Feminae: Medieval Women and Gender Index
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Title:
Queen of Sheba
Creator:
Description:
The Queen of Sheba appears wearing a luxurious ermine-lined gown with bells hanging from the waist. In her left hand she holds the
globus cruciger
and in her right she holds a scepter. A golden bejeweled crown sits atop her long golden hair. While she currently has black skin, scholars have determined that her face and hands were darkened by a later artist. This image comes from the original manuscript of Konrad Kyeser's
Bellifortis
[Strong in War], a military treatise that includes other non-warfare-related technological instruction and also addresses natural magic. Scholars have not yet provided an explanation for an image of the Queen of Sheba in such a manuscript. By the twelfth century the Queen of Sheba was presented as a symbol of the Church traveling from the farthest reaches of the world to hear the Divine Wisdom of Solomon, who was presented as a Christ-like figure. To signify her far-away and exotic origins, the queen was sometimes shown as accompanied by a dark-skinned figure or at other times, as she is here, was depicted as a dark-skinned woman.
Source:
Wikimedia Commons
Rights:
Public Domain
Subject
(See Also)
:
African Women
Blacks
Queen of Sheba (Biblical Figure)
Geographic Area:
Germany
Century:
15
Date:
before 1405
Related Work:
Current Location:
Göttigen, Staatsbibliothek, Cod. Ms. philos. 63, 122r.
Original Location:
Artistic Type (Category):
Digital images; Manuscript Illuminations
Artistic Type (Material/Technique):
Vellum (parchment); Gold; Pigment
Donor:
Height/Width/Length(cm):
//
Inscription:
Inscription (not shown):
Sum regina sabbia clarior ceteris et venusta/Pulchra sum et casta stat speculum pictore sculptum/In quo contemplantur juvenes quecumque volunt/Et in visu tacta sime retro sollis absconsa/Per aerem subito movet fuliginem ore/Ast
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