R. Sale > 03-10-2023, 10:19 PM
So, Milan was a definite hot spot for some fancy cloudbands, both during the C-14 dates and in the decades prior. The De Grassi illustration with the eagles was even done in two colors. It is also an example that not all cloudbands were used as cosmic boundaries. Sometimes cloudbands were just representations of clouds.
There is the question of origins for this motif: singular or multiple, where and when? There are several French and English examples that were fairly early.
Close:
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A simple version:
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Almost:
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Here's a fancy one:
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Gian Galeazzo Visconti was first married to Isabella of Valois. She was the sister of Jean, Duke of Berry, and Phillip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, etc. Her biography says she "brought her collection of French books to Milan."
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Is it possible that she introduced the nebuly line version of the cloudband to the artists of Milan?
Secondly, while the VMs does have several examples of fancy, scalloped nebuly line patterns, it also makes much use of the simple, heraldic version of the nebuly line. The VMs cosmos was drawn with a simple nebuly line. Simple nebuly lines are rather uncommon in medieval representations of cosmic boundaries, but one example is the
Berry Apocalypse.
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Another book in the Berry library was BNF Fr. 565 - the 'Oresme' cosmos.