Albert Durer's tomb, 1864

Albert Durer's tomb, 1864. '...the Old-world city of Nuremberg...is rich in everything of the past, and owes nothing to the present...To find oneself there is to be thrown back 300 or 400 years, for it is a purely mediaeval city...The streets speak of a generation long passed away. Here the eye rests on some gorgeous oriel of the most exquisite tracery; here, as we look up, we see the high-pitched roofs, with story on story of pointed dormers; here, again, some richly carved excrescence seems clinging to the eaves and rising high above them with its delicate spire...We will walk to the churchyard of St. John to see the tomb of this father of German art. Alas! some sacrilegious hands have moved his honoured dust. He lies not there - the sketch is but that of a cenotaph. It matters not: one of the world's wisest, who lived twenty-three centuries ago, has told us that "the whole world is the tomb of illustrious men." With Albert Dürer, the worthiest of the sons of Nuremberg, we take our leave for the present of that city, which Melanchthon called, in his day, "Lumen, oculus, decus et ornamentum praecipuum Germaniae!".' From "Illustrated London News", 1864. Creator: Unknown. (Photo by The Print Collector/Heritage Images via Getty Images)
Albert Durer's tomb, 1864. '...the Old-world city of Nuremberg...is rich in everything of the past, and owes nothing to the present...To find oneself there is to be thrown back 300 or 400 years, for it is a purely mediaeval city...The streets speak of a generation long passed away. Here the eye rests on some gorgeous oriel of the most exquisite tracery; here, as we look up, we see the high-pitched roofs, with story on story of pointed dormers; here, again, some richly carved excrescence seems clinging to the eaves and rising high above them with its delicate spire...We will walk to the churchyard of St. John to see the tomb of this father of German art. Alas! some sacrilegious hands have moved his honoured dust. He lies not there - the sketch is but that of a cenotaph. It matters not: one of the world's wisest, who lived twenty-three centuries ago, has told us that "the whole world is the tomb of illustrious men." With Albert Dürer, the worthiest of the sons of Nuremberg, we take our leave for the present of that city, which Melanchthon called, in his day, "Lumen, oculus, decus et ornamentum praecipuum Germaniae!".' From "Illustrated London News", 1864. Creator: Unknown. (Photo by The Print Collector/Heritage Images via Getty Images)
Albert Durer's tomb, 1864
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Credit:
Heritage Images / Contributor
Editorial #:
2149021499
Collection:
Hulton Archive
Date created:
01 January, 1864
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Not released. More information
Source:
Hulton Archive
Object name:
3011416
Max file size:
1273 x 1080 px (10.78 x 9.14 cm) - 300 dpi - 669 KB