The origins of the painting are unclear. It may have been commissioned by
David of Burgundy,
Bishop of Utrecht from 1456 to 1496, or his half-brother,
Philip of Burgundy, who was Bishop from 1517 to 1524. Lorne Campbell argues that the painting was commissioned by
Daniel van Boechout, Lord of Boerlare and Beverweerd, as the altarpiece of the
Lady Chapel of the
Benedictine Abbey of St Adrian in
Geraardsbergen, in East Flanders, south of Ghent and west of Brussels, where it first enters the historical record in 1600. It was bought by the rulers of the
Habsburg Netherlands,
Albert and
Isabella, in 1601, who had seen it at the abbey the previous year. They paid £2,100 to the abbot, and moved the painting to become the altar of the chapel of their palace in Brussels. The palace was destroyed by a fire in February 1731, but the chapel and its contents survived. The chapel was demolished in the 1770s, but the painting had already been removed by the Governor of the
Austrian Netherlands,
Charles of Lorraine. It was sold after Charles' death in 1781 to Emmanuel-Marie de Cock,
Pensionary of Brussels and Greffier-Pensionary of the
States of Brabant. A painting matching its description came to London in 1787 and was sold at an auction held in London by
John Greenwood the following year. It came into the possession of art dealer
Michael Bryan by 1795, and was sold to
Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle, who displayed it at
Castle Howard. It was restored in 1884 by William Morrill, and then moved to
Naworth Castle.
George Howard, 9th Earl of Carlisle served as a Trustee of the
National Gallery for more than 30 years, and offered to sell the painting to the National Gallery shortly before his death in 1911. His widow honoured his wishes, and the painting was bought by the gallery later in 1911. The £40,000 purchase price was funded by an advance of the gallery's annual purchase grant and other gallery funds, with contributions from
The Art Fund,
Edward Tennant, 1st Baron Glenconner,
Edward Guinness, 1st Earl of Iveagh,
Alfred de Rothschild, and
George Curzon, Earl (later Marquess) Curzon of Kedleston. The gallery published a monograph by
Maurice W. Brockwell to commemorate the acquisition – the first such publication by the gallery. Copies are held by the
Museo Nacional de San Carlos in Mexico City, the
Wittelsbacher Ausgleichfonds in Munich, the church of St John the Baptist in Nethen, the
National Gallery in Prague, and the
Tula Art Museum. ==References==