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  1. Raphael de Mercatellis, also known as Raphael of Burgundy (1437 – 3 August 1508), was a church official, imperial counsellor and bibliophile. He was the illegitimate son of Duke Philip the Good of Burgundy and a woman of Venetian origins, the wife of a merchant.

  2. Raphaël de Mercatellis (1437–1508), one of the non-marital children of Duke Philip of Burgundy (1396–1467), became abbot of St. Bavo’s in Ghent in 1478. He patronized artists in colloquial workshops while assembling his library, rather than commissioning paintings from celebrated, and more expensive, master illuminators.

  3. 23 de abr. de 2024 · The heritage of Antiquity was no less “smart, funny, and above all great fun", in Mercatellis' time as it remains today! For Raphael de Mercatellis, one of 26 or more illegitimate children that the Duke of Burgundy fathered, these stories may not have had only educational value.

  4. 110 subscribers in the mormonwitch community. Latter Day Saint & Mormon/ Restoration tradition believers who are interested or practitioners of…

  5. Raphaël de Bourgogne, également appelé Raphaël Marcatellis ou Mercatellis, né vers 1437 à Bruges et mort le 4 août 1508, fils du duc de Bourgogne Philippe le Bon, est un moine qui fut abbé de Saint-Bavon de Gand.

  6. 12 de dic. de 2012 · One of those men, Raphael de Mercatellis, was a wealthy bibliophile abbot of the church of Saint Bavo in Ghent, which, then as now, also housed Jan and Hubert van Eyck’s Ghent Altarpiece. The abbot owned at least one other manuscript containing illuminations by van Wulfschkercke and Bruynruwe that shares much in common with our Book of Hours.

  7. 24 de mar. de 2017 · Eventually, the end of the fifteenth century saw affluent nobles and clergymen, such as Raphael de Mercatellis, establishing the first exclusively humanist libraries in Northern Europe. Mercatellis was the patron of Commentaries on Plato (MS Hunter 206), one of the few Northern