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Wikimedia Commons · CC0 · Hover to magnify, click for fullscreen
Original fileHoop (Spes) De zeven hoofddeugden (serietitel)
after Hendrick Goltzius
A woman stands within a stone niche, looking heavenward with her hand to her chest in a gesture of devotion. She holds a large anchor, the traditional symbol of stability and faith, while her heavy robes billow in sculptural folds. The scene is framed by two small shields in the upper corners containing emblems of a bird and a budding branch.
The accompanying Latin verse describes the soul's ascent toward the divine, reflecting Neoplatonic and Neostoic currents prevalent in the intellectual circles of Haarlem. It highlights the Renaissance transition where traditional Christian virtues were reimagined through the lens of humanistic spiritual perfection.
2. Spes humiles linquit terras, et nubila tranat, Inq[ue] Deum rapitur, celiq[ue] per atria fertur. HG inven. F. E.
Translation
2. Hope leaves the humble earth, and crosses the clouds, And is rapt toward God, and is borne through the halls of heaven. HG inven. F. E.
Dirck Volckertszoon Coornhert
Coornhert's Neostoic philosophy and his 'Ethics' influenced Goltzius's circle in their pursuit of moral and spiritual refinement.
Franco Estius
Estius composed the Latin inscriptions for this series, providing the theological and philosophical framework for the visual allegories.
Object
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
Engraving
allegory
Digital Source
Wikimedia Commons · CC0
http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.382342
Creative Commons Zero, Public Domain Dedication
3640 × 6994 px
cac30137a0ffbf1d230788229a41735a2943ec69
December 28, 2019
March 23, 2026
Linked Data
AI AI-cataloged fields generated by gemini-3-flash-preview on April 1, 2026. Getty identifiers are AI-inferred and may require verification.