[HN Gopher] A bejeweled prayer book has been identified as belon...
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A bejeweled prayer book has been identified as belonging to Thomas
Cromwell
 
Author : pepys
Score  : 64 points
Date   : 2023-06-22 19:49 UTC (1 days ago)
 
web link (news.artnet.com)
w3m dump (news.artnet.com)
 
| civilitty wrote:
| Man that rendering of Hans Holbein the Younger's portrait of
| Thomas Cromwell is god-awful.
| 
| I saw it in person as a kid in the Frick Collection in NY hanging
| opposite Holbein's portrait of Thomas More and they completely
| changed how I looked at art. In person the portraits look
| downright photorealistic and when you get close to them, the
| detail is staggering, down to the stubble on More's face.
| 
| The photo in TFA looks nothing like I remember it. I wouldn't be
| surprised if RGB were inadequate in representing the colors,
| especially with proper museum lighting.
 
  | ericbarrett wrote:
  | Holbein was a master, head and shoulders above most of his
  | contemporaries. Kunstmuseum Basel has the largest collection of
  | his paintings and it's on my bucket list.
 
| sedatk wrote:
| I read it as Bejeweled Player Book first, and got confused.
 
| n1b0m wrote:
| He was one interesting dude. He could speak Italian which was a
| really exceptional thing to do. England is on the edge of Europe,
| quite provincial, not in great power. To go to Italy was to put
| yourself right in the centre of European culture. Especially
| Florence, where Cromwell ended up, was the epicentre of
| civilisation and culture.
| 
| So he learned Italian and came back to England in his twenties;
| extremely well educated, not just speaking Italian but a bit of
| German a bit of Spanish, fluent French and also reading Latin,
| which was crucial at that period. But Italian ended up being his
| passport into the eventual public life.
 
  | Jarwain wrote:
  | What would the modern day's equivalent of Florence be?
 
    | detourdog wrote:
    | The internet it has eliminated the notion of location.
 
  | goodbyesf wrote:
  | I think you are way overestimating 1600s florence and
  | underestimating 1600s england.
  | 
  | > England is on the edge of Europe, quite provincial, not in
  | great power.
  | 
  | We are talking 1600s england, not 600s england. During
  | Cromwell's time, england was easily a major european power
  | settling colonies in the new world. Far more powerful and far
  | more important that italian city-states like florence.
  | 
  | > To go to Italy was to put yourself right in the centre of
  | European culture
  | 
  | By the time cromwell was born, the italian renaissance was a
  | distant memory. Shakespeare was the one advancing european
  | culture, not dante.
  | 
  | > Especially Florence, where Cromwell ended up, was the
  | epicentre of civilisation and culture.
  | 
  | No. The epicenter of civilization and culture moved west and
  | north of florence by cromwell's time. Spain, France,
  | Netherlands, England, etc were the new drivers of european
  | civilization. Not florence, not italy.
  | 
  | > not just speaking Italian but a bit of German a bit of
  | Spanish, fluent French and also reading Latin,
  | 
  | Pretty much what most educated europeans could do.
 
    | vondur wrote:
    | Thomas Cromwell was active in English high politics during
    | the 1530's to 1540's. I believe England was just beginning to
    | become a European power at that time. Maybe you are thinking
    | of Oliver Cromwell?
 
  | codeulike wrote:
  | The way Wolf Hall tells the story, he also learned about
  | bookkeeping/banking in Italy which combined with his (later?)
  | legal training let him run rings around the other powerful
  | public figures of the time.
  | 
  | Wolf Hall is worth reading for many reasons but one of the
  | interesting/unusual aspects of the novel is that its kindof
  | answering 'what would happen if a smart fairly ruthless person
  | with fairly modern legal/administative/finance skills was sent
  | back in time 500 years'
 
  | seanhunter wrote:
  | That's the origin of the famous quote where Thomas More said of
  | Cromwell that he was so clever and resourceful that if you
  | locked him in prison and came back a few weeks later he'd be
  | living like a king and all his jailers would owe him money.
 
  | mistrial9 wrote:
  | the English Wikipedia article is not shy about some of those
  | "Italian" influences ! He was eventually executed for political
  | reasons, as the article says.
 
  | SideburnsOfDoom wrote:
  | Everything that I know about Thomas Cromwell, I know from
  | Hilary Mantel's excellent book _Wolf Hall_ , and from the
  | sequels.
 
    | ojbyrne wrote:
    | And the TV show.
 
      | SideburnsOfDoom wrote:
      | I haven't seen those, not sure how well they could capture
      | the books.
 
        | nwatson wrote:
        | Wolf Hall is about the best TV I've seen ...
        | https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolf_Hall_(TV_series)
        | 
        | "I, Claudius" and "Breaking Bad" and "Better Call Saul"
        | are in the same league.
 
        | seanhunter wrote:
        | They are surprisingly excellent (and I say that as
        | someone who loves the books and usually hates
        | adaptations) not least because the cast (in particular
        | Mark Rylance) are fantastic.
        | 
        | As an aside, for anyone who gets the chance to see Mark
        | Rylance in theatre in particular I would say take it if
        | you possibly can. I've seen him a few times and he has
        | been absolutely staggeringly good every time.
 
    | pklausler wrote:
    | It is regrettable that Mantel did not survive to see this
    | artifact.
 
    | valarauko wrote:
    | My recollection of the books is a bit rusty, but I think he
    | also spoke Welsh (his brother-in-law's family was Welsh) and
    | maybe Dutch as well? The Netherlands were the main market for
    | English wool, and were the nursery of early English
    | Protestantism (like Cromwell himself).
 
      | SideburnsOfDoom wrote:
      | In the books that is correct. In actual history, I do not
      | know.
 
| [deleted]
 
| zitterbewegung wrote:
| This is cromulent.
 
| frereubu wrote:
| There's a reasonable amount of confusion in the comments between
| Thomas and Oliver Cromwell.
| 
| Thomas Cromwell (1485 - 1540), who this article is about, was a
| relatively cosmopolitan man and chief minister to Henry VIII
| before being beheaded.
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Cromwell
| 
| Oliver Cromwell (1599 - 1658) was a puritan Christian anti-
| monarchist who had Charles I executed after the English Civil War
| and ruled as Lord Protector afterwards.
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Cromwell
| 
| (I am not a historian and encourage you to read the Wikipedia
| articles rather than relying on my very brief summaries!)
 
  | crisismeerkat wrote:
  | Oliver Cromwell was also beheaded, posthumously.
  | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Cromwell%27s_head
 
| ubermonkey wrote:
| This is a great place to note how stellar WOLF HALL and its
| sequels are. They make his life really accessible, even if it is
| a fictionalized account of real events.
 
  | billfruit wrote:
  | I think Wolf Hall is rather over rated. It sort of projects
  | quite a bit of modern sensibilities into people living in those
  | times. It is also very sparse, in the sense it doesn't catch
  | very much of the mannerisms of speech etc or even the physical
  | details, flavour of of the times of things.
 
    | karaterobot wrote:
    | Counteranecdote: I'm pretty sensitive to anachronisms in
    | historical depictions, and thought _Wolf Hall_ was pretty
    | darned good about situating itself in what felt like a
    | reasonable facsimile of the 16th century. I mean, we can 't
    | know what people thought, or how. But, I don't recall any red
    | flags offhand.
 
  | rcktmrtn wrote:
  | Of course it's worth mentioning that he's also depicted
  | prominently in "A Man for all Seasons" of which "Wolf Hall" was
  | created as a foil.
 
| autoexec wrote:
| Funny since the God he prayed to would have told him to pry those
| fancy jewels out, sell them, and give the money to the poor.
 
  | nsajko wrote:
  | How to become an authority on gods?
 
    | autoexec wrote:
    | Well, I'm certainly no theologian, I just grew up in a
    | christian household and according to scripture Jesus was
    | neither shy or subtle about his views on wealth and greed. He
    | returned to it again and again and again. It was clearly a
    | pretty big deal to the guy.
    | 
    | A jewel encrusted prayer book is basically "Tell me you're a
    | hypocrite without telling me you're a hypocrite"
 
    | bloomingeek wrote:
    | This is a terrible question, one doesn't become an authority
    | about gods. One reads about the so called actions/demands of
    | gods. Maybe you were being sarcastic?
 
    | swayvil wrote:
    | 1) locate gods.
    | 
    | 2) observe them intensely.
 
  | mjfl wrote:
  | the Puritans agreed with you, a century or so later.
 
  | neaden wrote:
  | I mean, if we're talking about the things Cromwell did wrong in
  | life I'd put this pretty far down the list below all the mass
  | murder.
 
    | ajtulloch wrote:
    | You're probably thinking of
    | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Cromwell and not
    | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Cromwell.
 
  | swayvil wrote:
  | Maybe it was a gift from a close friend.
  | 
  | Can't be gouging up the gift. The friend would get upset.
  | 
  | Maybe a powerful friend. A patron.
  | 
  | Gotta keep the gift nice to stay in good graces.
  | 
  | Maybe it was part of his costume. Something to wag and fondle
  | at aristocratic gatherings.
  | 
  | Appearances are important.
 
  | tines wrote:
  | Yeah, I don't envision Jesus having a jewel-encrusted anything.
 
    | southwesterly wrote:
    | "That's the cup of a carpenter."
 
    | nulbyte wrote:
    | I don't think it's so cut and dry. A woman once washed his
    | feet with expensive perfume. He then derided the man who
    | scolded her for not selling it and giving the money to the
    | poor.
 
      | autoexec wrote:
      | The disciples were upset by the waste because Jesus had a
      | pretty clear and consistent message on wealth. Jesus didn't
      | tell them they were wrong about his message either, seems
      | like he just didn't like that they were being dicks to the
      | woman, didn't want her turned into a villain, and he went
      | out of his way to say she would be remembered for her
      | actions which were directly serving him.
      | 
      | > While Jesus was in Bethany in the home of Simon the
      | Leper, a woman came to him with an alabaster jar of very
      | expensive perfume, which she poured on his head as he was
      | reclining at the table. When the disciples saw this, they
      | were indignant. "Why this waste?" they asked. "This perfume
      | could have been sold at a high price and the money given to
      | the poor." Aware of this, Jesus said to them, "Why are you
      | bothering this woman? She has done a beautiful thing to me.
      | The poor you will always have with you, but you will not
      | always have me. When she poured this perfume on my body,
      | she did it to prepare me for burial. Truly I tell you,
      | wherever this gospel is preached throughout the world, what
      | she has done will also be told, in memory of her."
      | 
      | Hearing the story as a kid though, I kind of suspected it
      | was really just Jesus saying: "I'm literally about to die
      | for you assholes ffs, can you guys lay off for 5 minutes
      | and just let me have this one nice thing!"
 
        | xen2xen1 wrote:
        | I've heard a few sermons that said the effect of the
        | perfume might have lasted until his crucifixion, and
        | might literally have been the one pleasant part of his
        | execution and death. The other part, if you read the
        | scriptures closely, Jesus generally treated the
        | individual as a person first, and a problem (win) second,
        | so the disciples being dicks to her wasn't something he'd
        | be cool with. And he tended not to correct the individual
        | in a group setting.
 
  | sorokod wrote:
  | Perhaps your confidence in what god would have told a 14th
  | century practicing christian is misplaced?
 
  | codeulike wrote:
  | Not an expert but my reading of the article is that the Book of
  | Hours/Hardouyn Hours was a Catholic prayer book in Latin and
  | Thomas Cromwell was a secret sortof proto-Protestant who had
  | illegal copies of the english translated Tyndale Bible hidden
  | at his home. So the jewel encrusted latin prayer book might
  | have been a cover story of a sort. As in, I don't think the
  | prayer book in the famous painting reflected his actual
  | (hidden, illegal) religous beliefs.
 
| Simon_O_Rourke wrote:
| Brendan Behan had a few things to say about Cromwell's legacy,
| including this classy piece of doggerel
| 
| "Don't speak of your Protestant minister, Nor of his church
| without meaning or faith, For the foundation stone of his temple
| Was the bollocks of Henry VIII"
 
  | olddustytrail wrote:
  | I believe he was making a mischievous translation of a Gaelic
  | text. So I think it's worth mentioning that, although I'm not
  | too familiar with Irish Gaelic, in Scottish Gaelic the word
  | "clach" means "stone" but is also the common word for
  | "testicle".
  | 
  | If it's the same in Irish it may be a bit of bilingual punnery.
 
  | cafard wrote:
  | Behan may have been talking about Oliver Cromwell, who I think
  | figured much larger as an object of execration among the Irish.
  | But, hey, my surname looks Dutch, so don't ask me.
  | 
  | My recollection of _Borstal Boy_ was that the doggerel you
  | quote was an ad-hoc translation from Irish.
 
    | gilleain wrote:
    | Given the reference to Henry VIII's bollocks, it is certainly
    | Thomas, not Oliver.
    | 
    | Thomas Cromwell oversaw the founding of the Anglican Church,
    | partly to satisfy Henry's need for a legitimate male heir.
 
      | cafard wrote:
      | Ah, but I don't think the rhymes Behan translated had
      | anything in particular do with either Cromwell, save
      | (remotely) by way of TC's agency in the new church.
 
| optimalsolver wrote:
| For an interesting read, check out Cromwell's letter to Henry
| VIII from the Tower of London while he was awaiting execution:
| 
| https://carolineangus.com/thomas-cromwells-letters/thomas-cr...
 
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(page generated 2023-06-23 23:00 UTC)