or is it a perfectly ordinary-sized man and a giantess? Another popular album amicorum motif which seems, indeed, to have originated in the albums — the earliest I’ve found is dated 1598 [BELOW] –which was then picked up by the print-books (“Vita Corneliana”, 1624 BELOW) — and has endured

dated 1598. Stuttgart, WLB, Fromann Collection, cod. hist. fol. 888-31, f.96v.
tiny man climbs ladder to woman carrying a hare in a glass, legend: Aus dergleichenn glas/ kompt mancher has; from the album of Jakob Petzke, dated 1617. Wroclaw, University Library, Department of Manuscripts, Akc. 1969/145, p.198.

Stuttgart, WLB, Frommann Collection, cod. hist. fol. 888-3, f.162v. [n.d.]

miniature signed in 1633 by the young painter, Adolf Boy (1612-78). Apparently (via Facebook!) in the Muzeum Narodowe w Gdansku
from the print-book “Vita Corneliana” ([Berlin] 1624) engraved by Peter Rollos [here as reprinted c.1680 in “Le Centre de l’Amour]. The Latin is a quotation from the opening of Martial’s 78th Epigram in Book 11 addressed to a bridegroom named Victor: “Use female embraces, use them, Victor/ and let your penis learn the work unfamiliar to it”
from the “Allemodisch Stambuch” published by Peter Rollos in Berlin in the 1630s; etchings signed by WGF [not known to me]

design for shooting target, 1609. Coburger Scheibenbuch, f.49r. Kramer & Kruse ( Coburg 1989), p.82, note that the standing figure is Count Johann Casimir von Sachsen-Coburg’s dwarf, Jacob Eckel, and that the perimeter inscription is a variant of the proverb found in Rollenhagen’s Froschmeuseler (1595) but were evidently unaware of the album precedents for this motif

? 19C. from Max Bauer, Sittengeschichte des deutschen Studententums (Dresden 1926)

Applied uses

In subsequent centuries it was very popular with the makers of gingerbread moulds

enamel-painted glass, Franken, 1675×1725. London, Victoria & Albert Museum,1907-1855. Inscription reads:: Ein Jeder nehme seines gleichen, So darff er nicht die letter steigen [everyone takes his equal, so he doesn’t have to climb the ladder]

enamel-painted glass, Central Germany, 18C. Inscription: Ein jeder nehme seines gleichen/ So darf er nicht die Laetter steigen. Biemann Collection, Zurich

19 & 20C

cartoon by Rowlandson, 1811. BM impression

modern stock photo.


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