![]() ![]() ![]() From the 1440s onward, he built up a significant library totaling nearly a thousand titles by his death. As the principal miniature of the manuscript, the Annunciation displays a luxurious border of Italianate acanthus leaf.Ī second important phase in book production was stimulated by the patronage of the Valois duke of Burgundy, Philip the Good, who inherited the passion of his house for expensive illuminated books. These traits are shown in the scenes of the Crucifixion and Annunciation from their Belles Heures ( 54.1.1) of around 1406–8/9. Their work exemplifies the courtly style prevalent in various European centers around 1400, which combined elegant, sinuous figures, decorative color, and selective realism in pictorial details such as animals, insects, or plants. The city of Paris was renowned as a major center of illumination in the early fifteenth century, yet by the 1440s its status was rivaled by vigorous book production in the great urban centers of the Burgundian Netherlands such as Bruges, Ghent, and Valenciennes.Īmong the most famous illuminators in the history of the medium are the Limbourg brothers, Herman, Paul, and Jean, who were employed by the extravagant collector Jean, duke of Berry, a prince of the royal French house of Valois. ![]() In its structure, layout, script, and decoration, every manuscript bears the signs of the unique set of processes and circumstances involved in its production, as it moved successively through the hands of the parchment maker, the scribe, and one or more decorators or illuminators.Įarly manuscripts were made in monasteries, but by the twelfth century an urban bookseller, called a libraire, coordinated the various stages of production. Unlike the mass-produced books of our time, an illuminated manuscript is a unique, handmade object. ![]()
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