0:00:00.010,0:00:08.180 Dr. Beth Harris: We're in Saint John's Hospital in Flanders, in 0:00:08.460,0:00:13.840 the city of Bruges, and we're looking at a reliquary in the shape 0:00:13.940,0:00:20.100 of a chapel. And this is fabulously decorated with paintings by the great 0:00:20.100,0:00:25.320 Northern Renaissance painter, Hans Memling. The shrine tells the story of 0:00:25.340,0:00:27.820 Saint Ursula. Dr. Anna Koopstra: It is made out of wood, 0:00:28.120,0:00:32.540 but it is sculpted and has these beautiful decorations like finials, 0:00:32.540,0:00:37.420 and turrets, and small figures of saints in niches. And then the sides 0:00:37.420,0:00:41.360 are painted. Dr. Harris: And it's hard, I think for us to overstate 0:00:41.360,0:00:48.400 the importance of relics. These objects, these physical pieces of the bodies 0:00:48.400,0:00:54.960 of saints, or even objects that were associated with saints and holy figures 0:00:54.960,0:01:00.700 were venerated, people made pilgrimages to visit them. These were objects 0:01:00.700,0:01:05.880 that mediated between the earthly and the spiritual world and could in a 0:01:05.880,0:01:10.270 very tangible way, help you earn a space in heaven. Dr. Koopstra: 0:01:10.280,0:01:13.180 As we stand here on one of the short sides, we see the 0:01:13.180,0:01:17.600 Virgin with two nuns from the community here in the hospital. 0:01:17.740,0:01:22.680 They are depicted as also standing inside of a church. Now, 0:01:22.680,0:01:28.120 we know that the shrine was intended for this community, but it is interesting 0:01:28.120,0:01:32.500 that it is two nuns who are depicted. Though they may be standing 0:01:32.500,0:01:38.540 for the whole of the community rather than two specific individuals. 0:01:38.550,0:01:42.040 Dr. Harris: We start on one side and we move, and in a way, 0:01:42.040,0:01:48.423 this object could take you on a virtual pilgrimage together with Saint Ursula. 0:01:48.460,0:01:53.320 And Memling is such an amazing painter in terms of creating these illusions 0:01:53.340,0:01:57.960 of reality that we very much feel a part of what we're seeing. 0:01:57.970,0:02:02.420 Dr. Koopstra: So the actual story that we see of Saint Ursula is 0:02:02.480,0:02:08.740 a story about traveling, making a pilgrimage to Rome. The story begins with 0:02:08.740,0:02:15.420 Ursula disembarking her ship. She is traveling accompanied by other female 0:02:15.680,0:02:21.560 virgins, 11,000 it is said, and she's disembarking here in Cologne. And 0:02:21.640,0:02:25.400 we know that because the buildings that we see in the distance, 0:02:25.580,0:02:28.220 one of those is Cologne Cathedral. Dr. Harris: They've set out 0:02:28.220,0:02:33.660 from Brittany. They've sailed along the Rhine, they disembark at Cologne, 0:02:33.940,0:02:37.640 and the figures are so filled with movement. Their ship has docked. 0:02:37.780,0:02:42.900 The figures are unloading goods. We see Saint Ursula beautifully dressed 0:02:42.980,0:02:48.340 in blue and white. She looks very noble, and the entourage is about 0:02:48.340,0:02:51.640 to make its way into the gates of the city. If we look 0:02:51.640,0:02:56.520 really closely, we can see that Ursula appears again in the background. 0:02:56.530,0:03:00.160 Dr. Koopstra: Cologne will also be the place where, upon return, 0:03:00.600,0:03:05.320 she will die, and this is alluded to in the background where we 0:03:05.320,0:03:09.340 see an angel announcing this. Dr. Harris: We're seeing three stops 0:03:09.440,0:03:12.320 on this side in her journey, and in the next one, 0:03:12.320,0:03:17.060 she's disembarking at Basel. And from here, they'll make their way on foot. 0:03:17.070,0:03:21.240 Dr. Koopstra: These scenes are filled with people, and yet they 0:03:21.240,0:03:26.620 are so cleverly devised that our eye immediately picks up on Ursula, 0:03:26.840,0:03:32.040 who is dressed similarly in every scene. And then the journey continues 0:03:32.240,0:03:38.950 on foot and we see people receding into the distance and snowy mountaintops, 0:03:38.960,0:03:42.340 which will be the Alps. Dr. Harris: Ursula and her entourage have 0:03:42.340,0:03:46.480 to travel across the Alps on their way to Rome, which is the 0:03:46.480,0:03:52.440 final destination of their pilgrimage. Ursula is kneeling and being greeted 0:03:52.440,0:03:54.770 by the Pope. Dr. Koopstra: Her tresses are now undone, her hair 0:03:54.810,0:03:58.880 is long, but we recognize her. And then through this open portal, we 0:03:58.880,0:04:02.680 look into the building, where her husband to be 0:04:03.240,0:04:08.620 will be baptized. And that is on the right. We see Ursula attending 0:04:08.720,0:04:12.520 mass, another person confessing. Dr. Harris: So here in this next 0:04:12.520,0:04:18.120 scene, we understand that they've left Rome and they've arrived at Basel, 0:04:18.360,0:04:21.700 and we can see them disembarking. And in the foreground, we see the 0:04:21.700,0:04:27.476 figures again this time leaving Basel in order to head back toward Cologne. 0:04:27.566,0:04:33.200 Memling is an amazing narrator of this story, but also an amazing painter 0:04:33.200,0:04:39.540 of these small details that draw us in. For example, the vestments that 0:04:39.540,0:04:45.580 the Pope is wearing, his tiara, patterns that we see, the small gems, 0:04:45.720,0:04:51.000 the different hats, the texture of the figure's hair. There's so much to 0:04:51.000,0:04:55.600 convince us of that reality. Dr. Koopstra: And still in all of 0:04:55.600,0:05:02.560 that variation, you are able to follow the main storyline, and that is 0:05:02.780,0:05:05.960 the skill of the artist. Dr. Harris: And our eye does immediately 0:05:05.960,0:05:11.200 go to Ursula herself in the foreground, her hands clasped in prayer as 0:05:11.200,0:05:17.160 she continues her pilgrimage. The next two scenes are the climax of the 0:05:17.160,0:05:23.280 story. And here we see terrible violence. And those figures are Huns, they're 0:05:23.780,0:05:29.940 pagans, and these innocent Christian women are being brutally murdered. 0:05:30.140,0:05:35.720 But it's that very martyrdom that ensures their place in heaven. 0:05:35.720,0:05:39.440 Dr. Koopstra: And we see Ursula twice. We see her once still on 0:05:39.440,0:05:44.760 the ship, where she catches the body of her husband to be, 0:05:44.960,0:05:51.180 who's been pierced by a sword. And on the right we see Ursula very 0:05:51.440,0:05:55.080 serene, moments before her death. And there's so much you see here as 0:05:55.080,0:05:59.440 well. Details like, the armor, that is shiny, and it also reflects the 0:05:59.440,0:06:04.680 people standing around. Ursula herself is very serene, like a beacon of 0:06:04.760,0:06:07.540 calm. Dr. Harris: One of the things that's so interesting about 0:06:07.900,0:06:13.240 the legends of Saint Ursula is that the people of Cologne found just 0:06:13.240,0:06:18.240 outside their walls, a large cemetery that dated back to Roman times, 0:06:18.240,0:06:24.040 but which they interpreted as the site of the burial of Ursula and 0:06:24.120,0:06:28.580 the maidens that accompanied her. And so there were so many relics to 0:06:28.580,0:06:34.000 be had, and these relics made their way to all sorts of places 0:06:34.220,0:06:39.910 in Europe that became themselves, sites of pilgrimage like here in Bruges. 0:06:39.950,0:06:45.260 Dr. Koopstra: We know that it was finished in 1489 because in that 0:06:45.260,0:06:49.800 year, on the feast day of Saint Ursula, on the 21st of October, 0:06:49.880,0:06:56.080 in a very solemn ceremony, the relics were taken out of an older 0:06:56.540,0:07:02.777 shrine to this much more ambitious shrine painted by Memling. 0:07:02.780,0:07:06.920 Dr. Harris: So this is an object that is commissioned by the community here 0:07:07.300,0:07:14.540 to honor Ursula's relics and to also, as the patrons, show their devotion 0:07:14.700,0:07:17.740 and their faith. Dr. Koopstra: One of the other things is the roof. 0:07:18.000,0:07:22.794 We see on each side three medallions, here with the virgin, 0:07:22.804,0:07:28.280 Christ and God, the father, the coronation, and then two music making angels. 0:07:28.400,0:07:33.520 But the way that it is painted also references a different material. 0:07:33.530,0:07:37.740 Dr. Harris: And we might have other reliquaries actually made of 0:07:37.740,0:07:44.140 gold with enamel. But here, very simple materials made to look and to 0:07:44.140,0:07:49.880 appear very luxurious. Until I was in front of this, it was hard 0:07:49.880,0:07:54.820 for me to believe that the gold decorative forms that we see on 0:07:54.820,0:08:00.360 the roof weren't real, weren't sculpted, but they are painted. Memling is 0:08:00.360,0:08:02.880 showing us what he can do as a painter. Dr. Koopstra: And so 0:08:03.280,0:08:10.088 opposite the panel with the standing Virgin in the chapel, we see Saint 0:08:10.157,0:08:14.620 Ursula protecting, in her robe, a large group of women. She holds the 0:08:14.620,0:08:18.460 arrow referencing how she died. Dr. Harris: And these beautiful 0:08:18.500,0:08:25.730 jewels in her crown, the clasps of her cloak, the beauty and sumptuousness 0:08:25.740,0:08:31.753 of Ursula in heaven. Here Ursula is being likened to the Virgin Mary. 0:08:31.753,0:08:34.190 Dr. Koopstra: It should also be noted that this object would've 0:08:34.200,0:08:38.222 only come out once a year on the Feast day of Saint Ursula. 0:08:38.225,0:08:43.120 Dr. Harris: So like so much art history, this object has been transformed from 0:08:43.460,0:08:48.300 one that helped people on a spiritual journey to what it is today, 0:08:48.360,0:08:51.960 a work of art, that we can admire and perhaps still have some 0:08:51.960,0:08:55.500 of that sense of it's tremendous spiritual value.