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A Leaf from the Office of the Dead

March 15, 2016 in Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition

Verso of Leaf with the Office of the Dead from an unknown Book of Hours, showing its elaborate foliate border in gold and polychrome. Photography © Mildred BudnyA Part of the Office of the Dead

from a 15th-century Book of Hours
made in Flanders
(perhaps at Bruges or Antwerp)
circa 1470

A single leaf, trimmed down in spoliation
to produce a decorated tidbit on its own
Circa 135 mm × 100 mm
< written area circa 66 × 50 mm >
Single column of 17 lines

Budny Handlist 12

Our series of posts by Mildred Budny on Manuscript Studies continues with a somber view of a detached leaf from the Office of the Dead in a gracefully decorated Book of Hours from Flanders.  With this post, given the subject of the manuscript text, we also reflect wistfully on the passing of some friends, colleagues, and others dear to us.  The occasion prompts us to offer a personal recollection of Jennifer O’Reilly (1943–2016).

Text and Layout

Manifestly the text on this detached leaf demonstrates that it forms part of the Office of the Dead.  On its own, it is not exactly clear for which part of that Office this part of the text was intended to serve, mainly because there are no indications upon the leaf, and because the assigned practices for liturgical observance could vary considerably from place to place, custom to custom, and time to time.

Such is the nature of Books of Hours, a widely popular and personal genre of manuscripts or printed books in the late Middle Ages and Renaissance.  At least we know which part of that set of texts, that is, the Office of the Dead, to which this leaf pertained in its original setting, although we cannot be certain of its specifically intended purpose, that is, which part of that particular Office.  Discovery of other parts of the original book might reveal such features more precisely.  Meanwhile, let us see what we can see.

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Tags: 2002 British Museum Colloquium, Book of Hours, Detached Leaves, Jennifer O'Reilly, Josephine Edmonds Case, Manuscript Conservation, manuscript fragments, Manuscript Illumination, Office of the Dead, Swimming Lessons, Wedding Present
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A Part-Leaf from the ‘Life of Saint Blaise’

March 8, 2016 in Events, Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition

Part of a Leaf from the Saint’s ‘First’ Life
in a Lectionary
Reused as Binding Material

344 cropped to M[First published on 8 March 2016, with updates.]

Here continues our blog by Mildred Budny on Manuscript Studies, for which the Contents List offers a guide to the series.  Now we look at a fragment from a 12th-century manuscript containing, or partly containing, one or more saints’ lives intended for reading aloud.

A fragmentary vellum leaf in Latin now in a private collection represents a remnant of the Passio Sancti Blasii Episcopi et Martiris (‘The Suffering of Saint Blaise, Bishop and Martyr’) from a manuscript dismembered for recycled use.  Laid out in double columns, the text is written in upright proto-Gothic script of circa 1170 CE from an as-yet unknown center.

Similarly, the medieval ownership of the leaf remains unknown, although the reuse as a limp vellum cover for an 18th-century paper notebook comprising a register of receipts in French presumably indicates the location of the leaf, if not the rest of its book, at least by the early modern period.  Given the fragmentary nature of the surviving evidence, we’ll take all we can get.

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Tags: Manuscript Fragments Reused in Bindings, Medieval Manuscript Fragments, Passio Sancti Blasii
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Three Leaves from a Latin Religious Pocket Handbook

February 1, 2016 in Manuscript Studies

 

3 Leaves from a Latin Religious Handbook
in Small-Format

Folio 8 recto, detail of top lines of both columns of text, with parts of the 'Treatise on the Conception of the Blessed Mary' by Eadmer. Reproduced by permission.

[First published on 1 February 2016, with updates.]

Continuing our series of Manuscript Studies (now with a Contents List), Mildred Budny reports on a set of 3 non-continuous leaves from a dismembered pocket-sized Latin religious handbook, purchased online and now in a private collection.  Written in Gothic rotunda script with simple bichrome embellishments, the leaves came from a bound volume of unknown origin and provenance.

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Tags: Eadmer of Canterbury, Liturgical Handbook, Medieval Manuscript Fragments, Psalms, Tractatus de Conceptione Mariae
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Leaf from a Tiny Book of Hours

October 22, 2015 in Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition

Leaf Within the Hours of the Virgin
From an Unknown Manuscript

Detached Vellum Leaf
Circa 76 × 54 mm < written area circa 40 × 36 mm >
Single column of 12 lines in Latin in Gothic rotunda script, with polychrome embellishments

Budny Handlist 11

Detail of Verso from a Detached Leaf from a tiny Book of Hours, with the decorated initial I of 'In' within the Hours of the Virgin. Photography © Mildred BudnyIn our series on Manuscript Studies, Mildred Budny reports on items in the Illustrated Handlist, among other specimens.

Usually those items have some evidence, internal and/or contextual, which enable or imply the identifications of their places or regions of origin, the original manuscripts to which the dispersed fragment belongs, and/or their routes of transmission to the current owner.  Various of our blogposts in the series prove these possibilities.  Not in this case.

Here we focus on a fragment of a tiny Book of Hours which strayed into the group without any record of its provenance. We illustrate this fragment as an opportunity for recognition among its peers.

In Perspective

The scale of this leaf leaf comes into perspective when set among some of its companions in the Handlist.  As in the set of Group Portraits, front and back. The Leaf had its debut among our Manuscript Groupies.

Within those collective Photo Opportunities, Views 1 and 2, this Leaf appears at bottom right, respectively with its Verso and Recto.

6 leaves in the 'Handlist', shown variously in their rectos or versos, by chance as the occasion arose. Photography by Mildred Budny

Group Portrait View 1

6 leaves in the 'Handlist', shown variously in their versos or rectos, by chance as the occasion arose. Photography by Mildred Budny

Group Portrait, View 2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tiny, right?  A lovely shape to clasp in the hand.  The original manuscript must have been a joy to hold and to behold.

Text and Context

The Leaf, turned to the Verso, alongside the small-format envelope used to 'contain' the leaf, shown from its front with the owner's handwritten inscription in blue ink 'Ms leaf', as well as a color guide and scale for reference. Reproduced by permission of the photographer.The thin Leaf turns its yellowed hairside of the animal skin toward the recto, and the whitish fleshside to the verso.  An unevenly undulating cut severed the leaf from its former conjoint stub or, more probably, conjoint leaf of a bifolium, with some traces remaining along the inner margin of marks for the former stitching of the volume.  The marks of dirt accumulated along the upper, lower, and outer edges attest to a period of storage as a closed volume.

The smudged, darkened stain aligned about midway down the outer edge probably derives from contact with a metal clasp oxidized over time.  Such a closure would have helped to embrace firmly a small, fat volume of the sort which a full Book of Hours in such a compact layout would have required.

At present, the leaf measures circa 76 × 54 mm, with a written area of circa 40 × 36 mm.  The single column of 12 lines is written in Latin in Gothic rotunda script, with embellishments.  Although somewhat perfunctory in the execution, the embellishments and their colorful materials add an element of luxury.

Recto of leaf from a tiny 12-line Book of Hours, with in-line initials decorated with red pen-flourishing. Budny Handlist 11. Photograph © Mildred Budny

Recto

The embellishments include rubricated titles, in-line initials with pen-flourishes, and enlarged polychrome initials with ornamental frames.  On the recto, the 1-line initials for sections beginning within the lines are alternately blue and gold respectively with red or purple penline extensions comprised mainly of undulating lines resembling pulled sugar ripples.

Recto of leaf from a tiny 12-line Book of Hours, with 2 polychrome opening initials in gold leaf and other pigments Budny Handlist 11. Photograph © Mildred Budny

Verso

On the verso, the polychrome decorated initials either stand alongside the column on the verso (6-line-high I for In of the Capitulum, that is, ‘Reading’, from the Old Testament Book of Ecclesiasticus) or occupy a position inset within it (2-line-high F for Famulorum of the Oratio or ‘Prayer’).  For these enlarged initials, the letter itself is rendered in gold leaf, with bulbous tips, against an asymmetrical background frame with toothed or cusped edges and extended tips.  Each frame, filled with sections of rusty reddish and blue pigments, has an inset inner contour of white pigment.  Within the F, the 2 enclosed counters above and below its tongue have a surcharged pattern of white dots.

The Text

The text on the leaf both starts and ends mid-phrase.  It extends from within:

Psalm 127:3 ([la-/]teribus . . . Israel)

to within:

Prayer: Famulorum tuorum . . . ut [/ qui] .

The text corresponds mostly to a portion of the Hours of the Virgin represented in a paragdigm online here (with an English translation), where the assigned location within the Hours (in that case, for the Use of Rome) is None, that is, the mid-afternoon prayer within the canonical periods for daily prayer.  Expanding the abbreviations in the text, the transcription here of the Leaf provides points of orientation as well as indications of its divergences from the paragdigm.

The preceding leaf apparently ended within Psalm 127:3

[3 Uxor tua sicut uitis abundans. in la-/]

[RECTO]

teribus domus tue Fi[-]
lii tui sicut nouclle [? sic for germina] oli[-]
arum in circuitu men[-]
se tue [4] Ecce sicut benedice[-]
tur homo [<uiro] qui timet do[-]
minum [5] Benedicat tibi
dominus ex syon et uideas bo[-]
na iherusalem omnibus diebus ui[-]
te tue [6] Et uideas filios
filiorum tuorum pacem super is[-]
rael Gloria A[ntiphon] pulcra es et de[-]
cora filia iherusalem terribi[-]

[RECTO] / [VERSO]

lis ut castrorum acies or[-]
dinata. Capittlu[m] [sic; = Ecclesiasticus 24:19–20].
In plateis sicut cynamo[-]
mum et balsamum arom[-]
tizans odorem dedi quasi
mirra decta electi dedi suaui[-]
atem odoris. deo gratias. V[ersiculus]
post partum uirgo. et. kyrie eleison
christe eleison. kyrie eleison. domine exaudi
et clamor. oremus Or[ati]o.
Famulorum tuorum quos
domine delictis ignosce. ut

[VERSO] / [qui tibi pacu . . . ]

The next leaf would have picked up from there.

Such a span of text occurs within various Books of Hours, and for various points within the Hours. The use of the Antiphon Pulchra es et decora filia Jerusalem terribilis ut castrorum acies ordinata is recorded in a variety of sources for several occasions within the liturgical year.

Therefore, without fuller knowledge about the other parts of the original manuscript and its specific approaches, it seems difficult to determine to which place within the Hours the portion represented by this leaf would have specifically corresponded.

Without better evidence, we resist a temptation to assign this very reading in this specific manuscript to a particular part of the Office of the Virgin.

About that Manuscript

Haven’t identified it yet.

You may remember that some of our blogposts in the series on Manuscript Studies have identified fragments from manuscripts dispersed by Otto F. Ege (among others). So far, these have addressed ‘Ege Manuscripts’ 8, 14, 41, and 61.  So the nature of his dispersals and the resources for identifying some of them have become familiar.  You can find descriptions and references in those posts.

Scott Gwara’s Handlist (2013) of ‘Manuscripts Collected or Sold by Otto F. Ege’ does not apparently include any volume which corresponds neatly to the characteristics of this leaf. We were hopeful.

A somewhat similar manuscript, fragmented and dispersed, is represented in Ege’s Portfolio of Fifty Original Leaves from Medieval Manuscripts, Number 36, a mid-15th-century French Book of Hours with a (not identical) comparable style, layout, and decoration.  But it has 13 lines per column, rather than the 12 on this Leaf, and includes some other approaches to decoration, such as interlace patterns and the use of double (rather than single) white outlines inside the frames for initials.

Date and Origin?

Wish we knew.  Suffice, perhaps, for now, to say that the rotunda script indicates an ‘Italianate’ element.  Not that this means that it is Italian script, or the work of an Italian scribe.  Just an element, important to register.

However, the style of the initials seems French instead.

Interesting combination of influences.

So, perhaps, this leaf and its original manuscript (if fully consistent) might have originated in Southern France, Italy, or (say) Spain, circa 1400 or later.

Transmission?  Forget It!

The owner reports, in responses to questions repeated over years, that this leaf was acquired at an unknown date, unframed, and from an unremembered source.  He confirms that the single-line inscription in ink on the envelope is his own handwriting.

It was probably a gift, but not sufficiently memorable as such, unlike another leaf from a different Book of Hours (Handlist 12) acquired as a wedding present.  It was presumably a gift, he observes, because its purchase is neither remembered nor recorded among the available papers.

So much for continuity.

Shucks

On a personal note.  Usually I am reluctant to say such.

Collectors Gonna Do Whatever.  Right.  They can.

But this situation makes me wonder.  I remember vividly, clearly, precisely, the gifts, and their circumstances, which ever I have received.  When I see — of course, because I place them in view — any gift, you know, I smile with recognition of the person, place and time of presentation (by whatever means, near or far), and even I the recall of the light or sunlight of the reception.  That is how I think, and remember.  Sensitive Creature, that’s me.

Detail of Recto of the leaf from a tiny Book of Hours, with 2 1-line in-line initials respectively in Gold or Blue pigment with pen-flourishes respectively of purple or red pigment. Photography © Mildred BudnyAnd so, this occasion with the necessity to encounter forgetfulness, amounting apparently to negligence or indifference (same difference), makes me wonder differently, and with increased appreciation, about the merits of Eastern habits of stamping materials in the stages of successive ownership and appreciation.  It seems a method worth considering for Western Stuff.

Seems more respectful.  I aim to label gifts to me even more precisely than before.

P. S.  You hear that?  I am the sort of person who appreciates gifts.

Hint?  You think?

Over to You

Do you know of any other leaves from this tiny book?  They could be anywhere.

******

We thank the owner of the leaf for permission to photograph, research, and publish it.  It is a pleasure also to record thanks to Adelaide Bennett, Gregory Clark, and James Marrow for their expert advice about the leaf.

*****

 

 

 

Tags: Book of Hours, Gothic Manuscripts, Otto Ege's Manuscripts
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Full Court Preston

October 10, 2015 in Documents in Question, Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition

Pile of documents and manuscript fragments within melanex protective sheets, with 2 medieval documents from Preston Saint Mary at the top. Photograph by Mildred Budny.Pair of 13th-Century Documents,
Missing Their Seals,
from Preston

Plus a Competition, Prizes Included

[Posted on 10 October 2015, with updates.  Also, now, see Preston Take 2.]

Next stop in our exploration of Manuscript and Document Studies.    Still on the quest of Fragments and Their Contexts.

We turn now to a pair of documents in a private collection, reproduced by permission.  They came for sale as part of a single batch, preserved together and sent forth together, apparently after centuries and generations with a common heritage.  Their origin relates to Preston (now known as Preston Saint Mary), near Ipswich, in Suffolk in England.

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Tags: Book Competition, Docketing, documents in question, History of Documents, Manuscript studies, photographic exhibition, Preston Saint Mary, Seal Bags, Seal Tags
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New Testament Leaves in Old Armenian

September 28, 2015 in Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition, Reports

Into Place

A Pair of Leaves Identified, Described, Collated,
and Set into the Context of its Manuscript

[First published on 28 September 2015, with updates.]

In our series of blogposts on Manuscript Studies, Mildred Budny sets the stage for an illustrated Report available for download here.

[News Flash: With her discovery in November 2016 of another leaf from the same manuscript, please watch for a further Update in a coming blogpost.

And now, that Update is here.]

Cover for the Report on 'Two Detached Manuscript Leaves containing New Testament Texts in Old Armenian' by Leslie J. French for the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, with a detail of Leaf I verso, column a lines 10-12, with the opening of Acts 23:12As part of the process of exhibiting images from manuscripts, documents, and other written materials — for example in our Galleries of Scripts on Parade and Texts on Parade, and in our Reports on Manuscript Studies — we offer a Report on ‘Two Detached Manuscript Leaves containing New Testament Texts in Old Armenian’ by our Associate, Leslie J. French.

Booklet ‘On Demand’

This Report is available below for download as PDF.  In the form of a booklet, it presents its materials laid out in the official font of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, Bembino, a multilingual digital font (which you see on this website), and in accordance with the principles of our Style Manifesto. Such an approach resembles the presentation of our Newsletter ShelfMarks in booklet form, likewise available freely for download — as are the Style Manifesto and the descriptive booklet, with specimens, for Bembino. The font itself is also FREE for download here (now in Version 1.3).

The Report examines and illustrates two detached leaves in Old Armenian which came to our attention when preparing their presentation among other specimens in various languages in our Gallery of Scripts on Parade. Then, identifying the passages of text and the elements of textual apparatus on the leaves proceeded hand in hand with an exploration of the available evidence, or records, for other parts of the same manuscript dispersed in several collections.  Designing Armenian characters, lowercase and uppercase, for Bembino (in its next version, still in progress, responding to requests) allowed for the collation of the texts in full, as an aid to decipherment for readers who may be unfamiliar with the language or the medieval script forms.  And so the booklet took shape. Read the rest of this entry →

Tags: Acts of the Apostles, Armenian Manuscripts, Bembino Digital Font, Bible Manuscripts, Bolorgir script, Edgar J. Goodspeed Manuscript Collection, Epistle to the Romans, Euthalian Apparatus, Goodspeed MS 229, Goodspeed MS 773, Harry Kurdian, Manuscript studies, Medieval Manuscript Collecting, Mekhitarian Monastery of San Lazzaro, New Testament Manuscripts, Philosophical Research Library MS Arm. 3, Wellcome Library Armenian MS 1
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Manuscript Studies

September 13, 2015 in Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition

Manuscript Studies, Documents Included

Detail of an initial M on the verso of the leaf. Photography © Mildred Budny

Initial M for “Manus” (“Hand”)

In 2015, we began our series of blogposts on ‘Manuscript Studies’, reporting and illustrating a variety of manuscripts, fragments, and documents.  Mostly these materials belong to different owners who allow us to study them long-term and report the research results. We thank them for their generosity and trust.

Manuscript Studies take time. It’s not the only way, but it is a good way.  (Whatever Works, Right?)

Some of us dedicate our time and effort to it.  You know, I have dedicated my life to it.  Not sure that it was the right thing (the Memoirs will be right interesting, and time will tell, not done yet), but the quest continues both to challenge and inspire.  Plus the responses to the blogposts give further inspiration.

A list of links for some of the first posts in this series has appeared here:

Manuscripts On My Mind, Number 16 (September 2015), page 12.

Contents List

The fuller Contents List is here, as it evolves.  Here we note the unfolding series.

Initial P of Prayer in Book of Hours, with Photography © Mildred Budny

Photography © Mildred Budny

“Show & Tell” Seminar on Manuscripts & Their Photographs
A Seminar at the Index of Christian Art at Princeton University
(With a Preview of a Despoiled Book of Hours Recently Discovered in France, shown here at the left)

The ‘Foundling Hospital’ for Manuscript Fragments
The Case of a Favorite Manuscript, Ripped Up, Alas, by the Center That Made It, but Thank Goodness They Left Something to Tell the Tale

Lost and Foundlings
The Sellers’ Tells, Sadly

Manuscript Groupies
Light-Hearted View of Group Portraits, when it comes to Manuscripts and Their Best Sides, Photo Ops Included

Curiouser and Curiouser
A Most Strange Seal on a Paper Document of A.D. 1345, Old Style, from Grenoble

Document in 5 lines on paper, dated 22 February 1345 (Old Style), with red wax seal. Image reproduced by permisison.

‘Curiouser and Curiouser’

Scrap of Information
A Puzzling Fragment from a French Charter with the Date, Maybe Accurate, of 1538

Full Court Preston
A Pair of 13th-Century Documents from Preston, Near Ipswich, in Suffolk

Notarial Roll of 1305 from Cesena
A Complete Documentary Scroll from Emelia-Romagna in North-East Italy, with Notarial Sign and Signature

A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 41’
Part of the Dialogues of Gregory the Great and Other Texts from a Manuscript Plundered in World War I

Initial S for 'Salue' on the verso of the Processional leaf. Photography by Mildred Budny

S for ‘Salue’ in ‘Otto Ege MS 8’

A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 61’
Ezekiel from a 32-Line Vulgate Pocket Bible from France

A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 8’
Latin Processional for Palm Sunday for Singing Nuns

A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 14’
Part of the Interpretation of Hebrew Names
from a 50-line Vulgate Latin Lectern Bible with Splendid Decoration and Illustration, as Once Was

More Leaves from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 51’
Detached Leaves from Ege’s Erfurt Manuscript of 1365 CE of Aristotle’s Nichomachean Ethics
in Latin Translation on Paper

The Mass of Saint Gregory, Illustrated
A Leaf from a 15th-Century Prayerbook

A Leaf from the Office of the Dead
A Single Leaf, Trimmed Down in Spoliation, to Produce a Decorated Tidbit on Its Own

Detail of recto of Lectionary Leaf with initial T and later scribbles. Photograph © Mildred Budny. Reproduced by permission.

Lectionary with Gregory’s Homily 38 on the Gospel of Mark

Leaf from a Tiny Book of Hours
Leaf from within the Hours of the Virgin from an Unknown Manuscript

Three Leaves from a Latin Religious Pocket Handbook
Three Discontinuous Leaves from Diverse Treatises
including Eadmer’s “Treatise on the Conception of the Virgin Mary”

Part-Leaf from a Large-Format Lectionary
Parts of I Maccabees 10 and Homily XXXVII on the Gospels by Gregory the Great

Written in the Stars
Roman Breviary Fragment with Latin Lections on Astrology from Sermons by Patristic Authors
Plus a Prayer for the Dead

Spoonful of Sugar
A Reused Medieval Bifolium from a Latin Treatise on Medicinal Substances

Justinian Wrapper Closed from Front with Extended Tie.Photography © Mildred Budny.

Folder from Front

It’s A Wrap
Laying Down the Law
A Leaf from the Novellae Constitutiones of the Emperor’s “Novels”, Numbers 159.2 and 134.1-3
Plus Embellishments

A Reused Part-Leaf from Bede’s Homilies on the Gospels
A Part-Leaf from a 14th-Century Large-Format Copy of Bede’s Homilies on the Gospels in Double Columns of 26 or More Lines
Perhaps Made in France

Cover for the Report on 'Two Detached Manuscript Leaves containing New Testament Texts in Old Armenian' by Leslie J. French for the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence, with a detail of Leaf I verso, column a lines 10-12, with the opening of Acts 23:12A Part-Leaf from the “Life of Saint Blaise”
Part of a Leaf from the Saint’s “First” Life in a Lectionary Reused as Binding Material

Cover-Up
A Medieval Bifolium from a Medium-Format Latin Psalter Reused as the Cover of the Binding of an 19th-Century Paper Notebook
With Receipts in French

New Testament Leaves in Old Armenian
Detached Leaves with Parts of the Acts of the Apostles and Paul’s Epistle to the Romans
With a Downloadable Booklet

More to come . . .

*****

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A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 14’

September 6, 2015 in Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition

Part of the ‘Interpretation of Hebrew Names’
from a 50-line Lectern Bible
in the Vulgate Version

Budny, Handlist Number 9
A Leaf From ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 14’

Alcath – Ananias in the A-Group
From the Interpretationes Hebraicorum Nominum
In the partly alphabetized Version beginning Aaz Apprehendens (or a Variant thereof)
At the end of a large-format Bible used for lectern reading

Circa 312 × 212 mm <written area circa 225 × 157 mm >
Triple Columns of 50 lines written in Gothic Formata bookhand
Produced probably in Flanders or Northern France, circa 1325

In our series on Manuscript Fragments, Mildred Budny examines some leaves dispersed into various collections, both private and public, through the methods of Otto F. Ege. Earlier posts on those leaves considered Lost and Foundlings, A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 41’, and A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 8’.  Later posts considered A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 61’ and New Leaves from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 51’.

Now we focus on a large-format leaf which, despite its relatively unembellished contents, formerly belonged to a large-format single-volume Bible amply endowed with decoration, illustrations, and glittering gold.

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Tags: 'Aaz-Apprehendens' Version, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Bible Manuscripts, Budny Handlist, Gothic Manuscripts, Interpretationes Hebraicorum Nominum, Lectern Bible, Otto Ege Manuscript 14, Otto Ege's Manuscripts, Parke Bernet Galleries, Sothebys
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A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 8’

August 15, 2015 in Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition

Processional for Nuns for Palm Sunday

Budny Handlist, Number 4

From a ‘Gradual’
Produced in England, circa 1275

In our series on ‘Manuscript Fragments’ within our blog (see its Contents List), we continue to examine some leaves dispersed into various collections, both private and public, through the methods of Otto F. Ege. Earlier posts on those leaves considered Lost and Foundlings, A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 41’, and A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 61’.  [Update: See also More Leaves from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 51’. Now we focus on a musical leaf for liturgical performance with Singing Nuns on a high holy day.

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Tags: Alison Altstatt, Edith of Wilton, Ege MS 14, Ege MS 41, Ege MS 51, Ege MS 61, Ege MS 8, Medieval Manuscript Fragments, Otto Ege's Manuscripts, Otto F. Ege, Processional for Nuns, Processional for Palm Sunday, Wilton Abbey, Wilton Processional
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A New Leaf from ‘Otto Ege Manuscript 61’

August 10, 2015 in Manuscript Studies, Photographic Exhibition

Budny Handlist 7. Ezekiel Leaf Verso with the end of Chapter 10 and the beginning of Chapter 11. Photography by Mildred Budny

Ezekiel Leaf Verso

Part of Ezekiel from a
32-Line Latin Vulgate Pocket Bible from France

Budny Handlist 7

Single leaf from a pocket-sized Bible
Circa 186 × 126 mm <written area circa 119 × 81 mm>
Double columns of 32 lines in Gothic Bookhand, with embellishments in red, blue, and purple pigment

Pencil inscription ‘1310 French Bible’ at the bottom of the recto

Formerly part of Ege Manuscript 61 (Gwara, Handlist 61)

Southern France, circa 1325

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Tags: Dawson's Bookshop, Ege Manuscript 61, manuscript fragments, Manuscript studies, Otto Ege's Manuscripts, Otto F. Ege, Pocket Bible
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