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Sibylla Sambetha
1480 painting by Hans Memling From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Sibylla Sambetha (the Persian Sibyl, also known simply as Portrait of a Young Woman) is a small oil-on-oak painting by the German-Flemish painter Hans Memling. Although the inscriptions on the border of the brown marble frame record that it was completed in 1480, there is no record of the woman portrayed. It has been in the collection of the Old St. John's Hospital in Bruges since 1815.[1]
The picture shows a young woman who is not pretty[2] but elegant and well-dressed. Her wealth and status are indicated by her hennin and chain and rings. She is set against a flat, black background and looks outwards, beyond the pictorial frame; avoiding the gaze of the viewer.[3] Her hands are folded while her fingertips rest on the lower border of a painted brown marbled frame, in an early and effective example of trompe-l'œil, a device the art historian Matthias Depoorter described as allowing Memling as able to "merge the painted space with the real one".[1]
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Description
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Panel

The panel is 38 cm (15 in) high and 26.5 cm (10.4 in) wide.[4] The sitter wears a truncated hennin under a sheer veil that falls across her face and shoulders. She has pale skin and a fashionably high forehead, with her hair tightly pinned to fit under the headdress. Today her dress is dark purple or black—the colours have darkened from their original blue—with a white collar above a red bodice.[3] She wears a fashionable hennin, a long neck chain and seven rings on her fingers.[1]
Inscriptions
The frame's lower border containeds a carved banderole with an inscription reading SIBYLLA SAMBETHA QUAE / EST PERSICA; associating the woman with the Persian Sibyl. A painted metal cartouche placed at the top left of the picture is a later addition, and contains the words "SIBYLLA SAMBETHA QVAE ET PERSICA, AN: ANTE CHRIST: NAT: 2040" (The Sibyl Sambetha, the Persian, in the year 2040 BC).[5]

The scroll at the end of the frame bears another later addition, the text of which refers to Mary with the words ECCE BESTIA CONCVLCABERIS, GIGNETVR D(OMI)NUS IN ORBEM TERRARVM ET CREATUM VIRGINIS ERIT SALVS GENTIVM, INVISIBILE VERBV PALPABITVR (Here let the serpent be trampled under your talon, let the Lord be born in the earthly realm, and the V|irgin's creation will become the world's salvation: the invisible word will be made palpable).[2]
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Identity of the sitter
The woman's identity is unknown, although there have been some attempts by art historians to identify her as Willem Moreel's daughter Mary. Willem was a magistrate of Bruges and commissioned Membling to paint both a 1482 portrait diptych and a donor triptych[6] for the Church of Saint James, Bruges, which he had founded. However, this theory is largely discarded as Mary Moreel would have been too young in 1480.[7]
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