In an effort to understand Hieronymus Bosch, I have been reading about the “movers and shakers” who first conceived of our modern world. Bosch presents the fantasies of these heretics, I think, without being entirely a heretic himself.
It is easier to see a heresy from a mile off than when it is right up your nose. Or if you are an ingenious, astounding artist, like Bosch, you can examine it closely.
In his book, The Millennium of Hieronymus Bosch (translated, 1952), the author Wilhelm Franger reconstructs that past age by visiting the episcopal courts, and in particular their records of former hippiedoms and heresies.
Especially in the XIIIth and XIVth centuries, they were the paradisal, gnostic cults that flourished across what would become Germany, the Rhineland, and the Low Countries, being known generally by some variation on the theme of “Brothers and Sisters of the Free Spirit.”
These self-proclaimed “Homines Intelligentiae” met literally underground, and were the “Woke” or “Wokists” of that time, believing themselves incarnations of the Holy Ghost, and very devoted – to their own esoteric and changeable notions.
But they were not truly creative. Their “paradise” would always, always depart, generally through corruption and lust, from
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