No image available

Die illuminierten Handschriften französischer Herkunft in der Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek


By


Abstract

"[Volume 7, part 1] of the scientific catalogues of the Bavarian State Library does not only include all the manuscripts from the 10th to the end of the 14th century with French illumination, but Ulrike Bauer-Eberhardt also describes in it all the English and Spanish decorated manuscripts kept in Munich. According to the art historical practice the 294 corresponding manuscripts are classified with stylistic arguments and attributed to different regions or cities and to different periods. So at last for certain parts of France--as the North or especially Paris--there can be given a representative portrait of certain workshops for book illumination or even of individual artists, who were active in certain periods and had decorated many manuscripts, today kept all over the world. In this context may be considered the so-called Channel Style, practiced with nearly identical elements of decoration about 1200 in southern England and northern France as well, as famous anonymous workshops--for example the Du Prat Atelier (cat. 30), the Gautier Lebaube Atelier (cat. 97), the Johannes Grusch Atelier (cat. 97, cat. 144), the Aurifaber-workshop (cat. 118, cat. 149, cat. 150, cat. 156, cat. 167, cat. 189) or the Jonathan Alexander Master (cat. 204)--or even several miniaturists identified by name, as Richard de Montbaston (cat. 252, cat. 255, cat. 257) and the Master Fauvel (cat. 255). But the volume includes also extraordinary manuscripts from England, such as the famous Golden Munich Psalter, illuminated in the first third of the 13th century in Oxford. Since great part of the manuscripts in Munich formerly belonged to Bavarian monasteries and they have been transferred to the Bavarian State Library during the secularization, also the majority of the exemplars illuminated in France offer sacral subjects. Worth mentioning in this context are the 35 tiny bibles created during the 13th century in France, with delicate parchment from unborn calfs, written in elegant textualis and often illuminated exquisitely with a great number of miniatures. Those portable manuscripts used for private devotion present the most progressive form of bibles in the Occident in those days, and of course they were part of the standard equipment in the different Bavarian monasteries. [Volume 7, part 2] concludes the comprehensive description of all French manuscripts in the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Munich that are decorated with book decoration, whereby the closely related Dutch and Flemish manuscripts were also included for stylistic reasons. Compared to vol. 7/1, the time frame here remains limited to about 140 years, which, however, can vary greatly in that both the demand for illuminated manuscripts and the mobile locations of certain illuminators as well as political change within the French regions were subject to rapid change"-- Provided by publisher.

Contents

Teil 1. Vom 10. bis zum 14. Jahrhundert. Anhang : Die illuminierten Handschriften englischer und spanischer Herkunft. [Heft 1] Textband. [Heft 2] Tafelband -- Teil 2. Vom 15. Jahrhundert bis um 1540 + flämische und niederländische Handschriften. [Heft 1] Textband. [Heft 2] Tafelband.

Contributors


Publisher

  • Publication

    Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, 2019-2022


Is about

  • Subject

  • Period

    900-1599


Type

  • Language


Classification

  • ISBN

    • 9783954903573
    • 3954903571
    • 375200620X
    • 9783752006209

Persistent URL