{"id":1305,"date":"2024-09-02T10:57:59","date_gmt":"2024-09-02T08:57:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/frisia.rug.nl\/en\/?post_type=verhaal&p=1505"},"modified":"2024-09-02T11:32:02","modified_gmt":"2024-09-02T09:32:02","slug":"de-reizende-rechter","status":"publish","type":"verhaal","link":"https:\/\/frisia.rug.nl\/en\/stories\/de-reizende-rechter\/","title":{"rendered":"Travellin’ Judge"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Here, in the hamlet of Merum, resided Tammo Popkens in around 1600. He was the owner of a number of farmlands in Loppersum, where he served as a \u2018redger\u2019 (rural judge or notary) in 1611. One of the books he owned was Itinerarium Sacrae Scripturae<\/em> (Travel book through the Holy Scripture) from 1596, in which you, as a reader, follow prominent figures from the Bible on their travels in Israel. The owner wrote his name at the front and the back of the book: \u2018Tammo popkens to Merum. In patientia oportet vincere<\/em>\u2019 or \u2018Tammo Popkens in Merum. Endurance\/patience is the way to victory\u2019. Above it, he quoted the Book of Job (8:9): \u2018Sicut umbra dies nostri super terram<\/em>\u2019 or \u2018On earth, our days pass like shadows\u2019.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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Itinerarium Sacrae Scripturae<\/em>\u00a0was first published in 1581\u00a0in German<\/a>. It became a bestseller. Between the year of publication and 1757, at least sixty editions were published in German, Latin, Dutch, English, Danish, Swedish, and Czech. The author was the Protestant theologist and cartographer Heinrich B\u00fcnting (1545-1606). He studied in Wittenberg and worked in Gronau, where he wrote this masterpiece in 1575. B\u00fcnting was a biblical humanist<\/span>Biblical humanism was a movement that aspired to a return to the sources of Antiquity and Christianity, including the Bible. According to biblical humanists, the Bible had to be studied in the original languages, i.e. Hebrew (Old Testament) and Greek (New Testament). In their view, the traditional Latin translation of the Bible (the Vulgate), which was used in the Catholic church and at universities, was of secondary importance. For them, medieval exegetes and dogmatists accounted for even less when it came to the meaning of the Bible scriptures. Biblical humanists particularly valued the Church Fathers of late Antiquity, of whom Ambrose, Augustine, Jerome, and Gregory are the most important and well-known.<\/span>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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B\u00fcnting\u2019s book was particularly intended to be read in an armchair at home. At the time, this book was the most complete reference work of the geography of the Old and the New Testaments. Christians saw Jerusalem as the centre of the religious world, which was reflected in the so-called T-O maps<\/span>T-O maps were maps on which the world is depicted as a circle (O), representing the ocean around the earth. A T divides this circular earth into the three continents known at the time: Asia, Africa, and Europe. The T denotes the Don and Nile rivers and the Mediterranean Sea. T-O maps are oriented to the east and have Jerusalem and Paradise at their centre.<\/span> in the Middle Ages. B\u00fcnting followed the cartographic tradition of the Middle Ages, in which the design of the maps was more important than their geographic accuracy. He was apparently unfamiliar with the modern cartography that was slowly emerging in his days, in which reality and accuracy (the right distances) were of central importance.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

This virtual-travel book became famous due to the three emblematic maps that B\u00fcnting made for it. On these maps, we see the world in the shape of a trefoil, Europe depicted as a queen, and Asia portrayed as the winged, mythological horse Pegasus. On the trefoil map<\/a>, the world is divided into three parts\u2014Europe, Africa, and Asia\u2014with Jerusalem at its centre. The map of Europe<\/a> highlights the glorious years of the Habsburg Empire. Queen Europe is depicted horizontally with Bohemia and Prague forming her heart in the centre. It is not surprising that, as a biblical humanist, B\u00fcnting also included a map representing classical Antiquity. The winged horse Pegasus symbolizes victory over evil and the creativity of the human spirit.<\/p>\n\n\n\n