Hidden Treasures: Illuminated Manuscripts from Midwestern Collections | Page 8

Folio from the Breviary of Leonello d’Este with Initial ‘M’ with St. James the Greater and Initial ‘D’ with Sts. Peter and Paul, 1441—1448 fig 11: Initial ‘L’ from a Sistine Chapel Antiphonary with St. Lawrence, 1539, Vincent Raymond de Lodève, French, active in Rome, ca. 1535–1557, tempera and gold on parchment, Collection of Jim Wiggins Workshop of Guglielmo Giraldi Italian (Ferrara), documented 1441–1494 Ink, tempera, and gold on parchment Michigan State University, Kresge Museum of Art, MSU purchase 67.13 By the fourteenth century, the breviary contained the entire text of the canonical hours and copies were made for lay users, as well as for the clergy and members of religious orders, for use in the daily recitation of the Divine Office. The deluxe manuscript to which these two folios belonged is now recognized as the Breviary of Leonello d’Este, Duke of Ferrara from 1441–1450. It was recorded in the Este accounts as having been illuminated between 1441 and 1448 by some of the major Ferrarese artists of the day, including Giorgio d’Alemagna, Guglielmo Giraldi, and Matteo de’ Pasti. fig 5 Folio from the Breviary of Leonello d’Este, 1441—1448 fig 12: One of two folios from a Book of Hours with Mass of St. Gregory and Funeral Scene with Mourners, ca. 1470, Willem Vrelant, Netherland