Journal article
The Southern Indian “Devil in Calicut” in Early Modern Northern Europe: Images, Texts and Objects in Motion
J Spinks
Journal of Early Modern History | Brill | Published : 2014
Abstract
For sixteenth-century Europeans, the so-called demon and idol known as the "devil in Calicut" vividly epitomized the town of Calicut on India's Malabar coast. Ludovico di Varthema's textual invention of the devil in 1510 was rapidly followed by a range of visual images that circulated in print. This article explores how and why the most persistent and vigorous images of this devil emerged from Reformation and Counter- Reformation northern Europe. It further proposes that aspects of the visual and material culture of southern India - and specifically metal sculptures and coins - should be mined in order to better understand the European creation of the "devil in Calicut" and its constant rein..
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