijnen
author_sort Michel van Duijnen
title ‘Only the strangest and most horrible cases’: The Role of Judicial Violence in the Work of Jan Luyken
title_short ‘Only the strangest and most horrible cases’: The Role of Judicial Violence in the Work of Jan Luyken
title_full ‘Only the strangest and most horrible cases’: The Role of Judicial Violence in the Work of Jan Luyken
title_fullStr ‘Only the strangest and most horrible cases’: The Role of Judicial Violence in the Work of Jan Luyken
title_full_unstemmed ‘Only the strangest and most horrible cases’: The Role of Judicial Violence in the Work of Jan Luyken
title_sort ‘only the strangest and most horrible cases’: the role of judicial violence in the work of jan luyken
publisher Open Journals
series Early Modern Low Countries
issn 2543-1587
publishDate 2018-12-01
description In 1685, Dutch Calvinist publishers brought to the market a new edition of the Anabaptist martyrology Het bloedig tooneel. Marketed mainly towards wealthy Dutch Anabaptists, the book included 104 high-quality etchings made by the Amsterdam artist Jan Luyken. Famous for their explicit depiction of executions, these images of martyrdom have been studied and explained mainly with reference to Luyken’s Anabaptist leanings, older illustrated martyrologies, and the textual elements of Het bloedig tooneel. However, Luyken matched his work on martyrdom with an impressive production of secular execution prints that are often indistinguishable from their religious counterparts. Taking these similarities as a point of departure, this article will argue that Luyken’s work was not solely concerned with religious and political views, but also with judicial violence as a visual theme in its own right. Besides partisan or sacred readings of violence, Luyken’s prints framed executions in terms of diversity and specificity, leading to the production of a wide variety of explicit and unique images of beheadings, hangings, and burnings. Within this context, Luyken’s execution prints turned scaffold violence into a marketable theme that was eagerly exploited by Amsterdam publishers across a wide variety of illustrated books.
topic martyrdom
book illustrations
executions
Jan Luyken
violence
printed image
url https://test.openjournals.nl/emlc/article/view/7200
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