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Thursday, April 03, 2014

Question from Lizabeth - Other ladies in "The Noble Arte of Venerie" illustration

Hi all! I was reading a book about The Tower of London and find illustration from Turberville`s book The Noble Arte of Venerie or Hunting of queen Elizabeth and courtiers. I was wondering who are the ladies behind the queen? Can anyone help?

6 comments:

  1. Anyone?Help,please!!!?

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  2. I would think they are simply representation of various ladies of the Court and not meant to be any person in particular, but that's only a guess.

    The book itself is available to read online, and between pages 90-97 there are two pictures of Elizabeth and her attendants hunting but, as far as I can tell, nobody is named.
    Google:
    Turbervile's Booke of hunting, 1576 : Turberville, George
    archive.org › eBook and Texts › American Libraries‎


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  3. Thank you Marilyn.Someone finally helped me!

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  4. I haven't responded because I can't find any information about this. this is a problem with most elite Tudor women. They may be represented in the arts but their names have been obscured.

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  5. I did find a reference saying that Turberville's work was "a translation of Jacques du Fouilloux's 'La Venerie,' even the woodcuts illustrating the original work being used in the English adaptation, [emphasis mine] whether or not they suited the English mise-en-scene ..."

    I can't find the illustrations online, so I don't know if the ones you refer to have a clearly identifiable Queen Elizabeth, but possibly the ladies represented in the woodcuts may actually be from the French court. Again, they may be purely representative rather than specific individuals.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you all,I see that wasn't anyone specific.

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