I have recently been looking at two leaves from an extremely fine Flemish Book of Hours, in a double-sided frame, in a private collection.
Addenda and Corrigenda
▼
Membra disiecta
▼
Saturday, 25 June 2016
Saturday, 18 June 2016
Descriptions of One Manuscript or Two?
[Digital Library@Villanova University; Source] |
Tuesday, 14 June 2016
Other Tuns as Part of a Rebus
It occurs to me that a suggestion in the previous post will only seem plausible if the reader knows how common it was for a tun to form part of a rebus, so here are a few more examples:
Rings + tun = "Ringeston" (as discussed here).
A tun in a press = Preston
Rings + tun = "Ringeston" (as discussed here).
A tun in a press = Preston
Saturday, 11 June 2016
A Scribal and Illuminated Rebus?
Among the digitized manuscripts at Villanova University, PA, is a very small (approx.100×70mm) 14th-century English copy of some of Augustine's works, with a single illuminated page at the beginning:
The thing that strikes me as most unusual about this first page is the lower border, with foliage sprouting from what looks like a hole in the side of a wooden barrel:
[This and other images: Digital Library@Villanova University; Source] |
Tuesday, 7 June 2016
"Ancient Illuminated MSS in the Library at Calveley"
My interest was aroused by the description of of a 19th-century album that will be sold next week, whose catalogue description does not have an image:
I asked the auctioneer to send me some photos, and I have just received the images. The title-page is shown above.