Medieval Manuscripts

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Overview

Sources for visual reference for medieval times and for the visual style of medieval manuscripts.

Early Manuscripts

Eadwine Psalter — MS M.521, c. 1155-60, Canterbury, England

MS M.521v
  • Highly stylized.
  • Stories from the Gospels.
  • Some livestock, pigs, architecture.

Links

Winchester Bible — MS M.619, c. 1160-80, Winchester, England

  • Highly rendered.
  • Stylized trees
  • David & Goliath
  • Knights, horses w/saddles & bridles
  • Clouds

Links

Morgan Bible — MS M.638, 1240's, Paris, France

  • aka The Crusader Bible
  • Highly rendered
  • Scenes from Genesis
  • Strange stylized trees
  • Harvesting
  • Creation
  • Adam and Eve
  • Animals (Noah's ark)

Links

Chronicle of John of Worcester — MS. 157, c. 1140, England

  • highly stylized
  • 2 pages
  • laborers, kings, clergy
  • boats, water
  • King Henry I's dream
  • Crucifixion of Christ

Links

Liber Floridus &mdash {id}, {date}, {place of origin}

  • Highly stylized
  • Topics covering medicine and science
  • Astrology
  • Maps
  • Plants

Links

  • {picture reference} (Photo Station)

Codex Falkensteinensis — BayHStA KL Weyarn1, 1166, Germany

  • Highly stylized figures
  • Mostly writing, marginalia

Links

La Estoire de Seint Aedward le Rei — MS Ee.3.59, c.1230-1240, England

  • Highly stylized figures
  • Kings and British history

Links

Later Medieval manuscripts

Codex Manesse — Cod. Pal. germ. 848, 1300-1340, Zurich

  • Between stylized and rendered
  • Secular illustrations of poets arranged by rank: kings, dukes, counts, down to commoners
  • Curly hair, head gear: fillets, barbettes, crowns, and some fancy hats
  • Animals, birds, horses
  • Hunting: hounds, stags, boars, bears
  • Boats
  • Not a whole lot of trees or plants, but there are repeated decorative scrolling floral motifs

Links

Heidelberger Sachsenspiegel — Cod. Pal. germ. 164, c. 1295-1371, Germany

  • Highly stylized/naive
  • Saxon law, (literaly "Saxon Mirror", or roughly "Survey of Saxon Law")
  • Secular themes
  • Commoners, livestock, crops, labor

Links

Dresden Sachsenspiegel — Mscr. Dresden M.32, 1295-1371, Germany

  • Quality is a little more murky than the Heidelberg manuscript.
  • More refined drawings.

Links

Early Renaissance codices & manuscripts

Épître d'Othéa — Cod. Bodmer 49, 1460, Bourgogne/Burgundy, France

  • Highly rendered
  • aka The Book of Hector, The Book of Knighthood
  • Costumes
  • Nobility, royalty, knights fighting in suits of armor
  • Romantic couples
  • Monsters, demons, gates of hell
  • Animals, birds, some hunting, wild boars, stags
  • Landscapes, architecture, interiors and exteriors, castles, walled cities

Links

La Livre De La Chasse MS M. 1044, c. 1407, France

  • Highly rendered
  • Gaston Phoebus
  • Hunting scenes and feasts
  • Wild animals and hounds
  • Nobility with servants

Links

  • {picture reference} (Photo Station)
  • source (Morgan Library)

Incunabula

Nuremberg Chronicle Inc.0.A.7.2[888], 1493, Germany

Links

{TK: gallery}

Heidelberger Totentanz GW M47257, 1488, Germany

  • Woodcuts (incunabulum)
  • Danse Macabre
  • Skeletons interacting with living people
  • All social classes represented
  • Early Renaissance; later than the period of interest

Links

  • TK: Link:picture reference (Photo Station)
  • source Heidelberg University library
  • info & source BibliOdyssey

Paradin, Claude: Devises Heroïques — SM815, 1551, Lyons, France

Earliest example of a collection of the devices worn by French aristocracy, a practice started in the late 15th Century.

  • Woodcuts
  • Alchemical, mystical, surreal vibe
  • Dates later than medieval times

Links