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The People Asking Joash to bring out his Son

Unknown Oudenaarde weaver whose mark is a six-pointed star

Category

Tapestries

Date

1578

Materials

Tapestry, wool and silk, 5-6 warps per cm

Measurements

5910 mm (H); 4130 mm (W)

Place of origin

Oudenaarde

Order this image

Collection

Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire

NT 1129447.7

Summary

Tapestry, wool and silk, 5-6 warps per cm, The people Asking Joash to bring out his Son, from a set of 13 of the Story of Gideon, Oudenaarde, 1578. This is the seventh tapestry in the narrative series. When the people awoke to find that Gideon had destroyed their altar and built a new one, they went to Gideon’s father, Joash, and asked him to give up his son (Judges 6.28-30). The people are led by a man wearing a breastplate and holding a spear, who strides purposefully towards Joash; the crowd behind him includes men and women, and some of them also carry weapons, including a stick with a spiked ball attached to the end. Joash refused to give up his son, challenging the people to let their god Baal speak for himself, if he really was a God (Judges 6. 31-32). Joash stands in the doorway of a building with the words ‘CVSTODI NOS DÑE’ (i.e. DOMINE), or 'Lord Protect Us', written over the mantel. The building may therefore be intended to represent a temple, but according to the biblical account it should be Joash’s house. The date ‘1578’ is inscribed above, on the pediment, and almost certainly indicates the date that the tapestry set was completed. The right hand half of lower border is missing, as is the right half of the right hand border.

Full description

The thirteen tapestries at Hardwick tell the Story of Gideon, one of the seven Judges to appear in the Old Testament Book of Judges. The Israelites had fallen out of the way of God into the worship of false idols, and as punishment God allowed them to be attacked by the Midianites and the Amakelites. God called on Gideon, son of Joash, to deliver the people of Israel from the Midianites and to restore them to His worship. After asking God to give him a number of signs, most famously involving a leaving a fleece out in the dew, Gideon set about choosing his army from the people of Israel, who flocked to him; he submitted them to a number of tests to reduce their number to 300. Gideon and his army finally attacked the Midianite camp and routed them, chasing the survivors into the hills. Once the Midianites had been definitively defeated the people of Israel asked Gideon to be their King but he refused, saying that only God could rule over them. Gideon lived the rest of his days in peace and had 70 children; after his death though the Israelites fell once more into false worship. The design of the Gideon tapestries is based in part at least upon a set of thirteen tapestries bought on behalf of Cosimo I de’Medici in Brussels in 1561 (Meoni 2003, p. 39). Three tapestries from the Medici series survive, two of which correspond to examples at Hardwick (Gaeto Bartelà 1980, cat. no. 111; Bisogni (ed.) 1990, pp. 283, 285). One of the ‘Gideon’ tapestries is woven with the date 1578. The series has long been thought to be woven at Oudenaarde, based on their quality and the design of the borders (van Ysselsteyn 1968; de Meûter 1998). This has recently been confirmed by the presence of a mark on the upper galloon of two of the tapestries in the form of a six-pointed star. Similar marks appear on three other known tapestry sets, one of which, a set of five ‘Large Leaf Verdures with the Labours of Hercules’ split between the Musée du Louvre, Paris and the Provinciall Paleis van Oost, Ghent, also bears the mark of the city of Oudenaarde (Delmarcel 1999, pp. 203-7; de Meûter et al. 1999, pp. 127, 131). The tapestries were woven for Sir Christopher Hatton, whose arms and itinials are woven into the borders. They were almost certainly intended for the Long Gallery at Holdenby Hall which was already under construction in 1578, the date woven into the tapestries. When Hatton died in 1591 his estates were inherited by his nephew Sir William Newport, who changed his name to Hatton on inheriting. Sir William sold most of the contents of Holdenby to pay off his uncle's debts, including the Gideon tapestries which were bought by Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury ("Bess of Hardwick") in London in 1592. Bess had patches with her own coat of arms stuck over Hatton's, and his crest of a golden hind was converted into a Cavendish stag by painting it brown and adding antlers. The design, manufacture and history of the Gideon set are discussed in detail in Wyld 2012. (Helen Wyld, 2009)

Provenance

Woven in Oudenaarde c. 1578 for Sir Christopher Hatton, and presumably hung at Holdenby Hall; on Hatton’s death in 1591 inherited by his nephew Sir William Newport (Later Hatton); July 1592 purchased by Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury for Hardwick Hall; thence by descent to Andrew, 11th Duke of Devonshire; acquired through the National Land Fund in 1956 and transferred to the National Trust in 1959.

Credit line

Hardwick Hall, The Devonshire Collection (acquired through the National Land Fund and transferred to The National Trust in 1959)

Marks and inscriptions

On pedimented doorway within main field: ‘CVSTODI NOS DÑE’ and ‘1578’

Makers and roles

Unknown Oudenaarde weaver whose mark is a six-pointed star, tapestry weaver

References

Van Ysselsteyn, 1968: G T van Ysselsteyn, ‘Karel de Grote te Rome een 16e Eeuwse Tapisserie’, in Miscellanea Josef Duverger. Bijdragen tot de Kunstgescheidenis der Nederlanden, 2 vols., Ghent 1968, vol. 2, pp. 787-793 Wingfield Digby and Hefford, 1980: George Wingfield Digby and Wendy Hefford, Victoria and Albert Museum: The Tapestry Collection, Medieval and Renaissance, London 1980 Gaeta Bartelà 1980 Giovanni Gaeta Bertelà, Palazzo Vecchio: committenza e collezionismo medicei 1537-1610, exh. cat. Florence 1980 Bisogni 1990 Fabio Bisogni (ed.), Il Palazzo della Provincia a Siena, Rome 1990 De Meûter, 1998: Ingrid de Meûter, ‘Flemish Tapestries of the 16th and 17th Centuries in Great Britain and their Connection with Oudenaarde’, Bulletin de liaison du Centre International d’Étude des Textiles Anciens [CIETA], 75 (1998), pp. 97-109 Delmarcel, 1999: Guy Delmarcel, Flemish Tapestry, Tielt 1999 de Meûter et al., 1999: Ingrid de Meûter, Martine Vanwelden et al., Tapisseries d'Audenarde du XVle au XVllle Siècle, Tielt 1999 Meoni, 2003: Lucia Meoni, ‘Gli arazzi fiamminghi nella collezione de’Medici’, in Koenraad Brosens (ed.), Flemish tapestry in European and American Collections: studies in honour of Guy Delmarcel, Turnhout 2003, pp. 37-47, 193-197 Brosens, 2008: Koenraad Brosens, European Tapestries in the Art Institute of Chicago, New Haven and London 2008 Wyld 2012: Helen Wyld, 'The Gideon Tapestries at Hardwick Hall', West 86th, vol. 19, no. 2 (Fall-Winter 2012), pp. 231-254

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