A critical study of the manuscript known as the Taymouth hours (London, British Library, Yates Thompson 13) Accompanying DVD contains full-color digital images of each page of the manuscript, with zoom-in capability. Includes bibliographical references (pages 321-349) and indexes.
Contents:
Introduction: Stories, Self and the Illustrated Devotional Manuscript -- City and Court: Shaping the Taymouth Hours -- Sacred and Secular: The Anglo-Norman Devotions and their Illustration -- Text and Image: The Latin Hours of the Holy Spirit, Trinity and Virgin and their Illustration -- Temptation, Sin, Repentance and Redemption: From the Short Office of the Cross through to the Office of the Dead.
Summary:
The Taymouth Hours is one of the most fascinating and enigmatic English manuscripts of the later medieval period. In this, the first comprehensive study of the manuscript, Kathryn A. Smith argues that the Taymouth Hours was commissioned in 1331 by Philippa of Hainault, queen of Edward III, for Edward's sister, the 13-year old Eleanor of Woodstock, on the occasion of her betrothal to Reinald II of Guelders. Through detailed analysis of the manuscript's programme, particularly the relationship between its marginal imagery and the devotional texts which they border, and by embedding the manuscript within the dynamic context of historical, political, religious, cultural and artistic developments in early 14th-century northern Europe, this groundbreaking study explores the ways in which the stories pictured in the Taymouth Hours shaped and affirmed the self of their royal female viewer. (A DVD of the complete manuscript is also included.)
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.