From Our Special Collections: Der Stachel der liebe

 

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DER STACHEL DER LIEBE Der Stachel der liebe: Death of the Virgin woodcutThis bound fifteenth-century manuscript, Der Stachel der Liebe (The Thorn ofLove), was written on paper in the hand of three scribes, the manuscript is a German translation of the LatinStimulus Amoris, a thirteenth-century mystical treatise. According to a note affixed to the manuscript, it once belonged to the Dominican Convent at Maria Medingen (near Donauwörth in Bavaria) and was sent there from Nuremberg. Hiram W. Sibley purchased the manuscript in Germany and donated it to the University of Rochester Library in 1930. 

The most significant feature of the manuscript is the woodcut pasted to the inside front cover. The woodcut depicts the Death of the Virgin and dates from 1420-30 making it one of the earliest European woodcuts in an American library. Until November 27, 2005 the manuscript and woodcut are on display at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC as part of a major exhibition Origins of European Printmaking: Fifteenth-Century Woodcuts and Their Public. It will then travel to Nuremberg, Germany where it will be on view at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum from December 14, 2005 to March 19, 2006. More information about the exhibition can be found at http://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/originsinfo.shtm.