Psalter (DS557) (Q2633)

From DS 2.0 Catalog
Revision as of 17:27, 4 February 2024 by Lpc (talk | contribs) (‎Changed claim: associated name as recorded (P14): Henry Yates Thompson (1838-1928), bought from Quaritch, 14 March 1895, with his bookplate, his no. 29; his sale, Sotheby’s, 23 March 1920, lot 43, to Tregaskis (his cat. 850, 1922, no. 17, and cat. 871, 1923, no. 15); C. L. Ricketts; acquired by the Lilly Library with the Ricketts Collection in 1961.)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from Indiana University, Bloomington (Ricketts 28)
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Psalter (DS557)
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from Indiana University, Bloomington (Ricketts 28)

    Statements

    Inscribed at foot of fol. 1r, Sum Liber Johannis Hunt ex dono Mariae Lussher 1.5.8.5i doubtless John Hunt (c. 1560-1612), of Gaydon, Staffordshire, etc., given to him in 1585 by Mary Lusher (c. 1564-1634, daughter of Nicholas Lusher, of Shooland in Putterham, Surrey), whom he had married in 1582; by descent to their daughter Bridget, who in 1633 married George Starkey (d. 1679).
    0 references
    and to Bridget’s daughter Elizabeth, who in 1690 married Richard Sanders (d. 1723) all of whom appear in the genealogical notes added in the margins of fols. 103v-109v; sale at Sotheby’s, 6 August 1878, lot 1440 (among ‘other properties’), to Quaritch (his General Catalogue, 1880, no. 8575; cat. 332, 1880, no. 41; General Catalogue VIII, 1884, no. 17397; and cat. 369, 1886, no. 35668).
    0 references
    Henry Yates Thompson (1838-1928), bought from Quaritch, 14 March 1895, with his bookplate, his no. 29; his sale, Sotheby’s, 23 March 1920, lot 43, to Tregaskis (his cat. 850, 1922, no. 17, and cat. 871, 1923, no. 15); C. L. Ricketts; acquired by the Lilly Library with the Ricketts Collection in 1961.
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    Binding: Bound in old (perhaps seventeenth-century) blue silk over pasteboards, marbled endleaves, paper flyleaves, worn; in a brown morocco case.
    0 references
    Figurative details, ff. 138: 6-line historiated initial and full border on fol. 7r, approximately 40 mm. by 55 mm., showing a man in red kneeling before David with his harp.
    0 references
    Other decoration, ff. 138: Headings in red, versal initials in alternating blue with red penwork and burnished gold with purple penwork; 2-line psalm initials in gold on red and blue grounds with white tracery, and 3-line initials in gold on panels infilled with coloured leaves and with marginal sprays (for psalms 101, 114, etc.); seven 6-line initials with three-quarter illuminated borders...
    0 references
    Script, ff. 138: Liturgical textura.
    0 references
    Layout, ff. 138: Collation: i#^6#, ii–xvii#^8#, xviii#^4#, with horizontal catchwords and traces of contemporary leaf signatures; ruled in red ink, 21 lines, written-space 167 mm. by 102 mm.; written in dark brown ink.
    0 references
    Manuscript note: The correspondence relating to the dispersal of Yates Thompson's sale of this manuscript and the rest of his collection is also in the Lilly Library.
    0 references
    Bibliography: James 1898, pp. 138-40, no. 29; Thompson 1914, pls. LXXIII-IV; De Ricci 1926, p. 53, no. 29; De Ricci 1935, p. 622; Bennett 1967, p. 332.
    0 references
    f. 1r: Latin.
    0 references
    ff. 138: Some pages very rubbed. The original patron of the manuscript is represented by the young man in red robes, trimmed in gold, kneeling before King David in the opening initial on fol. 7r. For examples of similar kneeling figures crossing through the gateway of initials, see Scott 1989, esp. pp. 21–22, and Marrow 1996.
    0 references
    ff. 138: Latin.
    0 references
    bookplate: The cryptic price ‘£bee.e.e’ on his bookplate is Henry Yates Thompson's (1838-1928) purchase cost, using his code word ‘bryanstone’, whereby ‘a’ = 1, ‘r’ = 2, ‘y’ = 3, and so on; this manuscript therefore cost him £100.
    0 references
    f. 1r-138r: The Calendar is of Sarum type, consistent with use in London. The translation of Saint Erkenwald, founder of Chertsey Abbey and later bishop of London, is underlined in red and accorded 9 lections (14 November). His relics were moved to their shrine on the east side of the wall behind the high altar of St. Paul’s Cathedral in 1148. The Office of the Dead is of the Use of Sarum. The...
    0 references
    28 June 2023
    0 references
    28 June 2023
    0 references