Dictionary of Renaissance art

LIPSIUS, JUSTUS

Lipsius, Justus: translation

(1547-1606)
Flemish philosopher and humanist who revived the ancient Stoic philosophy of Seneca and Tacitus and tried to reconcile it with Christianity. The founder of Neo-Stoicism, Lipsius articulated in hisDe Constantia(1584) andPoliticorum sive civilis doctrinae(1589) the mastery of emotions and the values of choosing virtue over pleasure as the proper paths. For Lipsius, the evils of society can only be resolved through constancy, which he defined as strength of mind, invulnerable to external events. Peter Paul Rubens' brother, Philip, was a pupil of Lipsius. When Philip died, the artist commemorated the event by paintingThe Four Philosophers(1612; Florence, Palazzo Pitti), a work that shows Lipsius surrounded by three of his pupils, including Philip. The artist stands behind the main figures, opposite a bust of Seneca. The four tulips in front of the bust, two opened and two closed, denote that both Philip and Lipsius had already died when the portrait was created. As further homage to those depicted, Rubens added the Roman Palatine Hill in the background, in antiquity the locus of learned discussion.

  1. lipsius, justusLipsius Justus translation Lipsius Justus Biographical article on the humanist by Paul Lejay dd Catholic Encyclopedia.Kevin Knight...Catholic encyclopedia
  2. lipsius, justusLipsius Justus translation Dutchborn humaniststrong one of the great classicalstrong scholars of the late Renaissance also historically important for his philosophical wo...Historical Dictionary of Renaissance
  3. lipsius, justusLipsius Justus translation Renaissance philosophy outside Italy....History of philosophy