Hispalis (Seville), Braun & Hoefnagel, 1565

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Hispalis (Seville), Braun & Hoefnagel, 1565

description

Zusammenfassung

A view of the city of Seville (under its Roman name, Hispalis) published in the third volume of Georg Braun's Civitatis Orbis Terrarum (1597); a somewhat exaggerated perspective taken from viewpoint somewhere near the palace of Buhaira, south-east of the city, looking west or slightly northwest.
The lower part of the painting shows a strange scene, itemised in the Key as S: Execution de Justicia de los cornudos patientes and T: Execution de l'acazuettas publicas. The "patient cuckold", a man with bound hands, wearing horns made from leafy branches (or antlers wrapped with greenery?) hung with bells and flags, and his adulterous wife (half-dressed and surrounded by a swarm of bees) riding asses, presumably as a punishment for their shameful behaviour. Or is his wife the woman on the third ass, who appears to be beating him, and is in turn being beaten with a strap or belt by the man with a trumpet? Onlookers are making the cabrón, the obscene sign of the horns.

date_range

Datum

1800 - 1900
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Quelle

Wikimedia Commons
copyright

Copyright-info

public domain

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