01 December 2013
A Calendar Page for December 2013
For more details on calendar pages or the Golf Book, please see the post for January 2013.
The necessary work of preparing for winter continues on this full-page miniature for December. In the foreground, a man and a woman are slaughtering one of the pigs that was fattened in November, and catching its blood in a pan. Behind them, people are busy baking bread in a large oven, watched over by attentive birds. In the background, we can see a stag, hunted by horses and hounds, leaping over a gate. In the bas-de-page below, several men are playing at what appears to be a most entertaining (if dangerous) game: tug-of-war on sledges. On the following page can be found a roundel containing a goat for the zodiac sign Capricorn, alongside the saints' days for December. Interestingly, the feast day of Thomas Becket has remained unaltered, probably because this manuscript was not in England during the Reformation (for more on this question, see our post Erasing Becket). At the bottom of the folio, two men are sledging on a frozen pond, while others, including a man carrying a white hare, are gathered around a warming fire.
Calendar page for December with a miniature of people slaughtering a pig and baking bread, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 29v
Calendar page for December with a bas-de-page scene of men sledging and warming themselves by a fire, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 30r
01 November 2013
A Calendar Page for November 2013
For more details on calendar pages or the Golf Book, please see the post for January 2013.
Hunting takes centre stage in these calendar pages for the month of November. In the full-page miniature, a nobleman can be seen returning from a stag-hunt; his quarry, a magnificently-antlered animal, is in the foreground, draped across a white horse. This nobleman is accompanied by two retainers and a group of tired-looking hounds, while in the background, peasants can be seen feeding their chickens and pigs, and preparing their farm buildings for winter. In the bas-de-page, a group of men are bowling - and, it appears, heatedly disputing a recent shot. On the following page are the saints' days and feasts for November, alongside a roundel containing a centaur archer for the zodiac sign Sagittarius; below, two men are coursing hounds on yet another hunt.
Calendar page for November with a miniature of a nobleman returning from a hunt, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), Additional MS 24098, f. 28v
Calendar page for November with a bas-de-page scene of men on a hunt, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), Additional MS 24098, f. 29r
01 October 2013
A Calendar Page for October 2013
For more details on calendar pages or the Golf Book, please see the post for January 2013.
Wine-making - and the more agreeable labour of wine-tasting - is the focus of the main calendar page for the month of October. In the full-page miniature, a group of men are at work with a wine-press, and pouring the finished product into nearby casks (one of which is being repaired even as it is filled). On the left, the wine merchant is offering his wares to a well-dressed customer. Behind them, beyond a stone wall upon which two peacocks are sitting, a vineyard can be seen, with men still gathering grapes. In the bas-de-page, men are playing with knucklebones. On the following page are the usual listing of saints' days and a small painting of two scales for the zodiac sign Libra. Below, four men are restraining a massive ox in preparation for its slaughter.
Calendar page for October with a miniature of wine-making, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use
of Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 27v
Calendar
page for October with a bas-de-page scene of a men slaughtering an ox, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of Rome),
workshop
of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 28r
01 September 2013
A Calendar Page for September 2013
For more details on calendar pages or the Golf Book, please see the post for January 2013.
The important end-of-the-summer work in the fields continues in these calendar pages for September. In the opening miniature, men are ploughing with teams of horses, while another man sows grain from a bulging sack. Behind them can be seen a modest farmhouse, and to the right, a man knocking acorns from the trees to feed the pigs that have gathered around him, in a labour more usually associated with November or December. In the bas-de-page, a group of white-clad men are playing at marbles, while another is trying his luck on a pair of stilts. On the following page, below the saints' days for September and a roundel of a scorpion for Scorpio, is a scene of men playing a game that closely resembles golf (hence the name given to this manuscript, the Golf Book); for more details on this unique depiction, please see our post A Good Walk Spoiled.
Calendar page for September with a miniature of labourers ploughing and sowing grain, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use
of Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 26v
Calendar page for September with a bas-de-page scene of a men playing a golf-type game, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of Rome), workshop
of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 27r
21 August 2013
King Athelstan's Books
Are you tired of the Anglo-Saxons yet? No, we're not either! Those of you who have been engrossed by Michael Wood's recent series, King Alfred and the Anglo-Saxons, may have seen the beautiful Athelstan Psalter in last night's programme. We featured this manuscript in a previous blogpost; but it's worth looking at again, and you may like to know that the entire Psalter is available to view on our Digitised Manuscripts site.
The Athelstan Psalter (London, British Library, MS Cotton Galba A XVIII, f. 21r).
The Athelstan Psalter is a curious little book, just large enough to fit into an adult male's hand. The script of the original portion indicates that the manuscript was made in North-East France, in the 9th century; but by the middle of the 10th century the Psalter was in England, where it received a number of accretions, including a metrical calendar and some computistical texts.
The association of this manuscript with King Athelstan, the first king of England (reigned 924–939), is unproved. A note by a later owner, Thomas Dakcombe (d. c. 1572), describes the book as "Psaltirum Regis Ethelstani"; and this is echoed in the list of contents made for Sir Robert Cotton (d. 1631). As Professor Simon Keynes has commented, "the claim of the so-called Athelstan Psalter once to have belonged to the king is based on the slenderest of evidence". Michael Wood himself spoke on the Athelstan Psalter at the British Library's Royal manuscripts conference in 2011, the proceedings of which are shortly to be published by the British Library.
It's amazing how such a little book has survived the ravages of time (it escaped destruction by fire in 1731) to become a modern star in the age of television! Episode 3 of Michael Wood's King Alfred and the Anglo-Saxons, entitled Aethelstan: The First King of England, can be viewed on the BBC iPlayer.
Further reading
Simon Keynes, ‘King Athelstan’s books’, in Michael Lapidge & Helmut Gneuss (eds.), Learning and Literature in Anglo-Saxon England: Studies presented to Peter Clemoes on the occasion of his sixty-fifth birthday (Cambridge, 1985), pp. 143–201, at pp. 193–96
Robert Deshman, ‘The Galba Psalter: pictures, texts and context in an early medieval prayerbook’, Anglo-Saxon England, 26 (1997), 109–38
01 August 2013
A Calendar Page for August 2013
For more details on calendar pages or the Golf Book, please see the post for January 2013.
The aristocratic pursuits which have so characterised this manuscript (see here for April, May, June and July) take a back seat in these scenes from the calendar pages for August. In the opening full-page miniature, a man and a woman are pausing from their labours in the fields to take some refreshment; the man is holding out a bowl towards another woman, who bears a basket of food and a jug (one hopes that it is full of wine). A dog with a studded collar plays nearby, while behind the resting pair more peasants are at work harvesting grain. In the bas-de-page, a group of men are engaged in the rather disquieting game of 'cock-throwing', hurling sticks at a bird that has been tied to a stake. On the following page are the saints for August, and a small roundel miniature of a woman holding a flower, for the zodiac sign Virgo. Below, another group of men are snaring birds, using an owl to attract them.
Calendar page for August with a miniature of labourers harvesting grain and resting in the fields, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 25v
Calendar page for August with a bas-de-page scene of a men snaring birds, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 26r
02 July 2013
A Calendar Page for July 2013
For more details on calendar pages or the Golf Book, please see the post for January 2013.
Calendar page for July with a miniature of a nobleman going hawking,
with haymakers behind him, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of
Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 24v
Our glimpse into the summer pursuits of aristocrats continues in this miniature from the month of July. In the foreground, a nobleman is setting out on horseback to hunt with falcons; he is accompanied by two retainers carrying more birds of prey, along with two dogs who seem eager for the hunt. Behind him, a group of haymakers are at work mowing a field. In the bas-de-page, a group of men are trying, unsuccessfully it appears, to capture some outsized butterflies. On the following folio can be found the saints' days for July and a rather fierce-looking lion for Leo. Below we can see the conclusion of the haymakers' labours, as they head off into the distance with a horsecart laden with their harvest.
Calendar page for July with a bas-de-page scene of a haycart, from the Golf Book (Book of Hours, Use of
Rome), workshop of Simon Bening, Netherlands (Bruges), c. 1540, Additional MS 24098, f. 25r
21 June 2013
A Digital Reunion: The Sforza Hours
The history of the Sforza Hours, our newest upload to Digitised Manuscripts, in many ways resembles a detective story. The manuscript (now Add MSS 34294, 45722, 62997, and 80800) was commissioned about 1490 by the Duchess of Milan Bona Sforza (d. 1503), the second wife of Galeazzo Maria Sforza. The Milanese court painter Giovan Pietro Birago (fl. 1471-1513) was contracted to embellish it with miniatures.
Bas-de-page scene of a hound chasing a rabbit, with Bona's name 'Diva Bona' in the full border, Add MS 34294, f. 122v
Detail of a full border with Bona's embelm of the phoenix and motto 'Sola fata, solum Deum sequor', Add MS 34294, f. 93r
By 1494 Birago’s work on the manuscript was almost finished and the artist delivered a substantial portion of the still-unbound manuscript to the Duchess. Then, something unexpected happened. Several leaves still remaining in the artist’s workshop vanished. The missing portion must have included a calendar, an indispensable part of any Book of Hours, which the Sforza Hours lacks to this day. At present, the manuscript begins imperfectly with the four lessons excerpted from the Gospels.
Miniature of St Mark and his lion at the beginning of the Gospel excerpts, Add MS 34294, f. 10v
Birago’s version of events surrounding the mysterious disappearance of the illuminated leaves survives in a letter he wrote to a person whose identity unfortunately has not yet been traced. The painter claims that his work was stolen by a certain Fra Gian Jacopo, and subsequently sold by him to another friar, only referred to in the letter as Fra Biancho. This Fra Biancho, Birago continues, took the leaves to Rome and presented them to Giovanni Maria Sforzino (d. 1520), illegitimate son of Francesco Sforza and half-brother of Bona’s husband Galeazzo. The letter not only gives us some insight into the murky behaviour of some ordained members of the Milanese church, but also puts into perspective the tangible value of an illuminated manuscript as a desirable object of theft. Regrettably, the letter does not give us any time frame for the events it describes. We may only suspect that Giovanni Maria Sforzino had already received the stolen leaves by the time of his sister-in-law’s death in 1503, as they were never returned to her or reintegrated with her prayerbook.
It is only now that a small portion of the previously missing folios can be reunited with the rest of the manuscript, if only digitally. Three detached leaves illuminated by Giovan Pietro Birago, all discovered in the 20th century and now in the collection of the British Library, were identified as those once removed from the unbound Sforza Hours. Two of them are leaves from the calendar (Add MSS 62997 and 80800), and were both acquired by Martin Breslauer in 1984, in Switzerland.
Calendar page for May, Add MS 62997
Calendar page for October, Add MS 80800
The third leaf includes a miniature of the Adoration of the Magi that once preceded the hour of Sext in the Hours of the Virgin (Add MS 45722). It belonged to the French collector Jean Charles Davillier (b. 1823, d. 1883) before an anonymous benefactor presented it to the British Museum in 1941.
Miniature of the Adoration of the Magi, Add MS 45722
The remaining miniatures by Giovan Pietro Birago have never been recovered. Bona Sforza clearly did not commission another campaign of work to complete her book of hours. At her death in 1503, the unfinished manuscript probably passed to her nephew Philibert II (b. 1480, d. 1504), Duke of Savoy. Philibert must have either presented or bequeathed the hours to his wife Archduchess Margaret of Austria (b. 1480, d. 1530). Margaret, a keen patron of the arts, decided to have the manuscript completed. In 1517, she commissioned the scribe Etienne de Lale to replace some of the missing text, and between 1519 and 1521, the Flemish illuminator Gerard Horenbout (b. c.1465, d. c.1540) to paint the remaining miniatures (the accounts for both campaigns have survived). Doubtless following the Archduchess’s wish, Horenbout painted her and her father’s portraits in a biblical disguise. Margaret appears as St Elizabeth in the Visitation.
Miniature of the Visitation, from the prayers at Lauds, Add MS 34294, f. 61r
She is also recognizable as a woman attending the Presentation of Christ in the Temple, while her father, the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian, is shown as Simeon.
Miniature of the Presentation in the Temple, from the prayers at None, Add MS 34294, f. 104v
The manuscript must have been subsequently presented to Emperor Charles V (b. 1500, d. 1558), Margaret’s nephew. The Emperor's portrait in a cameo bust can be found in the margin of f. 213r with the accompanying monogram KR (Karolus Rex).
Folio with a cameo bust of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, Add MS 34294, f. 213r
The Sforza Hours was eventually purchased by Sir John Charles Robinson (d. 1913), Surveyor of the Queen's Pictures, in 1871, in Spain. The book subsequently passed to another art collector, John Malcolm of Poltalloch (d. 1893), who presented it to the British Museum in 1893.
- Joanna Fronska
Medieval manuscripts blog recent posts
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