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343Projects
for Emperor Ferdinand i
6.2 The Tomb of Maximilian i in Innsbruck
In August 1559 (or perhaps 1560, the year is not indicated) Jacopo Strada was
again employed in a similar consultative capacity, now in connection with the
most important dynastic commission of the Austrian Habsburgs, the comple-
tion of the tomb of the Emperor Maximilian i. This tomb had been planned
by that Emperor himself and begun during his lifetime, and was intended to
be placed in a chapel or mausoleum to be constructed after his own designs in
the church of St. Georg in Wiener Neustadt. Its completion was enjoined on
the Emperor’s heirs in his will, and it naturally fell to Ferdinand i, as sovereign
of the Austrian Erblande, to execute his grandfather’s last wishes. He took this
task quite seriously, but nevertheless did not manage to accomplish it within
his own lifetime. The vicissitudes of this stupendous project have been de-
scribed elsewhere; suffice here to note that by the time of Ferdinand’s acces-
sion to the Empire the planned location of the monument had been shifted
from Wiener Neustadt to Innsbruck, that a new church specifically designed
to house it, the Hofkirche, was nearing completion, as was a large part of the
huge array of over life-size bronze statues of historical and symbolical ances-
tors and precursors of the Habsburg Emperors that was to accompany the Im-
perial tomb proper.6
In 1555 or early in 1556 Ferdinand commanded Hermes Schallautzer to de-
vise the collocation of the as yet inexistent tomb and the forty large and hun-
dred small bronze statues and the thirty-two bronze portrait busts that were
to accompany it in the new church. Schallautzer’s report was accompanied by
a ground plan of the new church showing the collocation of tomb and stat-
ues (nr 9), a ground plan (nr 3) of the tomb proper and a Visierung or design
of one half of its elevation, showing ‘how the whole should be ornamented’
(nr 4).7 Schallautzer’s description suggests that, like the accompanying stat-
ues, at least the historical scenes decorating the planned tomb or cenotaph
were to be cast in bronze.8 It was to include all the coats of arms taken from
6 Actually it is a cenotaph, since Maximilian’s remains were never transferred from Wiener
Neustadt. On the history of the tomb, see a.o. Schönherr 1890; Oberhammer 1935; Dressler
1973, pp. 46–60; EGG 1974, pp. 56–57; Scheicher 1984.
7 Schönherr 1890, p. 204; the text of Schallautzer’s report to Ferdinand printed ibidem in ap-
pendix i, p. 264–265: ‘So haben eur Römisch khgl. maj. etc. die gruntlegung der kirchen, da-
rein das grab geseczt soll werden, mit austailung der 40 grossen bilder unden, desgleichen in
de höch zwischen auf den pheilern di 100 clainen bilder und an der prust baider porkirchen
die 32 prustbilder hieneben mit nr. 9.’
8 Ibidem, ‘mer die vierundzwainzig haubtstuckh aus der ernportn mitzueschickhen, grösz, wie
es in das grab gegossen soll werden<...>’.
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Buch Jacopo Strada and Cultural Patronage at the Imperial Court - The Antique as Innovation, Band 1"
Jacopo Strada and Cultural Patronage at the Imperial Court
The Antique as Innovation, Band 1
- Titel
- Jacopo Strada and Cultural Patronage at the Imperial Court
- Untertitel
- The Antique as Innovation
- Band
- 1
- Autor
- Dirk Jacob Jansen
- Verlag
- Brill
- Ort
- Leiden
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-90-04-35949-9
- Abmessungen
- 15.8 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 572
- Kategorien
- Biographien
- Kunst und Kultur
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Preface XV
- Acknowledgements XVIII
- Acknowledgments of Financial Support Received XXI
- List of Abbreviations XXII
- Introduction: The Image—Or from Whom (Not?) to Buy a Second-Hand Car 1
- 0.1 The Portraits of Jacopo and Ottavio Strada 1
- 0.2 Why are These Portraits so Special? 4
- 0.3 Motions of the Mind 4
- 0.4 What is Known About Strada: Early Notices 9
- 0.5 Quellenkunde: Some Sources Published in the NineteenthCentury 15
- 0.6 Kulturgeschichte before World War II 19
- 0.7 Romance: Josef Svátek and the Rudolfine Legend 21
- 0.8 A (Very) Modest Place in the History of Classical Scholarship 24
- 0.9 Contemporary Scholarship 25
- 0.10 What Has Not Been Written on Jacopo Strada 37
- 0.11 Weaving the Strands Together: The Purpose of this Study 39
- 1 Early Years: Family Background, Education, Giulio Romano 45
- 2 Travel: Rome, Landshut, Nuremberg—Strada’s Connection withWenzel Jamnitzer 67
- 3 In Hans Jakob Fuggers’s Service 107
- 3.1 Hans Jakob Fugger 107
- 3.2 Fugger as a Patron and Collector 114
- 3.3 Fugger’s Employment of Strada 121
- 3.4 Architectural Patronage for the Fuggers: The DonauwörthStudiolo 134
- 3.5 Strada’s Trips to Lyon 137
- 3.6 Strada’s Contacts in Lyon: Sebastiano Serlio 149
- 3.7 Civis Romanus: Strada’s Sojourn in Rome 156
- 3.8 Commissions and Purchases: The Genesis of Strada’s Musaeum 174
- 3.9 Departure from Rome 183
- 4 Antiquario Della Sacra Cesarea Maesta: Strada’s Tasksat Court 188
- 4.1 Looking for Patronage: Strada’s Arrival at the ImperialCourt 188
- 4.2 The Controversy with Wolfgang Lazius 200
- 4.3 ‘Obwol Ir.Maj. den Strada selbst dier Zeit wol zu geprauchen’: Strada’s Tasks at Court 210
- 4.4 Indirect Sources Throwing Light on Strada’s Employment at Court 242
- 4.5 Conclusion 248
- 5 Jacopo Strada as an Imperial Architect: Background 251
- 5.1 Introduction: The Austrian Habsburgs as Patrons of Architecture 251
- 5.2 The Prince as Architect: Ferdinand I and Maximilian II asAmateurs and Patrons of Architecture 255
- 5.3 ‘Adeste Musae’: Maximilian’s Hunting Lodge and Garden in the Prater 290
- 5.4 The Imperial Residence: Status quo at Strada’s Arrival 307
- 5.5 The Architectural Infrastructure at the Imperial Court 319
- 5.6 Strada’s Competence as an Architect 331
- 6 Strada’s Role in Projects Initiated by Emperor Ferdinand I 339
- 7 An Object Lesson: Strada’s House in Vienna 367
- 8 The Munich Antiquarium 383
- 9 The Neugebäude 430
- 9.1 The Tomb of Ferdinand I and Anna in Prague; Licinio’s Paintings in Pressburg 431
- 9.2 Kaiserebersdorf and Katterburg 432
- 9.3 Sobriety versus Conspicuous Consumption 437
- 9.4 Hans Jakob Fugger’s Letter 438
- 9.5 Description of the Complex 441
- 9.6 The Personal Involvement of Emperor Maximilian II 455
- 9.7 Ottoman Influence? 463
- 9.8 Classical Sources: Roman Castrametatio and the Fortified Palace of Diocletian at Split 467
- 9.9 Classical Sources: Monuments of Ancient Rome 480
- 9.10 Contemporary Italian Architecture 489
- 9.11 Strada’s Contribution 500
- 9.12 Conclusion: Strada’s Role in the Design of the Neugebäude 507
- 10 Other Patrons of Architecture 514
- 10.1 The Courtyard of the Landhaus in Graz 514
- 10.2 The Residence for Archduke Ernest 517
- 10.3 Other Patrons: Vilém z Rožmberk 520
- 10.4 Jan Šembera Černohorský z Boskovic and BučoviceCastle 524
- 10.5 Christoph von Teuffenbach: The House in Vienna and the Castle at Drnholec 530
- 10.6 Reichard Strein von Schwarzenau and the Castle at Schwarzenau 534
- 10.7 Conclusion 542