Image:16thc-German-woodcut-Chastity-belt.jpg

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[edit] Summary

A 16th-century German satirical colored woodcut whose general theme is the uselesness of chastity belts in ensuring the faithfulness of beautiful young wives married to old ugly husbands. The young wife is dipping into the bag of money which her old husband is offering to give her (to encourage her to remain placidly in the chastity belt he has locked on her), but she intends to use it to buy her freedom to enjoy her young handsome lover.

For another closely-related 16th century woodcut (with different artwork, a better view of the lock, and the poem spelled according to a different German dialect, but basically the same idea), see Image:Alfons_luder_kunde.gif .

Here's an approximate rendering of the text in the image (based on a transcript of the text in the Image:Alfons_luder_kunde.gif version of the woodcut which is provided in Eric John Dingwall's 1931 book The Girdle of Chastity), arranged to bring out the poetic form:

Other version
Other version
der alt man
gelt und gütz gnung wil ich dir geben
wiltü nach meinem wilen leben.
greift mit er hand In mein taschen
das schloss wil Ich dir erlasen.
DES IUNG WEIB
Eß hilft kain schlos vir frauwen list.
kain trew mag sein da lieb nit ist.
darumb Ein schlüsel der mir gfelt.
den wil ich kauffen umb dein gelt.
DER IUNG GSEL
Ich drag Ein schlüßel zu solchen schlosen.
wie wol Eß manchen hat verdrosen.
der hat der narrn kappen vüll.
der Rechte lieb ERkauffenn wül.

Here's an attempted rendering of this text into modern German:

Der alte Mann
Geld und Güter genug will ich dir geben
willst du nach meinem Willen leben.
Greif mit der Hand in meine Tasche,
das Schloss will ich dir erlassen.
Das junge Weib
Es hilft kein Schloss vor der Frauen List
keine Treue kann sein wo Liebe nicht ist.
Darum einen Schlüssel, der mir gefällt,
den will ich kaufen um[=für] dein Geld.
Der junge Geselle
Ich trage einen Schlüssel zu solchen Schlössern.
obwohl es manchen verdrossen hat.
Der hat der Narrenkappe viel,
der rechte Liebe erkaufen will.

Dingwall translates what "DES IUNG WEIB" (the young wife) says as: "No lock is of avail against the cunning of women; there can be no fidelity where love is not present: for that reason will I buy with your money the key I lack".

This woodcut has been attributed to Peter Flötner and Hans Baldung, but Dingwall prefers to attribute it to H. Vogtherr (however, it is not entirely clear to me whether Dingwall is referring to this version, or to the alternative version Image:Alfons luder kunde.gif ).

[edit] Licensing

This image is a faithful reproduction of a two-dimensional work of art and thus not copyrightable in itself in the U.S. as per Bridgeman Art Library v. Corel Corp.; the same is also true in many other countries, including Germany.
The original two-dimensional work shown in this image is free content because:
Public domain This image (or other media file) is in the public domain because its copyright has expired.

This applies to the United States, Canada, the European Union and those countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years.


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