c 1470-1490 Gregorian Chant - Italy - Elaborate Initials

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Original leaf from a large Italian Antiphonal on animal parchment. (590 x 420mm – 23.25 x 16.5 inches) 

The manuscript text & music (five lines of music on a four-line stave) were beautifully executed by hand in dark brown ink on a red stave in large gothic hand.

Three  exceptional large initials alternating in red with intricate external and internal blue penwork  and deep blue with intricate external and internal red penwork

Italy (Florence?), c. 1470-1490. 

The large elaborate illuminated “T” begins part of John 16:20:  “Tristicia vestra…” (Your sorrow shall be turned into joy, alleluia, alleluia). 

Closely related in style and size to the initials in a group of leaves from a choirbook known to be illuminated in Florence by Frater Julianus de Florentia (Guliano Amidei?) c.1470. Examples are illustrated in Ferrini, 1987, Catalog One # 60 and Quaritch Medieval Manuscript Leaves, No 50, p 37. 

Antiphonals contain chants for the canonical hours of the Divine Office: 1st vespers or vigil of great feasts, matins, lauds, prime, terce, sext, none, vespers & compline.

As is usual with Medieval and Renaissance parchment, the hair side of the leaf is darker than the flesh side, but may take ink somewhat better.  The differences in tone caused scribes to arrange their quires so that the hair side of one sheet faced the hair side of the next, and the flesh side faced the flesh side.

Shipped unmatted

  • Inventory# IM-12864
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