looking closely at an enclosed garden (Besloten Hofje) at Sint-Dimpnakerk, Geel
When I visited Sint-Dimpnakerk (The Church of Saint Dymphna) in Geel, Belgium at the end of May to learn more about the church and the history surrounding Saint Dymphna, I did not anticipate finding six pilgrim badges in a sixteenth-century enclosed garden (Besloten Hofje) in a corner of the church. Though these were not Saint Dymphna pilgrim badges, my attention quickly turned towards them as I tried to discern what they were and where they had come from.
Enclosed gardens are a type of reliquary altarpiece found in houses of religious women in the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in the Low Countries. [1] The enclosed garden in Sint-Dimpnakerk was made in the first quarter of the sixteenth century in Mechelen, Belgium. Enclosed gardens have certain shared characteristics: “Small wooden boxes frame not only relics but also wax seals, jewellery, poupées de Malines [polychrome statuette], glass beads and pilgrim badges against a textile background of silk vegetation.”[2] The name ‘enclosed garden’ and the garden iconography central to them refer back to the hortus conclusus of the Song of Solomon (see verse 4:12). The Sint-Dimpnakerk enclosed garden evokes for the maker and viewer a fusion between Christ the bridegroom (displayed here in his Passion) and the church as his bride.
The Sint-Dimpnakerk enclosed garden has been largely overlooked by scholarship, which explains why most of its badges haven’t yet been documented. It is outshined at Sint-Dimpnakerk by the impressive early sixteenth-century oak altarpiece depicting the story of Dymphna. It is also outshined by the seven famous, enclosed gardens of Mechelen, which have been preserved and restored and are now displayed at the Museum Hof van Busleyden (Mechelen).
The colours of the Sint-Dimpnakerk enclosed garden are faded from light, though its components remain well intact. Six saints stand beneath a crucified Christ amid bright flowers, fabric relics, and pilgrim badges. The badges are camouflaged in the garden scene and difficult to see even from the vantage point of the altar. I returned to the church at different hours of daylight to look into the enclosed garden and found a new badge each time. Some badges are carefully sewn into the flowers surrounding them. Others are placed nearby other relics and appear as a sort of backdrop for the saints. Here badges live a second life different from their first one as pilgrim souvenirs.
Where did these pilgrim badges come from? How long had these badges been kept and why? How did religious women making these enclosed gardens come across them? How did the restoration and supplementation by E.H. Theodoor Kuyl in 1863 affect the badges? I knew I could find an answer to the first question, perhaps the only answerable one. I first consulted the Kunera database to see whether the badges, or ones similar to them, had been documented. I contacted Dr. Hanneke Van Asperen at Radboud University for help identifying the badges’ origins. The captions accompanying the gallery of six photographs below contain her initial answers.
Though pilgrim badges are commonly found in enclosed gardens, discovering these new badges at Sint-Dimpnakerk was a very welcomed surprise on the research trip. There remains much fruitful study to be undertaken about the role of badges in this enclosed garden and the afterlife they live there and elsewhere — something I will be reflecting on in an upcoming blog post.
Works Cited
[1] “Enclosed Gardens of Mechelen (kikirpa.be).” Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage, KIK-IRPA.
[2] “Enclosed Gardens (kikirpa.be).” Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage, KIK-IRPA.
[3] Personal communication with Dr. Hanneke Van Asperen.
I am very grateful to Maria Gerits and Frie Van Ravensteyn for the time and knowledge they shared with me during my stay in Geel. Another thanks is owed to Jolien Hoekx and Julie Cooymans at the Gasthuismuseum for their help before I arrived.
Written by Hannah Gardiner. Edited by Dr. Ann Marie Rasmussen. All photographs by Hannah Gardiner.