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In: Faking It!
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1.1 Nicolai Abildgaard, Ossian. Den gamle blinde skotske barde synger til harpen sin svanesang (Ossian Singing His Swan Song), 1780–1782. Oil on canvas. 42 × 35.5 cm. Copenhagen, Statens Museum for Kunst. Open access. [https://open.smk.dk/artwork/image/KMS395] 17

1.2 Author unknown, The Vinland Map (Beinecke MS 350A), date unknown (mid-twentieth century?). Ink on parchment. 40 × 278 cm. New Haven, CT, Yale University Library. Open Access. [https://collections.library.yale.edu/catalog/2002873] 24

2.1–2.2 AM 135 4to, folios 4v and 105v. Source: The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies 34–35

2.3 AM 135 4to, folio 107r. The agreement starts at line 35 in the inner column and ends on line 18 of the outer column. Source: The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies 36

2.4 GKS 3269 b 4to, folio 67v. The agreement is written in the outer column. Source: The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies 38

2.5–2.6 AM 168 b 4to, folios 12r–12v. Source: The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies 40–41

2.7–2.8 AM 137 4to, folios 3v–4r. The agreement starts at line 16 on folio 3v and ends at line 6 on folio 4r. Source: The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies 42–43

2.9 AM 137 4to, folio 101r. The agreement starts at line 13. Source: The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies 44

4.1 Annius of Viterbo, Commentaria fratris Ioannis Annii Viterbensis ordinis predicatorum Theologiae professoris super opera diversorum auctorum de Antiquitatibus loquentium (Rome, Eucharius Silber: 1498), fol. Qiii (2) r. BnF RES-G-173 76

4.2 Frontispiece from Berosus babillonicus de antiquitatibus Seu defloratio berosi Caldaica Cum figuris et ipsius eleganti vita Libris Geneseos perutilis (Paris, Jean de Gourmont: 1509). Early European Books, Copyright © 2011 ProQuest LLC. Image reproduced by courtesy of The Wellcome Trust, London 85

4.3 Berosus babilonicus: De his quae praecesserunt inundationem terrarum (Paris, Marnef: 1510) fol 8v, BnF NUMM-8703559 87

4.4 Antiquitatum Variarium Volumina XVII (Paris, Josse Badius – Jean Petit: 1512) fol. 117 v, BnF RES-G-1353 (1) 90

4.5 Antiquitatum Variarum autores (Lyon, Sebastian Gryphius: 1552) 2, BnF G-17993 96

4.6 Berosi Chaldaei Sacerdotis. Reliquorumque consimilis argumenti autorum (Lyon, Jean Temporal: 1554) 1v, Private collection 101

4.7 Title page from Sexti Iulii Frontini De Coloniis (Paris, Gilles Gilles – Nicolas II Gilles: 1588), Bibliothèque Municipale de Lyon, 324754 105

4.8 Antiquae Historiae ex XXVII authoribus contextae Libri VI (Lyon [Basel], s.n. [Konrad Waldkirch]: 1591) [7r], Private collection 108

7.1 Albrecht Altdorfer, Two Women Holding a Basket with Fruits, 1506. Pen and ink, heightened with white, on red-brown prepared paper, 17.3 × 12.3 cm. Berlin, Staatliche Museen, Kupferstichkabinett. Image bpk / Kupferstichkabinett, SMB / Jörg P. Anders 173

7.2 Albrecht Altdorfer, detail with the artist’s monogram of Two Women Holding a Basket with Fruits, 1506. Berlin, Staatliche Museen, Kupferstichkabinett. Image bpk / Kupferstichkabinett, SMB / Jörg P. Anders 174

7.3 Heinrich Aldegrever, Self-Portrait at Age Twenty-Eight, 1530. Engraving, 14.7 × 10.5 cm. New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1917 178

7.4 Hans Hoffmann, Stag Beetle, reversed copy after Dürer, c. 1574. Watercolour and gouache on paper, 11.4 × 10.3 cm. Berlin, Staatliche Museen, Kupferstichkabinett. Image bpk / Kupferstichkabinett, SMB / Jörg P. Anders 182

7.5 Hans Hoffmann, Hare, signed with faked monogram ‘AD’ and date ‘1528’. Watercolour and gouache on vellum, 35.5 × 26 cm. Berlin, Staatliche Museen, Kupferstichkabinett. Image bpk / Kupferstichkabinett, SMB / Jörg P. Anders 186

7.6 Albrecht Dürer, Hare, 1502. Watercolours and gouache on paper, 25 × 22.5 cm. Vienna, Albertina Museum. Image © Albertina, Wien 187

7.7 Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder, Bouquet of Flowers in a Niche, c. 1616–1619. Oil on wood, 35 × 23 cm. Vienna – Vaduz, Liechtenstein The Princely Collections. Image LIECHTENSTEIN, The Princely Collections, Vaduz-Vienna / SCALA, Florence 189

7.8 Hans Hoffmann, Thistle with Robin Perching on a Pine-Stump, c. 1582–1585. Watercolours and gouache on vellum, 46.4 × 35.8 cm. Nuremberg, Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Image © Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Foto: Monica Runge 192

7.9 Hans Hoffmann, detail with the hidden ‘Hh’-monogram of Thistle with Robin Perching on a Pine-Stump, c. 1582–1585. Nuremberg, Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Image © Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Foto: Monica Runge 193

8.1 Mercurius Britanicus, communicating the affaires of great Britaine for the better information of the people no. 27 (11–18 March 1644), London: Printed by G. Bishop and R. White, title page. Images produced by ProQuest as part of Early English Books Online. www.proquest.com. © British Library Board, Thomason Collection, E.37(27) 206

8.2 Mercurius Britanicus, communicating the affaires of great Britaine for the better information of the people no. 27 (11–18 March 1644), London: Printed by G. Bishop and R. White, title page. Images produced by ProQuest as part of Early English Books Online. www.proquest.com. © British Library Board, Thomason Collection, E. 37(28) 207

8.3 A Perfect Diurnall of the Passages in Parliament no. 14 (12–19 September 1642), London: Printed for Robert Wood, title page. Images produced by ProQuest as part of Early English Books Online. www.proquest.com. © British Library Board, Thomason Collection, E. 240(7) 208

8.4 A Perfect Diurnall of the Passages in Parliament no. 14 (12–19 September 1642), London: Printed for Francis Coules, title page. Images produced by ProQuest as part of Early English Books Online. www.proquest.com. © British Library Board, Burney Collection 209

8.5 Mercurius Pragmaticus no. 1 (14–21 September 1647), title page. Images produced by ProQuest as part of Early English Books Online. www.proquest.com. © British Library Board, Thomason Collection, E.407(39) 212

8.6 Mercurius Pragmaticus no. 18 (11–18 January 1648), title page. Images produced by ProQuest as part of Early English Books Online. www.proquest.com. © British Library Board, Thomason Collection, E.423(2) 213

8.7 Mercurius Pragmaticus no. 18 (11–18 January 1648), title page. Images produced by ProQuest as part of Early English Books Online. www.proquest.com. © British Library Board, Thomason Collection, E.423(1) 214

9.1 Anonymous painter, Giovanni Nanni (Annius) of Viterbo. Viterbo, Museo Comunale. Author’s photo 233

9.2 Curzio Inghirami, Armilla, 1634. Volterra, Biblioteca Comunale Guarnacci, Archivio Maffei, MS IV.53.4.6, Inv. 5883 236

9.3 The first scarith. Curzio Inghirami, Antiquitatum Ethruscarum Fragmenta, †† 2ii verso. Image provided by Sokol Books 238

9.4 The ‘dear household god’ of Prospero of Fiesole. Curzio Inghirami, Antiquitatum Ethruscarum Fragmenta (Frankfurt [Florence], [n.p.]: 1637) unpaginated insert. Image provided by Sokol Books 240

9.5 Curzio Inghirami, Antiquitatum Ethruscarum Fragmenta (Frankfurt [Florence], [n.p.]: 1637). Image provided by Sokol Books 242

9.6 Portrait of Curzio Inghirami, from Giuseppe Allegrini, Serie di ritratti d’uomini illustri toscani con gli elogi storici dei medesimi, Vol. 3 (Florence, Giuseppe Allegrini: 1770) 128 247

9.7 Anonymous, Portrait of Giorgio Grognet de Vassé, c. 1862. Mosta, Basilica of the Assumption of Our Lady. Author’s photo 249

9.8 Giorgio Grognet de Vassé, Atlantic temple, c. 1854. Courtesy National Library, Malta 253

9.9 Greek relief sculpture from the island of Samothrace showing Agamemnon, Talthybius and Epeius, c. 560 BCE, Paris, Louvre. Photo: Marie-Lan Nguyen, 2007, Wikimedia Commons, licensed under Creative Commons attribution-share alike 4.0 international license, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en 254

9.10 Giorgio Grognet de Vassé, Spiral motifs on Neolithic temples in Malta, c. 1854, watercolour, Valetta, National Library MS 615, Figs. 106–110. Photo: Courtesy of National Library, Malta 255

9.11 Mosta Dome, “Atlantic” detailing. Mosta, Malta, 1862. Author’s photo 257

10.1 Detail of first full page from MS V. r. 1 a, Royal Library (Kungliga Biblioteket), Stockholm, containing the start of Hjalmars saga och Hramers. On the top line, from the middle to the penultimate word, the runes spell out ‘abor auk samolis’ (Abor and Zamolxis) 265

10.2 Title page from Carl Lundius, Zamolxis primus Getarum legislator (Uppsala, Henricus Keyser: 1687). Image provided by Uppsala University Library and based on their exemplar 266

10.3 Title page, showing the start of Krembres saga, from MS V 138 b, Uppsala University Library (early eighteenth century). The introduction concerning the origins of the ‘translationʼ begins on the following leaf. Image provided by Uppsala University Library 275

10.4 Frontispiece from Niels Pedersen, Cimbrorum et Gothorum origines, migrationes, bella, atqve coloniæ, libris duobus (Leipzig, Johann Melchior Liebe: 1695). Image provided by Lund University Library 278

11.1 George Bickham the Younger, The Bottle Conjurer, from Head to Foot, without Equivocation, 1749. Engraving. London, British Museum. Image © Trustees of the British Museum 298

11.2 Thomas Blackmore, Samuel Foote Esqr, 1771. Mezzotint after Sir Joshua Reynolds. London, British Museum. Image © Trustees of the British Museum 299

11.3 George Bickham the Younger, The Bottle Conjurer, from Head to Foot, without Equivocation, 1749. Engraving. London, British Museum. Detail, left part of the image. Image © Trustees of the British Museum 301

11.4 George Bickham the Younger, The Champion; or Evening Advertiser by Capt Hercules Vinegar, of Pall-mall, 1740. Engraving. London, British Museum. Image © Trustees of the British Museum 308

11.5 Jan van de Velde II, Populus vult decipi – T’volck wil bedroghen zyn (People want to be conned (The Quack)), c. 1630. Engraving after Willem Pieterszoon Buytewech. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. Image © Rijksmuseum 310

11.6 Jan Saenredam, ‘The Children of Mercury’, c. 1596, engraving after Hendrick Goltzius. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum. Image © Rijksmuseum 311

11.7 Gerard Dou, The Quack, 1652. Oil on panel. Rotterdam, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen. Image © Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen 313

12.1 George Cruickshank, Bank Restriction Note, 1819. Etching on paper, 124 × 195 mm. Image © British Museum 324

12.2 Thomas Barrett, The Charlotte Medal, 1788. Silver, 74 mm (diameter). Sydney, Australian National Maritime Museum Collection purchased with the assistance of the Australian Government through the National Cultural Heritage Account. Image ©Australian National Maritime Museum Collection 335

12.3 Copper Charlotte Medal, 1788. Copper, 47 mm (diameter). Private Collection. Image © National Museum of Australia 338

12.4 Holey Dollar and Dump, 1813. Silver, 41 mm (diameter). Image © National Museum of Australia 342

12.5 Convict love token from John Bloxidge, 1839. Metal (non-specific), 36 mm (diameter). Canberra, National Museum of Australia. Image © National Museum of Australia 344

12.6 Convict love token from John Woodfield, 1831. Metal (non-specific), 35 mm (diameter). Canberra, National Museum of Australia. Image © National Museum of Australia 344

12.7 Convict love token from William Brain, 1838. Metal (non-specific), 36 mm (diameter). Canberra, National Museum of Australia. Image © National Museum of Australia 345

12.8 Convict love token depicting the Searrus, 1787. Copper, 30 mm (diameter). London, Sim Comfort Collection. Image © Sim Comfort Associates 346

12.9 Convict love token from John Jones, 1776. Metal (non-specific). Sydney, Timothy Millett Collection. Image © Timothy Millett 349

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Faking It!

The Performance of Forgery in Late Medieval and Early Modern Culture

Series:  Intersections, Volume: 84
Cover Faking It!
E-Book ISBN:
9789004106901
Publisher:
Brill
Print Publication Date:
20 Dec 2022
  • Subjects
    • Art History
      • Art History
    • History
      • Medieval History
      • Early Modern History
      • Art History
    • Literature and Cultural Studies
      • Literature, Arts & Science
Front Matter
Preliminary Material
Copyright page
Acknowledgements
Figures
Notes on the Editors
Notes on the Contributors
Chapter 1 Introduction: The Performance of Forgery
Chapter 2 Forgery, Audience and Authentication: Icelandic Agreements of the Fifteenth Century
Chapter 3 All That Glitters Is Not Gold: False Jewellery and Its Juridical Regulation in Italy between the Late Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period
Chapter 4 Re-Forging a Forgery: The French Editions of Annius of Viterbo’s Antiquitates
Chapter 5 Prenatal Prophecies and Linguistic Ciphers: A Russian Political Forgery Devoted to the Autocratic Evil of Ivan the Terrible
Chapter 6 Girolamo Baruffaldi as a Forger: The Case of Barbara Torelli
Chapter 7 The Deceptive Power of a Monogram: Appropriating Dürer’s Identity in the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries
Chapter 8 Mind Your U’s and V’s!: Counterfeiting Newspapers in Civil War Britain
Chapter 9 The Theatre of Forgery: Curzio Inghirami (Volterra, 1614–1655) and Giorgio Grognet de Vassé (Malta, 1774–1862)
Chapter 10 Sailing and Sinking on the Sea of Forgery: The Tradition of Fake Sagas in Seventeenth-and Eighteenth-Century Sweden and Denmark
Chapter 11 Of Theatrical Illusion and Fake Advertisements: George Bickham the Younger, Samuel Foote and the Great Bottle Hoax of 1749
Chapter 12 Counterfeiting Coins and Convict Transportation from England to Australia in the Eighteenth Century
Back Matter
Index Nominum

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