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Chicago, Newberry Library, Case MS 137, no. 7 (detail) |
In May last year I visited the Newberry Library and spent a stimulating morning looking at leaves and cuttings (one of which I subsequently discussed
here). One of the finest I saw is a large paper 15th-century Italian Humanistic leaf, with an illuminated
bianchi girari initial, shown above. As the heading tells us, this initial "C" introduces Eusebius of Caesaria's
De praeparatione evangelica, Book I [
Wikipedia].
The heading is written in very elegant epigraphic capitals, in lines of blue, red, olive green, and dark purple inks. These colours, alternating in this order, are characteristic of the famous Paduan scribe Bartolomeo Sanvito (also discussed in
this blogpost).
Here is an example of a heading by Sanvito, using the same colours in the same sequence, but with the addition of lines of gold (another of his favoured colour-sequences):
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Escorial, MS F.IV.11 (detail) |
Sanvito's coloured capitals were so admired by contemporaries that he was often commissioned to add them to books whose main text was written by other scribes, and so although the main text of the Newberry leaf did not look to me like his hand, I wondered if the heading in epigraphic capitals might be by him.