LES ENLUMINURES Le Louvre des Antiquaires 2 place du Palais-Royal Paris

Similar documents
A digital facsimile of selections fromwalters Ms. W.842, Chapter 53 of the Book of Isaiah Title: Book of Isaiah 53:1-12

Acanthus leaf: a stylized fleshy leaf motif used extensively in decorated initials and foliate borders.

Sir George Lee ( ) Papers

List 11: Evelyn Waugh

Zetetic Books Conor Pattenden 46 Meadow Road Berkhamsted HP4 1EB UK

Bibliographic Description of a 1523 Luther New Testament (Burke Catalogue: CB77/1523)

Lauren Burden Ranuzzi Manuscript Report: Esercizi Spirituali HRC Number: PH12591 October 1, 2012

State Papers Online, Julia de Mowbray, Publisher Scott Dawson, Product Manager

The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanack, Dublin, Red morocco binding.

RcprodiiiT-d at 70% of the original size. Dutail ivoin inside front cover.

The Year Books Or Reports in the Following Reigns, with Notes to Brooke and Fitzherbert s Abridgments (1678, )

Order of Saint Lazarus: Primary sources

London, Royal Academy of Music, Manuscript 600

CBA LFL 9/22/2015 1

Guidelines for the Preparation and Submission of Theses and Written Creative Works

Contents: As in the domestic issue, above, except that p. 2 contains a publisher s advertisement listing four titles in Unwin s Colonial Library.

MEI: how to use a crash course for the Material Evidence in Incunabula database

Dalhousie University Archives. Finding Aid - Thomas McCulloch collection (MS-2-40)

JACOBEAN POETRY AND PROSE

Ars Quatuor Coronatorum 93 VOLUME SET. Being the Transactions of the Lodge Quatuor Coronati No. 2076, London. Attic Books Ars Quatuor Coronatorum 1

The Walters Art Museum 600 N. Charles Street Baltimore, Maryland

Also by A. L. Rowse. Shakespeare

Johannes, de Rupescissa, approximately 1300-approximately Liber de consideratione quintae essentiae omnium rerum

CBA LFL 9/22/2015 1

A Bibliography of Bagpipe Music

J.P.Sommerville THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN BRITAIN

SIR WALTER RALEGH AND HIS READERS IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY

The History and the Culture of His Time

New Arrivals September 4, 2018

Making books for profit in medieval times

Manuscripts Collection Reader Guide 5 CHARTER, ROLL AND SEAL COLLECTIONS

Brief memoirs of the life of Anne Freame, with her death-bed sayings

St. Wulstan Society (Worcester, Mass.), Records,

A Bibliography of Bagpipe Music

Inventory. Dep.217. Professor Andrew Dewar Gibb

B.A. Honours:16 th and 17 th century Literature. Prepared by: Dr. Iqbal Judge Asso.Prof. PG Dept of English

Early Modern Literature in History

D R A F T. A32 Nine of the stories in Nabokov s Dozen first appeared in book form in the. Vladimir Nabokov: A Descriptive Bibliography, Revised

A Bibliography of Bagpipe Music

Banes (Alexander and Nannie I.) Family Papers. (Mss. 4392) Inventory. Compiled by. Joseph D. Scott

James F. Mercer papers

Archives Fine Books Shortlist No.7 Queensland

Book Sale on Nov. 21, 2015 starting at 9:30 AM at the OBCGS Library

This page intentionally left blank

Guide to the Margaret Rickert Papers

Santa Clara University Department of Electrical Engineering

Inventory. Acc Sir Robert A Watson-Watt

Course: CH 108 Name: Gregory Simpson Date: Assignment: Codicological Description of a Latin-German Dictionary from the Middle Ages

The Walters Art Museum 600 N. Charles Street Baltimore, Maryland

S. C. Malone Penmanship Collection n.d. and Decker Library, Maryland Institute College of Art

Thesis and Dissertation Handbook

MS18 Waddell Collection

THE LYRIC POEM. in this web service Cambridge University Press.

Inscriptions and insertions in a first edition of The Lord of. the Rings

English 100A Literary History I Autumn Jennifer Summit and Roland Greene

Medieval and Renaissance

WRITINGS ON TRAVEL, DISCOVERY AND HISTORY BY DANIEL DEFOE

No online items

APPENDIX C THOREAU EDITION STYLE SHEET

William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository

THE ROYAL PREROGATIVE AND THE LEARNING OF THE INNS OF COURT

JULIA HILL NEWELL COLLECTION SC Ruth T. Watanabe Special Collections Sibley Music Library, Eastman School of Music University of Rochester

HERBERT EDWIN LOMBARD

LIVES IN BOOK TRADE HISTORY Changing contours of research over 40 years

The Annual Register

The Highlanders Of Scotland Books

Introduction To Manuscript Studies PDF

A Bibliography of Bagpipe Music

Guide to the David H. Stevens Papers

Memorandum. December 1, The Doctoral Candidate. Office of the Registrar. Instructions for Preparing the Doctoral Dissertation

History Of Manuscript Illumination

Preparation of the Manuscript

New John Buchan stock - 25 January 2019

Works of. as well as HIS TRANSLATIONS OF THE ILIAD & THE ODYSSEY OF HOMER. Attic Books Alexander Pope Set 1

PROBLEM FATHERS IN SHAKESPEARE AND RENAISSANCE DRAMA

U N I T 2 : T H E M I D D L E A G E S E N G 1 2 A

CBA LFL 9/22/ THE LAGOON BY JOSEPH CONRAD {bl}new York{/bl} THE MACMILLAN COMPANY LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO., LTD All rights reserved

There is an activity based around book production available for children on the Gothic for England website which you may find useful.

Book Review of Mirjam Foot s Bookbinders at Work. New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press; London: The British Library, pp.

HAND LIST MICROFILM AND SELECTED MICROFICHE SETS FOLGER SHAKESPEARE LIBRARY

Marshall Library of Economics. Jean-Gustave Courcelle Seneuil Papers

Shorter, Clement King, Clement King Shorter letter to Dr. George Williamson 1922 May 8

Thomas More: A Biography By Richard Marius READ ONLINE

MANUAL FOR THE PREPARATION OF THESIS AND DISSERTATIONS THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION. Texas Christian University Fort Worth, Texas

To gather rare books and manuscripts, such as would be of the greatest educational, historical and literary interest and use.

CBA LFL 9/22/2015 1

Medieval Festival Ballet Theatre of Maryland

Ed. Carroll Moulton. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, p COPYRIGHT 1998 Charles Scribner's Sons, COPYRIGHT 2007 Gale

DANIEL J. MEADOR COLLECTION MSS.044

Zetetic Books Conor Pattenden 46 Meadow Road Berkhamsted HP4 1EB UK

Early printed maps of Kent

A Finding Aid to the Barbara Mathes Gallery Records Pertaining to Rio Nero Lawsuit, , in the Archives of American Art

Manuscript Description

The Westminster Tournament Challenge (Harley 83 H 1) and Thomas Wriothesley s Workshop

Notes on footnoting and references for submitted work:

William Shakespeare - As You Like It By William Shakespeare READ ONLINE

THE NAPOLEONIC EMPIRE

No online items

INDIANA UNIVERSITY SOUTHEAST MASTERS IN INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES GUIDE TO THE PREPARATION OF THESES

CBA LFL 9/22/2015 1

Transcription:

LES ENLUMINURES, LTD 2970 North Lake Shore Drive 11B Chicago, Illinois 60657 tel. 1-773-929-5986 fax. 1-773-528-3976 chicago@lesenluminures.com LES ENLUMINURES Le Louvre des Antiquaires 2 place du Palais-Royal 75001 Paris tél : 33 1 42 60 15 58 fax : 33 1 40 15 00 25 info@lesenluminures.com ANONYMOUS, [Heraldry of the Kings and Nobles of England from Edward the Confessor to Elizabeth I] In English, illustrated manuscript on paper [England, dated 1597] vii + 90 + vii, complete, (collation impossible to determine due to modern rebinding), paper size (285 x 194 mm), watermark (Briquet 12772, "Pot à una anse," Amiens, 1598), catchwords, contemporary foliation in Arabic numerals (ff. 1-86), written in a late Elizabethan secretary script in brown ink, justified for double modules in brown and red ink (writing space 236 x 122 mm; illustration space 236 x 45 mm), first module horizontal ruling line in rubric, larger calligraphic script used for the names of kings and queens, running headers identifying reigns centered in brown ink, ONE LARGE CALLIGRAPHIC INITIAL (72 x 90 mm) on f. 1 r, 509 COATS OF ARMS (307 painted; 164 illustrated; 38 blank), two sixteenth- or early seventeenth-century notes on noble families and one letter from the bookseller Simons and Waters to J.A Stewart bound into rear flyleaves as part of modern rebinding, foliation error on ff. 4 and 64 corrected in modern pencil, ff. 85 and 86 out of order due to rebinding, foliation for ff. 87-90 incomplete, ff. 1r-9v have numbering of the first 73 nobles appear in the gutters, ff. 13rv, 16v, 21rv, 25rv, 31v, 34v, 38v, 42rv, 47rv, 57v, 64rv, 68v, 80v, 82v blank, marginalia in seventeenth-century cursive script in brown ink on ff. 1r, 29r, 50v, 53r and 72v, marginalia in pencil on f. 82r, modern corrections and embellishments to heraldic devices in pencil on ff. 1v, 8r, 9r, 14v, 24v, 38r, 43r, 44v, 50v, 52v, 53r, 59v, 66r, 75r, 81v, and 84r, painter contemporary with pencil corrections corrects errors using white paint on ff. 55v, 57r, 67v, 79r, 80r, and 82r, moderate to heavy soiling on ff. 1r and 89r-90v, water staining in center of page on ff. 88-90 do not effect text, browning to edges throughout, periodic damp staining, minor worming to fore-edge on ff. 27-34, contemporary paper repairs to fore-edges on ff. 1-17 and 88-90. Bound in twentieth-century half binding in marble paper with brown leather spine and corner pieces over cardboard, gilded title and dating over brown leather affixed to front cover ( HERALDIC MANUSCRIPT 1597 ), blind stamp decoration on spine, moderate to heavy wear to spine and corner pieces, all edges moderately chipped and worn revealing cardboard, reinforced maroon cloth shoulders on inside front and rear covers, marble paper used as front and rear pastedowns, first three front and rear flyleaves in modern heavy bonded paper, last four front and rear flyleaves in contemporary paper with justifications but no text, two book plates appear on front inside cover and recto side of first front flyleaf, sale price information and initials appear on recto side of second front flyleaf ( AYK 2000 ), catalogue information on verso side of last fly leaf (3048). Dimensions 292 x 203 mm. This interesting, richly illustrated manuscript presents a collection of heraldic devices with short biographies of the person pertaining to the coat of arms. It provides an important witness to the use of heraldry as a source for the history of England. Such manuscripts served as a means to identify family relationships and their importance to contemporary political and marriage alliances and were often also used to claim title to lands and offices during legal proceedings. 1

PROVENANCE 1. Manuscript dated 1597, written in England. Dating found on f. 1 r. Anno dm. 1597. A Regine Eliz;, etc xxxix o. 2. Sir Robert Dallas (1756-1824). Robert Dallas was born on 16 October 1756 to Robert Dallas (d. 1797) and Elizabeth, daughter of the Rev. James Smith. He was educated at Dr Elphinstone's school in Kensington and subsequently at Geneva under the tutorship of the distinguished Swiss pastor Chauvet. He entered Lincoln's Inn as a student on 4 November 1777. He received the bar on 6 November 1782. He specialized in parliamentary and privy council work being a part of many notable cases, including the first East India Company challenge to Charles James Fox's East India Bill in 1783 and the defense at the impeachment trial of Warren Hastings initiated by Edmund Burke and Charles James Fox, was to last for seven years in 1787. Between 1806 and 1808 he defended General Thomas Picton, the former governor of Trinidad, against charges of unlawfully torturing a young girl accused of theft. On 20 February 1807 Dallas attempted to convince the parliament not to pass Lord Grenville's bill meant to abolish the slave trade. Dallas had a brief political career; he became MP for the Cornish borough of Mitchell from 1802-1805, until appointed chief justice of Chester. He became MP for Dysart burghs in Scotland in March 1805, but served only until 1806. On 6 May 1813, Dallas was appointed solicitor-general in the earl of Liverpool's administration. He was knighted on 19 May. Following his brief tenure of the solicitorgeneralship, Dallas was appointed an assistant justice of the court of common pleas on 18 November 1813. In October 1817, he formed part of the special commission that tried the Derbyshire Luddites for high treason, which ended in the execution of William Turner, Jeremiah Brandreth and Isaac Ludlam the elder on 7 November. In November 1818, Dallas became lord chief justice of the common pleas and was sworn of the Privy Council on 19 November. In March 1820 he and Lord Chief Justice Charles Abbott headed the commission to try the Cato Street conspirators, which ended in the execution of James Ings and four others on 1 May 1820. Dallas married twice, first to Charlotte Jardine on 11 August 1788, was Charlotte Jardine with whom he had one son and one daughter. Charlotte Dallas died on 17 October 1792. Dallas married his second wife Giustina Davidson on 10 September 1802, with whom he had five daughters. 3. John Alexander Stewart, possibly Professor John Alexander Stewart of Oxford University (1846 1933) who bought the manuscript from Simmons and Waters booksellers, 4 Bath Street, Leamington SPA, United Kingdom in late 1920 or early 1921. Stewart was educated at Edinburgh University, and afterwards at Lincoln College, Oxford. In 1870 he was elected a senior student of Christ Church and lecturer in philosophy at Lincoln and Oriel colleges (1874-75). He married Helen (d. 1925), daughter of John Macmillan, in 1875. In 1897 he became White's professor of moral philosophy and fellow of Corpus Christi College. He resigned his chair in 1927. He received the honorary degree of LLD from the universities of Edinburgh (1896) and Aberdeen (1934). He published two books: Notes on the Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle (2 vols., 1892) and The Myths of Plato (1905). This information comes from the bookplate on the front inside cover. This armorial bookplate depicts a coat of arms leaning dexter with a pelican piercing its breast in a nest with three young located middle chief above a chequey fess. Below the chequey fess is a cinquefoil placed middle base. The coat of arms is surmounted by a Melbury helm with a crest showing a nested pelican piercing its breast with three young placed on the sinister chief corner of the shield. 2

The coat of arms is placed within a medallion, which contains the motto sanguine suo and the owner s name in Latin Sigillum Iohannis Alexandri Stewart. On the bookplate in pencil are the marks 122 in the upper left corner i in the upper right corner and 3048 in the lower right corner. Both the pelican charge and the chequey fess belong to the Stewart clan of Scotland. 4. Henry Clark Stewart of Inchmahome, his armorial bookplate on the recto of the first front flyleaf. This armorial bookplate depicts a coat of arms leaning dexter with a pelican piercing its breast in a nest with three young located middle chief above a chequey fess. Below the chequey fess is a diamond placed middle base. The coat of arms is surmounted by a barrel helm with a crest showing a pelican piercing its breast placed on the sinister chief corner of the shield. The motto Sanguine Suo extends from between the pelican s wings to the front of the helm. The coat of arms is framed by a double lined rectangular box in two modules. The lower module has the name HENRY CLARK STEWART OF INCHMAHOME. Both the pelican charge and the chequey fess belong to the Stewart clan of Scotland. On the bookplate in pencil are the mark ii appears the upper right corner. TEXT ff. 1r-84v, [Heraldry of the Kings and Nobles of England from Edward the Confessor to Elizabeth I], incipit, The names and ahrmes of all the nobilitio [???] in England...Edward Confessor sonne of king Etheldredo and Emma his last wyfe, daughter of Richard the third duke of Normandie... ; explicit, Henry Norys knight created Lord Norys of Ricott he bendang a cheveron betwene 3 ravens heads erased sables. ff. 88r-90v, Index. The history of heralds dates from the twelfth century as part of the growing importance of land and title claims and the role of chivalric codes. Heraldry confirmed the lands and titles of each lord by displaying the emblems on the shield. In 1484, Richard III created constitutionally the organization run by the heralds, also known as the College of Arms, as part of the royal court to adjudicated claims to nobility and to create new coat of arms. In the 1530s, Henry VIII reconstituted the heralds and began a comprehensive survey of titles and heraldic devices in England. Elizabeth I encouraged the creation of heraldry and noble lineages, using three kings of arms, seven heralds, and four pursuivants charged with establishing official pedigrees and asking writers and historians to research these pedigrees. Besides granting arms, the heralds are responsible for establishing rights of arm by descent, and, in so doing, legitimizing claims to titles and lands. This manuscript prepared by an anonymous scribe organized his collection of heraldic devices around the reigns of the kings and queens of England. The scribe begins a new section with each new monarch and includes the principal nobility who held titles or were given titles during their reign. The organization seems simple on the surface, but it is a bit confusing as certain nobles held their lands and titles in previous reigns, but are listed in latter reigns. There are short summary histories for the principal figures in the manuscript. Most, however, are described by their title and family origins followed by a description of their coats of arms. All in all, it provides an important source for the contemporary interest in heraldry during the sixteenth century. 3

Two small contemporary fragments likely used in the research of the heraldic manuscript have been bound into rear flyleaves of the modern binding. The first contains hand written notes in the hand of the scribe regarding the family genealogy of the heirs of Richard Woodvile, earl of Rivers, which includes information on the lords of Stanley. A later hand at the bottom of the note corrects certain errors in these notes regarding John Stanley as not being the first son or brother of first lord Stanley. The second fragment contains numerous notes on the financial holdings of several properties and several notes on family histories in no order. This information is quite useful to those seeking to understand how one took notes to compose the larger manuscript and to those interested in seeking out the importance of wealth in estates for identifying the importance of the English peerage. A third modern memorandum is bound into rear flyleaves of the modern binding. This memorandum was written by Simmons and Waters of Leamington SPA to J.A. Stewart, Esq. On 18 February 1921. It reads Dear Sir, We thank you for your cheque for the MSS. We know nothing of its history except it at one time belonged to Sir R. Dallas 1756-1824, the judge. Yours very faithfully, Simmons Waters. ILLUSTRATION There are three types of coats of arms depicted in this manuscript: blank, pen illustrated, and painted. Each of the coats of arms appears in the fore edge margins next to the name of the person. The blank coats of arms have the outline of a shield and nothing more. They occur throughout the manuscript in random locations, this despite the fact the descriptions of the devices are present in the manuscript. The scribe completed the pen-illustrated coats of arms in brown ink. He completed the painted coats of arms using several colors over the pen-illustrated coats of arms. The pen-illustrated coats of arms are done with moderate skill. The painted coats of arms are completed with less skill. It is difficult to determine whether or not the manuscript was ever intended to be painted in its original form. The pen-illustrated coats of arms are certainly contemporary, although incomplete. This is also true for the painted coats of arms. Although most coats of arms are painted, they are done in series and not front to back. There are gaps in the painting throughout the manuscript and the initial pages are not painted, as one would expect. The problem is complicated by the fact that there is a painter who corrects the paintings and does so after the scribe who corrects the heraldic devices in pencil. This is known by the fact that the painter often paints over the pencil corrections. There are two possibilities. The original painting is contemporary with the original production of the manuscript and the painter-corrector is later. The second possibility is that all the painting was completed much later than the original manuscript, perhaps by one of its nineteenth century owners who used pencil to correct the manuscript. Royal coats of arms: Edward the Confessor (f. 1r); William the Conqueror [blank] (f. 1r); William Rufus (f. 10r); Henry I (f. 14r); Stephen I [blank] (f. 17r); Henry II (f. 22r); Richard I (f. 26r); John I (f. 29r); Edward I (f. 35r); Edward II (f. 39r); Edward III [blank] (f. 43r); Richard II (f. 48r); Henry IV [incomplete] (f. 53r); Henry V [blank] (f. 55r); Henry VI [blank] (f. 58r); Edward IV [blank] (f. 4

65r); Edward V [blank] (f. 69); Henry VII [blank] (f. 70r); Henry VIII [blank] (f. 72r); Edward VI (f. 78r); Mary I (f. 81); Elizabeth I (f. 83r). LITERATURE Fairbairn, James. Book of Crests of the Families of Great Britain and Ireland, New York, Dover Publications, 1993. Murray, John. Stewart, John Alexander (1846 1933), in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, ed. H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison, Oxford, OUP, 2004. Wells, Nathan. Dallas, Sir Robert (1756 1824), in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, ed. H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison, Oxford, OUP, 2004. Williamson, David. Debrett s Guide to Heraldry and Regalia, London, Headline Book Publishing PLC, 1992. Woodcock, Thomas and John Martin Robinson. The Oxford Guide to Heraldry, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1988. ONLINE RESOURCES Renaissance the Elizabeth World http://elizabethan.org/ Medieval English Genealogy http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html 5