(Q16835)

Statements

0 references
28 November 2023
0 references
Arms of Kings and Nobles of England, from Brut to King James I].
0 references
0 references
0 references
Manuscripts, English--England
0 references
0 references
Manuscripts, Renaissance--England
0 references
Manuscripts, Medieval--Massachusetts--Boston
0 references
Heraldry--England--Early works to 1800
0 references
Manuscripts, Renaissance--Massachusetts--Boston
0 references
England--Heraldry--Pictorial works
0 references
Manuscripts, English--Massachusetts--Boston
0 references
Extent: 87 leaves : paper, color coats of arms ; 341 x 202 (varies, approx. 105 x 290) mm bound to 35 cm
0 references
paper, color coats of arms
0 references
Ms. codex.
0 references
In English.
0 references
Title devised by cataloger.
0 references
Secundo folio: Queene Elizabethe began...
0 references
Collation: Paper, indistinguishable armorial watermark, fol. ii + 87 + iii ; too tightly bound to collate, and apparently misbound. Modern arabic pencil foliation, upper outer corner of each page.
0 references
Layout: One text column, with arms in outer margin (except for fol. 75, which may be bound backwards), 1-4 arms and entries per page. Bounding lines in plummet.
0 references
Script: Written in an English secretary hand, with later marginal comments in brown ink.
0 references
Decoration: 544 coats of arms in full color.
0 references
Binding: 19th-century red straight-grain morocco over pastebgoard, gilt stamped, gilt board-edges and turn-ins, spine gilt-stamped with florets in compartments, all edges gilt, blue watered-silk pastedowns and endleaves.
0 references
This collection of 544 coats of arms of noble and royal families of England begins with Brut and proceeds as far as 1612 (the later supplied title incorrectly gives the latest date as "the 3rd of James I," that is, 1605-6). Each coat of arms is accompanied by a heraldic description and brief history of the ennobled family. The arms are given in no clear order, although they do appear to be...
0 references
Provenance: Possibly owned in the early eighteenth century by Peter Le Nevé, many of whose manuscripts were acquired by the manuscript's first known owner, John Ives; in Le Nevé's 1731 John Wilcox sales catalogue, lot 733 is described as "Arms of the Nobility since William the Conqueror, in Colours." Owned in 1770 by John Ives, a Norfolk historian, his signature on fol. i: "Johannes Ives de...
0 references
Immediate source of acquisition: Acquired by BPL from a London bookdealer via the Frances Skinner Fund on 7 December 1927 (bookplate inside front cover).
0 references
Call number: MS f Med.38.
0 references
Former call number: Ms. 1329.
0 references
Bibliographic record created by BPL staff based primarily on description by Lisa Fagin Davis.
0 references
4 December 2023
0 references
0 references