Filhol, viii. Pl. 562; Landon, Musée, vii. Pl. 39.
12. St. Bruno taking the Monastic Habit. Filhol, v. Pl. 343; Landon, Musée, viii. Pl. 5.
13. Pope Victor III. confirming the Chartreuse. Filhol, ix. Pl. 717; Landon, Musée, vii. Pl. 63.
14. St. Bruno bestowing the Monastic Habit. Filhol, ix. Pl. 710; Landon, Musée, vii. Pl. 65.
15. St. Bruno receiving a Letter from Pope Urban II. Filhol, ii. Pl. 139; Landon, Musée, vii. Pl. 34.
16. St. Bruno before Pope Urban II. Landon, Musée, viii. Pl. 37.
17. St. Bruno refusing the Archbishopric of Reggio. Filhol, vi. Pl. 421; Landon, Musée, viii. Pl. 41.
18. St. Bruno in the Deserts of Calabria. Filhol, ix. Pl. 699; Landon, Musée, viii. Pl. 26.
19. Meeting of St. Bruno and Count Roger. Filhol, v. Pl. 301; Landon, Musée, viii. Pl. 28.
20. Apparition of St. Bruno to Count Roger. Filhol, iii. Pl. 205; Landon, Musée, viii. Pl. 30.
21. Death of St. Bruno, Oct. 6, 1101. Filhol, iv. Pl. 253; Landon, Musée, vii. Pl. 41.
22. St. Bruno borne to Heaven. Filhol, viii. Pl. 574; Landon, Musée, viii. Pl. 35.
Series engraved, in reverse, by Chauveau; Nos. 15 and 22 by S. le Clerc; No. 22 by F. Poilly.—Villot, Cat. Louvre; Landon, i. 18-39.
BRUNO, ST., VISION OF, Guercino, Bologna
Gallery; canvas, H. 11 ft. 10 in. × 7 ft.
The Virgin and Child in a glory of Angels;
below, St. Bruno in Prayer; at right a monk
with a crucifix in his hand, reading. One of
Guercino's best works. Painted in 1646 for
the Church of the Certosa, Bologna; carried
to Paris in 1796; returned in 1815. Engraved
by G. Rosaspina.—Pinac. di Bologna,
Pl. 21; Meyer, Künst. Lex., iii. 4; Landon,
Musée, xii. Pl. 6; Burckhardt, 793.
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Vision of St. Bruno, Guercino, Bologna Gallery.
BRUSASORCI, the elder, born in Verona,
in 1494, died in 1567. Venetian school.
Real name Domenico Riccio; pupil of Carotto,
according to Ridolfi, or of Niccolò
Giolfino, according to Lanzi. Studied later
in Venice the works of Titian and of Giorgione,
and learned to imitate their styles,
though not without some originality. His
mural and panel works are to be seen chiefly
in Verona. His excellence as a fresco painter
is shown in the Entry of Clement VII. and
Charles V. into Bologna, which he painted
in a hall of the Casa Ridolfi, Verona.—Ch.
Blanc, École vénitienne; Seguier, 216; Burckhardt,
167, 191, 607, 746; Bernasconi, 302.
BRUSASORCI, the younger, born in 1540,
died in 1605. Venetian school. Real name
Felice Riccio, son and pupil of Domenico
Riccio; after his father's death, finished
studies under Jacopo Ligozzi, Florence, and