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Auction archive: Lot number 6

BREVIARY, use of Sarum, in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON ...

Estimate
£80,000 - £120,000
ca. US$136,568 - US$204,852
Price realised:
£122,500
ca. US$209,119
Auction archive: Lot number 6

BREVIARY, use of Sarum, in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON ...

Estimate
£80,000 - £120,000
ca. US$136,568 - US$204,852
Price realised:
£122,500
ca. US$209,119
Beschreibung:

BREVIARY, use of Sarum, in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM , [western England, perhaps Devon, c.1310-20
BREVIARY, use of Sarum, in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM , [western England, perhaps Devon, c.1310-20] 154 x 97mm. iv + 256 + iii leaves, ruled space: 110 x 62mm. Two-line initials with flourishing the height of the text extending into the lower margins as human and animal heads, foliage, drolleries or birds, some margins with additional drawings of deer and musicians, and with painted birds, two large initials in burnished gold with foliate sprays, NINE HISTORIATED INITIALS with painted foliate extensions forming WHOLE OR PARTIAL BORDERS inhabited with drolleries, angels, animals and naturalistic birds (some rubbing with loss to pigment, text to opening leaves affected by damp, five marginal vellum repairs, inner margins strengthened on final versos of gatherings). Chestnut morocco gilt by Douglas Cockerell (1870-1945) for the W.H. Smith and Son Bindery (WHS monogram stamped on lower turn-in) with spine titled 'PORTIFORIUM AD USUM SARUM. TEMPORALE'. THE LONG-LOST COMPANION VOLUME TO MORGAN M.329 PROVENANCE : (1) Style, measurements and content are all consistent with this manuscript being the sister volume of a manuscript in New York (Morgan Library and Museum, M.329), a Sarum breviary containing Calendar, Psalter and Canticles, Sanctoral, Vespers of the Dead and the Common of Saints — the elements that complement and complete the Temporal of the present manuscript. The Calendar of the New York volume contains one feast uncommon in a Sarum calendar — the Cornish saint, Petroc (4 June) also venerated in Devon — and various early obits that suggest an origin or use in the West Country. The presence of the feast of St Eustace in red in M.329 has been taken to indicate that it was intended for use in a church with that dedication, most likely St Eustace in Tavistock. The manuscript also contains a suffrage to Eustace and the stag of St Eustace appears twice in the margins. The stag with a cross between its antlers also features in the lower margins of ff.13v and 166 of the present manuscript. Obits added to the Calendar of the Morgan volume indicate ownership by a member of the family of Nicholas de Meoles (Moels) of Somerset, his death on 24 January 1316 is recorded, as is that of his wife’s brother, Hugh de Courtenay, Earl of Devon. Hugh’s son John was Abbot of Tavistock. The Morgan volume was owned by Richard Sterne (1596-1683, Archbishop of York and great-grandfather of Laurence Sterne , who signed the verso of the paper fly-leaf. The fly-leaves of the present volume offer no evidence of its early provenance as they belong to the Cockerell rebinding. The Morgan volume has been dated to c.1320-25 on the grounds that it contains the feast of Corpus Christi, only introduced into England in 1317. Yet the death of Nicholas de Moels in 1316 was an addition to the Calendar so the manuscript may be earlier; the Corpus Christi cult was likely widespread by 1318: E. Antoaneta Ciobanu, The Spectacle of the Body in Late Medieval England , 2012, p.111. In the present manuscript the knight emerging from the lower painted border on f.68 carries a spear and a shield, gules two chevrons or . These could be the arms of Simon de Fawsley (or Falvesley) of Northamptonshire, d.1333. In three other instances, ff. 72, 121 and 246, the conical hats on pendrawn heads in the lower margin are also decorated with two chevrons. Perhaps this is significant for the original ownership of the manuscript or the origin of the illuminator: the style would accord with a formation in the Midlands. (2) Bernard Quaritch Ltd, cat.no 328, A catalogue of rare and valuable books , January 1914, no 580, illustrated. CONTENT : Breviary, Temporal, from Advent to Trinity ff.1-256v. ILLUMINATION : The lively drolleries peopling the illuminated borders that mark the major openings and the profusion of humorous figures and heads drawn in the margin of almost every page make this a highly appealing and delightful manuscript. Entertaining details — such as the

Auction archive: Lot number 6
Auction:
Datum:
16 Jul 2014
Auction house:
Christie's
16 July 2014, London, King Street
Beschreibung:

BREVIARY, use of Sarum, in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM , [western England, perhaps Devon, c.1310-20
BREVIARY, use of Sarum, in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM , [western England, perhaps Devon, c.1310-20] 154 x 97mm. iv + 256 + iii leaves, ruled space: 110 x 62mm. Two-line initials with flourishing the height of the text extending into the lower margins as human and animal heads, foliage, drolleries or birds, some margins with additional drawings of deer and musicians, and with painted birds, two large initials in burnished gold with foliate sprays, NINE HISTORIATED INITIALS with painted foliate extensions forming WHOLE OR PARTIAL BORDERS inhabited with drolleries, angels, animals and naturalistic birds (some rubbing with loss to pigment, text to opening leaves affected by damp, five marginal vellum repairs, inner margins strengthened on final versos of gatherings). Chestnut morocco gilt by Douglas Cockerell (1870-1945) for the W.H. Smith and Son Bindery (WHS monogram stamped on lower turn-in) with spine titled 'PORTIFORIUM AD USUM SARUM. TEMPORALE'. THE LONG-LOST COMPANION VOLUME TO MORGAN M.329 PROVENANCE : (1) Style, measurements and content are all consistent with this manuscript being the sister volume of a manuscript in New York (Morgan Library and Museum, M.329), a Sarum breviary containing Calendar, Psalter and Canticles, Sanctoral, Vespers of the Dead and the Common of Saints — the elements that complement and complete the Temporal of the present manuscript. The Calendar of the New York volume contains one feast uncommon in a Sarum calendar — the Cornish saint, Petroc (4 June) also venerated in Devon — and various early obits that suggest an origin or use in the West Country. The presence of the feast of St Eustace in red in M.329 has been taken to indicate that it was intended for use in a church with that dedication, most likely St Eustace in Tavistock. The manuscript also contains a suffrage to Eustace and the stag of St Eustace appears twice in the margins. The stag with a cross between its antlers also features in the lower margins of ff.13v and 166 of the present manuscript. Obits added to the Calendar of the Morgan volume indicate ownership by a member of the family of Nicholas de Meoles (Moels) of Somerset, his death on 24 January 1316 is recorded, as is that of his wife’s brother, Hugh de Courtenay, Earl of Devon. Hugh’s son John was Abbot of Tavistock. The Morgan volume was owned by Richard Sterne (1596-1683, Archbishop of York and great-grandfather of Laurence Sterne , who signed the verso of the paper fly-leaf. The fly-leaves of the present volume offer no evidence of its early provenance as they belong to the Cockerell rebinding. The Morgan volume has been dated to c.1320-25 on the grounds that it contains the feast of Corpus Christi, only introduced into England in 1317. Yet the death of Nicholas de Moels in 1316 was an addition to the Calendar so the manuscript may be earlier; the Corpus Christi cult was likely widespread by 1318: E. Antoaneta Ciobanu, The Spectacle of the Body in Late Medieval England , 2012, p.111. In the present manuscript the knight emerging from the lower painted border on f.68 carries a spear and a shield, gules two chevrons or . These could be the arms of Simon de Fawsley (or Falvesley) of Northamptonshire, d.1333. In three other instances, ff. 72, 121 and 246, the conical hats on pendrawn heads in the lower margin are also decorated with two chevrons. Perhaps this is significant for the original ownership of the manuscript or the origin of the illuminator: the style would accord with a formation in the Midlands. (2) Bernard Quaritch Ltd, cat.no 328, A catalogue of rare and valuable books , January 1914, no 580, illustrated. CONTENT : Breviary, Temporal, from Advent to Trinity ff.1-256v. ILLUMINATION : The lively drolleries peopling the illuminated borders that mark the major openings and the profusion of humorous figures and heads drawn in the margin of almost every page make this a highly appealing and delightful manuscript. Entertaining details — such as the

Auction archive: Lot number 6
Auction:
Datum:
16 Jul 2014
Auction house:
Christie's
16 July 2014, London, King Street
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