Saturday, 24 November 2018
Leaves from a 14th-century Dominican Lectionary
In the last few years I have seen a number of leaves from a volume written in a strange "prescissa" or "sine pedibus" script: in which the bottoms of the minims terminate without an upturn or a lozenge as a foot. The script is perhaps most often associated with England in the 13th and 14th centuries, the Luttrell Psalter being a classic example:
The present manuscript certainly does not look English, however, and attributions have included "Germany, 15th century", "Flanders, late 14th century", "late XIVth c. ... probably written in Flanders", "Northern Spain, ca. 1350", and "northern Spain, first half of the fourteenth century": people obviously have trouble deciding where and when it was written. I always thought it curious, but had no reason to pursue it. Earlier this year however, I was generously given a leaf of the manuscript, and thus a reason to think about it in a more focused way.
Saturday, 17 November 2018
Miniatures by William de Brailes
[click to enlarge] |
Saturday, 10 November 2018
The Brummer Gallery Archive IV: Leaves From The Arenberg Psalter
On the same page as the most recent blog post about the Brummer photo albums is a manuscript miniature with a very distinctive shape, shown above, with a detail here:
Saturday, 3 November 2018
More Manuscripts from the Chateau d'Anet, at Glasgow
Jean-Luc Deuffic later created an immeasurably more professional site, with a list of all the Chateau d'Anet books known to him, with links to other sites, images, etc. I rarely encounter an Anet book that he does not already know about, but one was the Duprat Bible at Boston Public Library, discussed here.
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