Book of Hours, use of Chartres (DS9698) (Q43098)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens (.b18619265, https://catalog.huntington.org/record=b1861926, mssHM 1150)
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Book of Hours, use of Chartres (DS9698) |
Manuscript metadata collected by Digital Scriptorium from The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens (.b18619265, https://catalog.huntington.org/record=b1861926, mssHM 1150) |
Statements
Firmin-Didot, Ambroise, 1790-1876
0 references
Hoe, Robert, 1839-1909
0 references
Illuminations (paintings)--France--15th century
0 references
Books of hours--France--15th century
0 references
between 1485 and 1499
15. century
1485Gregorian
1499Gregorian
0 references
Extent: ff. ii + iv + 162 + ii : parchment ; 115 x 173 mm
0 references
Book of Hours written at the end of the fifteenth century in France with the use of Chartres in the hours of the Virgin and in the office of the dead; the saints of the calendar also suggest Chartres.
0 references
Span folios: ff. 1-162v. Support: Parchment. Layout: 18 28(-1, the Gospel of John) 3-208 214(-4). One catchword, f. 15v, in the script of the text, written horizontally, to the right of the inner bounding line. 20 long lines through f. 127v (quire 16), thereafter 21 long lines; ruled space, 100 x 54 mm, in a very faint brownish ink. Written in a bâtarde script in two sizes according to...
0 references
Decoration: Twelve large miniatures above 3 lines of text in squared frames, in an unusual style, the figures being painted with large heads and in dark tones, possibly by more than one artist. Small miniatures, ca. 50 x 30 mm., placed in the band border which runs the length of the text, in the outer margin. 6-line initial on f. 11 formed by a 2-headed snake biting branches with both mouths...
0 references
Input into Digital Scriptorium by: C. W. Dutschke, 9/16/2009.
0 references
The first owner may have been a woman as the prayers occasionally contain feminine forms (ff. 119v, 123v, 125v, 150, 160). A note on f. ii reads "Je suis a Demoiselle Jeanne de Malherbe, 1567." Belonged to A. Firmin Didot; his sale, Paris, 16 June 1883, n. 12 to Labitte. Belonged to Robert Hoe, Grolier Club (1892) n. 58; Cat. (1909) pp. 57-59; his sale, Anderson, New York, 1912, pt. III, n...
0 references
22 July 2024
0 references
22 July 2024
0 references