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Tilman Riemenschneider

Tilman Riemenschneider (c. 1460 – 7 July 1531) was a German sculptor and woodcarver active in Würzburg from 1483. He was one of the most prolific and versatile sculptors of the transition period between late Gothic and Renaissance, a master in stone and limewood.

Tilman Riemenschneider
Supposed self-portrait of Tilman Riemenschneider.[1]
Bornc. 1460
Died(1531-07-07)7 July 1531
NationalityGerman
Occupationsculptor
Years activec. 1473 until 1527

Biography

 
 
The Lamentation of Christ, Maidbronn
 
Detail of stone tomb of Rudolf von Scherenberg in Würzburg Cathedral, (1496–1499).
 
Limewood carved figure of Saint George fighting the dragon (~ 1490).

Tilman Riemenschneider was born around the year 1460 at Heiligenstadt im Eichsfeld in present-day Thuringia.[2]: 2 

When Riemenschneider was about five years old, his father was involved in a violent political conflict, the Mainzer Stiftsfehde [de], so the family had to leave Heiligenstadt and all their possessions. They resettled in Osterode, where his father became Master of the Mint (a good position at that time) and where Riemenschneider spent his childhood years.

Riemenschneider likely came to Würzburg for the first time at the age of 18 in 1478/79.[2]: 2  His uncle served as notary and financial advisor to the bishop there, but he did not stay for long. Around 1473, Riemenschneider learned the trade of sculpting and woodcarving, likely in Swabia or the Upper Rhine — possibly in Strasbourg and/or Ulm. At that time, the statutes of the guild of sculptors required that an apprentice travel to many different workshops to gain experience. Very little is known about this period of his life, but he likely came in contact with the work of Martin Schongauer, whose copper engravings served him later as examples.

In 1483, he settled in Würzburg.[2]: 2  On 7 December 1483, he joined the Saint Luke's Guild of painters, sculptors, and glass workers as a painter's assistant. On 28 February 1485, he married Anna Schmidt (born Uchenhofer), a widow of a master goldsmith with three sons. This marriage not only brought him property, but it also meant that he could end his apprenticeship and become a master craftsman.

Also in 1485, Riemenschneider became a citizen of Würzburg, which made it possible to attain the status of master craftsman, and opened a workshop in Franziskanergasse, in the home of his wife.[2]: 2 

His earliest confirmed work is the gravestone of Eberhard von Grumbach in the Pfarrkirche at Rimpar. This may be the type of work he started out with before obtaining large church commissions. He started to receive numerous orders from the town councils of Würzburg and neighboring towns. The earliest large work attributed to him is the Franziskusaltar in the St Jakobskirche in Rothenburg ob der Tauber, which is described in the church guide book as 'about 1490', but its style compared to other works of that date is rather primitive, suggesting it may be an earlier work, sometimes dated from 1485.[3] In 1490, the town council of Münnerstadt ordered an altarpiece for the altar of St Maria Magdalena, the parish church, which included a carving of Mary Magdalene with six angels. It was set up in 1492. In 1491, the town council of Würzburg ordered two life-sized stone figures of Adam and Eve for the south portal of the council's church, the Marienkapelle (erected in 1493).[2]: 2 

In 1494, Riemenschneider's first wife died, leaving him with three stepsons and a daughter. In keeping with the times and his status, he remarried in 1497, Anna Rappolt.[2]: 2  She bore him two daughters and three sons, all of whom seem to have inherited their father's artistic talent. In 1495, he created the statue of Mary with child (Pfarrkirche St Bernard in Würzburg).

More high-profile work followed: In 1496 Riemenschneider received the order to carve the tomb of Prince-Bishop Rudolf von Scherenberg at Würzburg Cathedral. It was delivered in 1499, the same year in which an order arrived for the Imperial tomb at Bamberg Cathedral (delivered 1513).[2]: 2 

By 1500, he had developed an outstanding reputation as an artist and had become a wealthy Würzburg citizen. Not only did he own a number of houses, but he also was a landowner with his own vineyards. His flourishing workshop provided work for as many as 40 apprentices doing woodcarving, sculpting, and painting.

In November 1504, Riemenschneider became a member of the Unterrat (councilman) of the town of Würzburg, an office he held until 1525.[2]: 3  This office not only brought him social status, but it also helped him obtain many large and profitable orders.

In 1508, Riemenschneider married Margaretha Wurzbach. From 1509 until 1522 he was a member of the Oberrat four times. He married again, in 1520, a woman of whom only the first name, Margarethe, is known. In 1520/1, Riemenschneider was a mayor of Würzburg (in the Middle Ages there were always two people who held this position at the same time).[2]: 3 [4]: 28 

His increasing engagement in local politics at a time of heavy order volume meant that his apprentices took a more prominent role in the creation of the workshop's output. Art historians have been able to identify specific figures as the work of individual workers.[2]: 11–12 

During the German Peasants' War, Riemenschneider was one of the town council members who refused to obey an order by Konrad von Thüngen, the Prince-Bishop of Würzburg to fight the revolting peasants.[2]: 23  On 4 June 1525, the peasant's army was destroyed, with 8,000 killed, just outside Würzburg by the troops of Georg, Steward of Waldburg-Zeil, and the bishop. After the town surrendered, the full town council, including Riemenschneider, was incarcerated and tortured in Marienberg Fortress. The claim that both of his hands were broken during the torture, which ended his artistic career, is today considered to be a legend without base in fact.[2]: 24  It probably only originated in the 19th century after his "rediscovery".[4]: 24  Together with the rest of the council, Tilman was set free after two months, with loss of most of his property. The only order he is known to have received after this was work in 1527 for a Benedictine nunnery at Kitzingen.[2]: 4, 23  Until his death on 7 July 1531 at Würzburg, he led a retired life with his fourth wife. His son Jörg from his second marriage continued the workshop after his death.

Due to his loss of status, Riemenschneider was soon forgotten as an artist, other than for the two gravestones of Bishops Rudolf von Scherenberg and Lorenz von Bibra side by side at the Würzburg Cathedral. Only when his gravestone was discovered in 1822 between Würzburg Cathedral and Neumünster was his outstanding position in Gothic sculpture recognized by a wider audience. Unlike Albrecht Dürer or Veit Stoss, Riemenschneider acquired true fame only posthumously.[4]: 28 

Art

 
Ascension of Mary Magdalene from the Magdalena Altarpiece, Münnerstadt (1490–1492)
A limewood carving of Mary Magdalene sporting thick body hair.
Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich

The sculptures and woodcarvings of Tilman Riemenschneider are in the late Gothic style, although his later work show mannerist characteristics. Notably the tomb for Lorenz von Bibra (see below) is considered as one of the pieces marking the transition from Gothic to Renaissance art. His work is characterized by the expressiveness of the figurines' faces (often shown with an inward look, as in the 'self-portrait') and by their detailed and richly folded clothing. The emphasis on expression of inner emotions sets Riemenschneider's work apart from that of his immediate predecessors.

Riemenschneider's early success as a sculptor was due to the plasticity of his works, with great care being taken of modeling the folds of garments. This way of sculpting the garments as well as the typical oval faces and almond-shaped eyes were modelled on art from the Upper Rhine region of the 1470s, implying that Riemenschneider may have learned his trade either there or at Ulm. Later works lost some of the volume of the early sculptures, allowing a more efficient production.[2]: 7–8 

Riemenschneider is seen today as one of the first sculptors of the 15th century who did not have all his figures painted. Prior to the 1490s, almost every sculpture had been painted in several layers by a different artist, who often attracted more admiration than the sculptor. The reasons for shifting to a new type of art, where the wood was visible, are still debated by art historians.[2]: 15 

Riemenschneider worked in both wood and stone. It is assumed he learned stone carving first and only later turned to wood carving. Some wooden figures, though unmistakably his own work, show some signs of less-than-perfect choice of wood or handling.[2]: 17–18 

Souren Melikian places Riemenschneider's best work, such as the Virgin listening to the Annunciation, in the same league as the oil paintings of Albrecht Dürer. Art historian Kenneth Clark views the Riemenschneider figures as showing the serious personal piety in Germany in the late fifteenth century and as harbingers of the coming Reformation. Among his successors and/or pupils were Peter Breuer [de] and Philipp Koch.

Major works

 
Holy Blood Altar by Tilman Riemenschneider in Rothenburg ob der Tauber
 
Last Supper detail from Holy Blood Altar in Rothenburg ob der Tauber

The largest collection of his work, 81 pieces, can be found in the Mainfränkisches Museum in the Fortress Marienberg in Würzburg.

  • Hassenbacher Vesperbild, church of Hassenbach [de], around 1490, wood
  • Altar of the Farewell of the Apostles, Allerheiligenkirche, Kleinschwarzenlohe [de] near Nuremberg, 1491
  • Altar Piece, Maria Magdalena, Münnerstadt, 1490/1492
  • Adam and Eve, originally Marienkapelle Würzburg, Mainfränkisches Museum, 1491/1493
  • Sculpture of Bishop Rudolf von Scherenberg, Würzburg Cathedral, 1496/1499
  • Emperor's Tomb, Bamberg Cathedral, 1499/1513
  • Mary Salome and Zebedee, Würzburg 1501-5, now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London
  • Saint Anne and her three husbands, Munich, Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, 1505/1510, wood
  • Grieving Maria, Würzburg, Mainfränkisches Museum, around 1505
  • Altar of Maria, Creglingen, around 1505/1508, wood
  • Altar of the Apostles, Altar of the Church Fathers, and Altar of the Annunciation, Carving of St. Kilian, Crucifix, epitaph of Hans von Bibra, St. Leo church, Bibra near Meiningen, around 1500, wood except epitaph
  • Crucifixion, St. Nikolas Church in Eisingen, Bavaria, 1500—1505
  • Holy Blood Altar, Jakobskirche, Rothenburg ob der Tauber, 1501—1505, wood
  • Altar of the Apostles, St.-Kilians-Kirche zu Windsheim, 1509, now in the Kurpfälzisches Museum, Heidelberg
  • Crucifixion Altar, church of Detwang (Rothenburg ob der Tauber), 1510/1513, now in the Kurpfälzisches Museum, Heidelberg
  • Tomb of Bishop Lorenz of Bibra, Würzburg Cathedral, 1520/1522
  • Madonna of the Rosary, pilgrim's church of Maria im Weingarten [de], near Volkach, around 1521/1524
  • The Lamentation of Christ, abbey church of Maidbronn near Würzburg, 1525
  • The Assumption of the Virgin, center panel of the Creglingen altarpiece, Herrgottskirche, Creglingen, 1495–1499

In literature

 
Altar of Maria in Creglingen

The character Goldmund in the 1930 book Narcissus and Goldmund by Hermann Hesse serves as an apprentice with a master sculptor who is socially prominent in the town where he worked and whose character appears to be loosely based on that of Riemenschneider. He serves both as an artistic inspiration for Goldmund and as a foil for the less restrained temperament of Goldmund.

Hesse describes Riemenschneider's statue of Mary with child which resides in the Pfarrkirche St Bernard in Würzburg as:

"Dreamily she gazes out from her glass case, far away from our world... in her gracefulness and distinction she is refined to a degree of perfection far above that of mankind today."

The plot of Elizabeth Peters's first Vicky Bliss mystery novel, "Borrower of the Night" (1973) centers around the search for a missing Riemenschneider sculpture. Most of the action takes place in Rothenburg ob der Tauber.

References

  1. ^ Kalden-Rosenfeld, Iris, Tilman Riemenschneider—the Sculptor and His Workshop, Königstein im Taunus: Karl Robert Langewiesche Nachfolger Hans Köster Verlagsbuchhandler KG,2004, ISBN 3-7845-3223-3; p. 86 and illustration, cat. no. 101
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Tilman Riemenschneider – Werke seiner Blütezeit (German). Freunde Mainfränkischer Kunst und Geschichte e.V. Würzburg. 2004.
  3. ^ for this and other dating, see loc cit, p. 132 and following.
  4. ^ a b c Dettelbacher, Werner (1974). Franken – Kunst, Geschichte und Landschaft (German). Dumont Verlag. ISBN 3-7701-0746-2.

External links

tilman, riemenschneider, bach, scholar, albert, riemenschneider, asteroid, 6145, riemenschneider, 1460, july, 1531, german, sculptor, woodcarver, active, würzburg, from, 1483, most, prolific, versatile, sculptors, transition, period, between, late, gothic, ren. For the Bach scholar see Albert Riemenschneider For the asteroid see 6145 Riemenschneider Tilman Riemenschneider c 1460 7 July 1531 was a German sculptor and woodcarver active in Wurzburg from 1483 He was one of the most prolific and versatile sculptors of the transition period between late Gothic and Renaissance a master in stone and limewood Tilman RiemenschneiderSupposed self portrait of Tilman Riemenschneider 1 Bornc 1460Heiligenstadt im Eichsfeld Holy Roman EmpireDied 1531 07 07 7 July 1531Wurzburg Holy Roman EmpireNationalityGermanOccupationsculptorYears activec 1473 until 1527 Contents 1 Biography 2 Art 3 Major works 4 In literature 5 References 6 External linksBiography EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tilman Riemenschneider news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Saint Barbara Bayerisches Nationalmuseum The Lamentation of Christ Maidbronn Detail of stone tomb of Rudolf von Scherenberg in Wurzburg Cathedral 1496 1499 Limewood carved figure of Saint George fighting the dragon 1490 Tilman Riemenschneider was born around the year 1460 at Heiligenstadt im Eichsfeld in present day Thuringia 2 2 When Riemenschneider was about five years old his father was involved in a violent political conflict the Mainzer Stiftsfehde de so the family had to leave Heiligenstadt and all their possessions They resettled in Osterode where his father became Master of the Mint a good position at that time and where Riemenschneider spent his childhood years Riemenschneider likely came to Wurzburg for the first time at the age of 18 in 1478 79 2 2 His uncle served as notary and financial advisor to the bishop there but he did not stay for long Around 1473 Riemenschneider learned the trade of sculpting and woodcarving likely in Swabia or the Upper Rhine possibly in Strasbourg and or Ulm At that time the statutes of the guild of sculptors required that an apprentice travel to many different workshops to gain experience Very little is known about this period of his life but he likely came in contact with the work of Martin Schongauer whose copper engravings served him later as examples In 1483 he settled in Wurzburg 2 2 On 7 December 1483 he joined the Saint Luke s Guild of painters sculptors and glass workers as a painter s assistant On 28 February 1485 he married Anna Schmidt born Uchenhofer a widow of a master goldsmith with three sons This marriage not only brought him property but it also meant that he could end his apprenticeship and become a master craftsman Also in 1485 Riemenschneider became a citizen of Wurzburg which made it possible to attain the status of master craftsman and opened a workshop in Franziskanergasse in the home of his wife 2 2 His earliest confirmed work is the gravestone of Eberhard von Grumbach in the Pfarrkirche at Rimpar This may be the type of work he started out with before obtaining large church commissions He started to receive numerous orders from the town councils of Wurzburg and neighboring towns The earliest large work attributed to him is the Franziskusaltar in the St Jakobskirche in Rothenburg ob der Tauber which is described in the church guide book as about 1490 but its style compared to other works of that date is rather primitive suggesting it may be an earlier work sometimes dated from 1485 3 In 1490 the town council of Munnerstadt ordered an altarpiece for the altar of St Maria Magdalena the parish church which included a carving of Mary Magdalene with six angels It was set up in 1492 In 1491 the town council of Wurzburg ordered two life sized stone figures of Adam and Eve for the south portal of the council s church the Marienkapelle erected in 1493 2 2 In 1494 Riemenschneider s first wife died leaving him with three stepsons and a daughter In keeping with the times and his status he remarried in 1497 Anna Rappolt 2 2 She bore him two daughters and three sons all of whom seem to have inherited their father s artistic talent In 1495 he created the statue of Mary with child Pfarrkirche St Bernard in Wurzburg More high profile work followed In 1496 Riemenschneider received the order to carve the tomb of Prince Bishop Rudolf von Scherenberg at Wurzburg Cathedral It was delivered in 1499 the same year in which an order arrived for the Imperial tomb at Bamberg Cathedral delivered 1513 2 2 By 1500 he had developed an outstanding reputation as an artist and had become a wealthy Wurzburg citizen Not only did he own a number of houses but he also was a landowner with his own vineyards His flourishing workshop provided work for as many as 40 apprentices doing woodcarving sculpting and painting In November 1504 Riemenschneider became a member of the Unterrat councilman of the town of Wurzburg an office he held until 1525 2 3 This office not only brought him social status but it also helped him obtain many large and profitable orders In 1508 Riemenschneider married Margaretha Wurzbach From 1509 until 1522 he was a member of the Oberrat four times He married again in 1520 a woman of whom only the first name Margarethe is known In 1520 1 Riemenschneider was a mayor of Wurzburg in the Middle Ages there were always two people who held this position at the same time 2 3 4 28 His increasing engagement in local politics at a time of heavy order volume meant that his apprentices took a more prominent role in the creation of the workshop s output Art historians have been able to identify specific figures as the work of individual workers 2 11 12 During the German Peasants War Riemenschneider was one of the town council members who refused to obey an order by Konrad von Thungen the Prince Bishop of Wurzburg to fight the revolting peasants 2 23 On 4 June 1525 the peasant s army was destroyed with 8 000 killed just outside Wurzburg by the troops of Georg Steward of Waldburg Zeil and the bishop After the town surrendered the full town council including Riemenschneider was incarcerated and tortured in Marienberg Fortress The claim that both of his hands were broken during the torture which ended his artistic career is today considered to be a legend without base in fact 2 24 It probably only originated in the 19th century after his rediscovery 4 24 Together with the rest of the council Tilman was set free after two months with loss of most of his property The only order he is known to have received after this was work in 1527 for a Benedictine nunnery at Kitzingen 2 4 23 Until his death on 7 July 1531 at Wurzburg he led a retired life with his fourth wife His son Jorg from his second marriage continued the workshop after his death Due to his loss of status Riemenschneider was soon forgotten as an artist other than for the two gravestones of Bishops Rudolf von Scherenberg and Lorenz von Bibra side by side at the Wurzburg Cathedral Only when his gravestone was discovered in 1822 between Wurzburg Cathedral and Neumunster was his outstanding position in Gothic sculpture recognized by a wider audience Unlike Albrecht Durer or Veit Stoss Riemenschneider acquired true fame only posthumously 4 28 Art Edit Ascension of Mary Magdalene from the Magdalena Altarpiece Munnerstadt 1490 1492 A limewood carving of Mary Magdalene sporting thick body hair Bayerisches Nationalmuseum Munich The sculptures and woodcarvings of Tilman Riemenschneider are in the late Gothic style although his later work show mannerist characteristics Notably the tomb for Lorenz von Bibra see below is considered as one of the pieces marking the transition from Gothic to Renaissance art His work is characterized by the expressiveness of the figurines faces often shown with an inward look as in the self portrait and by their detailed and richly folded clothing The emphasis on expression of inner emotions sets Riemenschneider s work apart from that of his immediate predecessors Riemenschneider s early success as a sculptor was due to the plasticity of his works with great care being taken of modeling the folds of garments This way of sculpting the garments as well as the typical oval faces and almond shaped eyes were modelled on art from the Upper Rhine region of the 1470s implying that Riemenschneider may have learned his trade either there or at Ulm Later works lost some of the volume of the early sculptures allowing a more efficient production 2 7 8 Riemenschneider is seen today as one of the first sculptors of the 15th century who did not have all his figures painted Prior to the 1490s almost every sculpture had been painted in several layers by a different artist who often attracted more admiration than the sculptor The reasons for shifting to a new type of art where the wood was visible are still debated by art historians 2 15 Riemenschneider worked in both wood and stone It is assumed he learned stone carving first and only later turned to wood carving Some wooden figures though unmistakably his own work show some signs of less than perfect choice of wood or handling 2 17 18 Souren Melikian places Riemenschneider s best work such as the Virgin listening to the Annunciation in the same league as the oil paintings of Albrecht Durer Art historian Kenneth Clark views the Riemenschneider figures as showing the serious personal piety in Germany in the late fifteenth century and as harbingers of the coming Reformation Among his successors and or pupils were Peter Breuer de and Philipp Koch Major works Edit Holy Blood Altar by Tilman Riemenschneider in Rothenburg ob der Tauber Last Supper detail from Holy Blood Altar in Rothenburg ob der Tauber The largest collection of his work 81 pieces can be found in the Mainfrankisches Museum in the Fortress Marienberg in Wurzburg Hassenbacher Vesperbild church of Hassenbach de around 1490 wood Altar of the Farewell of the Apostles Allerheiligenkirche Kleinschwarzenlohe de near Nuremberg 1491 Altar Piece Maria Magdalena Munnerstadt 1490 1492 Adam and Eve originally Marienkapelle Wurzburg Mainfrankisches Museum 1491 1493 Sculpture of Bishop Rudolf von Scherenberg Wurzburg Cathedral 1496 1499 Emperor s Tomb Bamberg Cathedral 1499 1513 Mary Salome and Zebedee Wurzburg 1501 5 now in the Victoria and Albert Museum London Saint Anne and her three husbands Munich Bayerisches Nationalmuseum 1505 1510 wood Grieving Maria Wurzburg Mainfrankisches Museum around 1505 Altar of Maria Creglingen around 1505 1508 wood Altar of the Apostles Altar of the Church Fathers and Altar of the Annunciation Carving of St Kilian Crucifix epitaph of Hans von Bibra St Leo church Bibra near Meiningen around 1500 wood except epitaph Crucifixion St Nikolas Church in Eisingen Bavaria 1500 1505 Holy Blood Altar Jakobskirche Rothenburg ob der Tauber 1501 1505 wood Altar of the Apostles St Kilians Kirche zu Windsheim 1509 now in the Kurpfalzisches Museum Heidelberg Crucifixion Altar church of Detwang Rothenburg ob der Tauber 1510 1513 now in the Kurpfalzisches Museum Heidelberg Tomb of Bishop Lorenz of Bibra Wurzburg Cathedral 1520 1522 Madonna of the Rosary pilgrim s church of Maria im Weingarten de near Volkach around 1521 1524 The Lamentation of Christ abbey church of Maidbronn near Wurzburg 1525 The Assumption of the Virgin center panel of the Creglingen altarpiece Herrgottskirche Creglingen 1495 1499In literature Edit Altar of Maria in CreglingenThe character Goldmund in the 1930 book Narcissus and Goldmund by Hermann Hesse serves as an apprentice with a master sculptor who is socially prominent in the town where he worked and whose character appears to be loosely based on that of Riemenschneider He serves both as an artistic inspiration for Goldmund and as a foil for the less restrained temperament of Goldmund Hesse describes Riemenschneider s statue of Mary with child which resides in the Pfarrkirche St Bernard in Wurzburg as Dreamily she gazes out from her glass case far away from our world in her gracefulness and distinction she is refined to a degree of perfection far above that of mankind today The plot of Elizabeth Peters s first Vicky Bliss mystery novel Borrower of the Night 1973 centers around the search for a missing Riemenschneider sculpture Most of the action takes place in Rothenburg ob der Tauber References Edit Kalden Rosenfeld Iris Tilman Riemenschneider the Sculptor and His Workshop Konigstein im Taunus Karl Robert Langewiesche Nachfolger Hans Koster Verlagsbuchhandler KG 2004 ISBN 3 7845 3223 3 p 86 and illustration cat no 101 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Tilman Riemenschneider Werke seiner Blutezeit German Freunde Mainfrankischer Kunst und Geschichte e V Wurzburg 2004 for this and other dating see loc cit p 132 and following a b c Dettelbacher Werner 1974 Franken Kunst Geschichte und Landschaft German Dumont Verlag ISBN 3 7701 0746 2 The Limewood Sculptors of Renaissance Germany Michael Baxandall 1980 Tilman Riemenschneider Master Sculptor of the Late Middle Ages Julien Chapuis et al 1999 Tilman Riemenschneider The Catholic Encyclopedia Riemenschneider im Taubertal Kurt Gerstenberg 1939 Vincent Mayr Riemenschneider Tilman Grove Art Online Oxford University Press 6 21 2006 Julien Chapuis Tilman Riemenschneider Master Sculptor of the Late Middle Ages National Gallery London Publications 11 October 1999 ISBN 0 300 08162 6 ISBN 978 0 300 08162 6External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tilman Riemenschneider Mainfrankisches Museum Wurzburg National Gallery of Art exhibit Tilman Riemenschneider Master Sculptor of the Late Middle Ages Virgin and Child at the Spencer Museum of Art University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas Art of Germany BBC documentary 2010 In Episode one Andrew Graham Dixon visits and comments on the Holy Blood Altar Texts on Wikisource Tillmann Riemenschneider Catholic Encyclopedia 1913 Riemenschneider Tilman New International Encyclopedia 1905 Tilman Riemenschneider at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tilman Riemenschneider amp oldid 1130431825, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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