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Auction archive: Lot number 15

Nichasius de Planca, De Precepto Prudentie , in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM

Auction 04.06.2003
4 Jun 2003
Estimate
£15,000 - £20,000
ca. US$24,913 - US$33,218
Price realised:
£59,750
ca. US$99,239
Auction archive: Lot number 15

Nichasius de Planca, De Precepto Prudentie , in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM

Auction 04.06.2003
4 Jun 2003
Estimate
£15,000 - £20,000
ca. US$24,913 - US$33,218
Price realised:
£59,750
ca. US$99,239
Beschreibung:

Nichasius de Planca, De Precepto Prudentie , in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM [northeastern France or Flanders, late 13th century] 199 x 134mm. 113 leaves: 1-8 1 2, 9 9, 10 8, apparently COMPLETE gatherings 1-7 with catchwords at the lower inner corner of final versos and each gathering numbered by later binder at the lower edge of first recto, 19 lines written in dark brown ink in a gothic bookhand between two verticals and 20 horizontals, the upper and lower pairs across margins, within an outer frame of paired lines all ruled in brown ink, justification: 108 x 79mm, rubrics in red, text capitals touched red, one-line initials or paraphs of red or blue, line-endings and marginal chapter numbers of red and blue, authors' names in margins in red or brown, two-line initials with text-height terminals in gold flourished red and blue, THREE HISTORIATED INITIALS WITH THREE-SIDED BORDERS in burnished gold, pink, blue and orange-red containing animals and drolleries, ILLUMINATED INITIAL WITH THREE-SIDED BORDER of the same type. Early 19th-century English calf, covers gilt and rolled in blind, spine gilt and tooled in blind (edges rubbed, hinges split). PROVENANCE: 1. The text is dedicated to William, Bishop of Utrecht, to whom the author presents his work on f.2v. The only medieval bishop of Utrecht of this name was William of Mechelen, bishop from 4 February 1296 until his death 4 July 1301. The style of the manuscript suggests exactly this dating for its execution and this combined with the elegance and scrupulousness of its production, together with the fact that the text has not been traced in any other copy, suggest that this is the original author's presentation copy. Minor emendations throughout the text in a contemporary hand show notable attention to detail and knowledge of the text, and may be Nichasius's own proof-reading of his work. The brief marginal glosses do not greatly post-date the original text. 2. Johannes Pochon: 16th-century annotation to final leaf, together with a (presumably punning) drawing of a tankard. 3. The fourth Earl of Ashburnham (1797-1878): a note in pencil inside the upper cover reads Barrois with the number 178. This manuscript was number clxxviii in the Ashburnham collection and was one of the collection of 702 manuscripts bought from Joseph Barrois in 1849: Catalogue of the manuscripts at Ashburnham Place, part the second, comprising a collection formed by Mons. J. Barrois . It was lot 423 in the Ashburnham-Barrois sale, Sotheby's 10 June 1901. The catalogue of the sale in the British Library identifies the purchaser as Charles Fairfax Murray 4. Anton W.M. Mensing of Amsterdam (1866-1936), director and owner of Frederick Müller, auctioneers of Amsterdam : his sale Sotheby's 15-17 December 1936, lot 411, bought by Maggs. 5. Alan Lubbock: his armorial bookplate inside upper cover. CONTENT: Nichasius de Planca, De precepto prudentie , introduction and contents of Book 1, ff.1-2r; Book 1, ff.2v-57r; contents of Book 2, ff.57r-58r; Book 2, ff.58r-112; f.113 unrelated fragment of text in a 14th-century hand on the nature of the soul. A 13TH-CENTURY DEFENCE OF POETRY: comprising the teaching of the allegorical figure of Prudentia, and a treatise on the correct understanding of the classical poets. The first book, in 15 chapters, introduces the work and its purpose, eulogises the dedicatee, and relates how the figure of Prudentia (Learning) appeared to the author as he worked late on his studies at the University of Paris (Chs 1-4); her appearance is described, and the significance of her diadem and sceptre, which bear symbols representing the learned virtues, with a special commendation of Socrates as the epitome of these (Chs 5-11); Prudentia and the author converse, and she urges him to write in commendation of the study of poetry. In Book 2, Nichasius extolls the uses of poetry and criticises its neglect by his contemporaries, explains the materials and techniques used by the

Auction archive: Lot number 15
Auction:
Datum:
4 Jun 2003
Auction house:
Christie's
London, King Street
Beschreibung:

Nichasius de Planca, De Precepto Prudentie , in Latin, ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT ON VELLUM [northeastern France or Flanders, late 13th century] 199 x 134mm. 113 leaves: 1-8 1 2, 9 9, 10 8, apparently COMPLETE gatherings 1-7 with catchwords at the lower inner corner of final versos and each gathering numbered by later binder at the lower edge of first recto, 19 lines written in dark brown ink in a gothic bookhand between two verticals and 20 horizontals, the upper and lower pairs across margins, within an outer frame of paired lines all ruled in brown ink, justification: 108 x 79mm, rubrics in red, text capitals touched red, one-line initials or paraphs of red or blue, line-endings and marginal chapter numbers of red and blue, authors' names in margins in red or brown, two-line initials with text-height terminals in gold flourished red and blue, THREE HISTORIATED INITIALS WITH THREE-SIDED BORDERS in burnished gold, pink, blue and orange-red containing animals and drolleries, ILLUMINATED INITIAL WITH THREE-SIDED BORDER of the same type. Early 19th-century English calf, covers gilt and rolled in blind, spine gilt and tooled in blind (edges rubbed, hinges split). PROVENANCE: 1. The text is dedicated to William, Bishop of Utrecht, to whom the author presents his work on f.2v. The only medieval bishop of Utrecht of this name was William of Mechelen, bishop from 4 February 1296 until his death 4 July 1301. The style of the manuscript suggests exactly this dating for its execution and this combined with the elegance and scrupulousness of its production, together with the fact that the text has not been traced in any other copy, suggest that this is the original author's presentation copy. Minor emendations throughout the text in a contemporary hand show notable attention to detail and knowledge of the text, and may be Nichasius's own proof-reading of his work. The brief marginal glosses do not greatly post-date the original text. 2. Johannes Pochon: 16th-century annotation to final leaf, together with a (presumably punning) drawing of a tankard. 3. The fourth Earl of Ashburnham (1797-1878): a note in pencil inside the upper cover reads Barrois with the number 178. This manuscript was number clxxviii in the Ashburnham collection and was one of the collection of 702 manuscripts bought from Joseph Barrois in 1849: Catalogue of the manuscripts at Ashburnham Place, part the second, comprising a collection formed by Mons. J. Barrois . It was lot 423 in the Ashburnham-Barrois sale, Sotheby's 10 June 1901. The catalogue of the sale in the British Library identifies the purchaser as Charles Fairfax Murray 4. Anton W.M. Mensing of Amsterdam (1866-1936), director and owner of Frederick Müller, auctioneers of Amsterdam : his sale Sotheby's 15-17 December 1936, lot 411, bought by Maggs. 5. Alan Lubbock: his armorial bookplate inside upper cover. CONTENT: Nichasius de Planca, De precepto prudentie , introduction and contents of Book 1, ff.1-2r; Book 1, ff.2v-57r; contents of Book 2, ff.57r-58r; Book 2, ff.58r-112; f.113 unrelated fragment of text in a 14th-century hand on the nature of the soul. A 13TH-CENTURY DEFENCE OF POETRY: comprising the teaching of the allegorical figure of Prudentia, and a treatise on the correct understanding of the classical poets. The first book, in 15 chapters, introduces the work and its purpose, eulogises the dedicatee, and relates how the figure of Prudentia (Learning) appeared to the author as he worked late on his studies at the University of Paris (Chs 1-4); her appearance is described, and the significance of her diadem and sceptre, which bear symbols representing the learned virtues, with a special commendation of Socrates as the epitome of these (Chs 5-11); Prudentia and the author converse, and she urges him to write in commendation of the study of poetry. In Book 2, Nichasius extolls the uses of poetry and criticises its neglect by his contemporaries, explains the materials and techniques used by the

Auction archive: Lot number 15
Auction:
Datum:
4 Jun 2003
Auction house:
Christie's
London, King Street
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