Home > Digitized Walters Manuscripts
This document is a tranformation of a TEI P5 XML manuscript description incorporating images. If you have trouble reading special or non-Latin characters on this page, please make sure you have appropriate Unicode fonts installed and an up-to-date web browser.
Walters Ms. W.144, Les livres du gouvernement des roys et des princesBrowse images (Browse images in a new window) | TEI in XML format
Manuscript
Les livres du gouvernement des roys et des princes
Text title
Les livres du gouvernement des roys et des princes
Author
Authority name: Giles, of Rome, Archbishop of Bourges, ca. 1243-1316.
Known as: Aegidius Romanus
Known as: Egidio Colonna
Author
Authority name: Henri de Gauchy
Note: Translator from Latin into French
Abstract
This early fourteenth-century English manuscript is an example of Henri de Gauchyâs French translation of De regimine principum, a text that is an important witness to the flowering of the âmirror for princesâ genre at the courts of the Capetian kings of France. Giles of Rome first composed De regimine principum for Philip the Fair of France around 1277, and it was soon translated into several vernacular languages. Henri de Gauchyâs was the most prolifically copied of the French translations, and remains extant in thirty-one copies, six of which are of English origin. W.144 is one of a cluster of illuminated manuscripts of a political nature produced during the last years of the reign of King Edward II and the minority of Edward III, a tumultuous period in English history during which concerns about good government came to the fore. Although the manuscript contains no evidence of ownership prior to 1463, the quality of the illumination in W.144 suggests that this book was originally destined for a king or member of the nobility. The text is divided into three books intended to instruct princes on their ethical, economic, and political responsibilities: the conduct of the individual ruler; the rule of the family and household; and, the governance of the kingdom. Scenes of princes and scholars conversing, as wells as princes instructing their queens and children, are among the ten miniatures and historiated initials. Stylistically, the book is a member of the Queen Mary Psalter group (London, British Library Royal 2 B VII), although aspects of its illumination also relate it to other important groups of manuscripts produced in early fourteenth-century England.
Date
First third of the 14th century CE
Origin
London (?), England
Language:
The primary language in this manuscript is French, Old (842-ca.1400).
Support material
Parchment
Medium thickness; follicle pattern visible on many pages; slightly trimmed
Extent
Foliation: iv+119+iii
First three flyleaves at the front and last two at the back of paper; fourth front flyleaf and first back flyleaf of parchment, foliated but not integral to the structure of the manuscript; modern pencil foliation in upper right corners of rectos; text beginning on fol. 2r and ending on fol. 120v
Collation
Formula: iv, 1-9(8), 10(10,-1), 11-14(8), 15(6), iii
Catchwords: Quires of eight marked with catchwords in lower margin under right text column on versos, usually enclosed within ink-drawn box
Signatures: Some quires, particularly quires after fol. 73v, have red marks on first and final leaves of the quire, facing each other in lower inner margins
Comments: Quire 10 is a quire of eight with an additional leaf (fol. 74) hooked around it; quires begin on fols. 2(1), 10(2), 18(3), 26(4), 34(5), 42(6), 50(7), 58(8), 66(9), 74(10), 83(11), 91(12), 99(13), 107(14), 115(15)
Dimensions
20.0 cm wide by 30.0 cm high
Written surface
15.3 cm wide by 23.5 cm high
Layout
Contents:
fols. 2r - 120v:Decoration:
fol. 2r:
Images of authors presenting books to patrons occur in illuminated copies of Latin texts produced in France from the eleventh century forward. The earliest surviving book presentation image in a vernacular manuscript is found in the presentation copy of the Grandes Chroniques de France (Paris, Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève Ms 782, fol. 326v), dated to ca. 1274. The illustration shows the text's translator, the monk Primat, along with his abbot Matthew de Vendôme and other monks, kneeling to present his work to Philip III.
The Augustinian monk and archbishop of Bourges Giles of Rome dedicated his De regimine principum to âhis special lord Lord Philip [the future Philip IV, or Philip the Fair], first-born son and heir of the most famous man Lord Philip [Philip III] by the grace of God most illustrious king of Franceâ (suo domino speciali Domino Philippo primogenito & hæredi præclarissimi viri Domini Philippi dei gratia Illustrissimi Regis Francorum). As the future Philip the Fair would have been no more than thirteen years old at the time of the commission, it seems likely that the manuscript's actual patron was his father, Philip III.
fol. 2v:
fol. 3v:
This illumination depicts a prince consulting and receiving the advice of learned counselors, an apt subject to illustrate a text on the art of government. One of the scholars in the miniature points to the pages of a book that lies open on his lap, while the seated king raises his right hand in a gesture for attention.
fol. 10r:
The standing scholarâs raised right hand and index finger indicate that he is speaking. His gesture is answered by the prince, whose raised right hand and open palm indicate that he is listening.
fol. 28v:
In contrast to the miniature on fol. 10r, in which the scholar instructs the ruler, in this initial it is the ruler who raises his right hand and index finger in the gesture for speech, while the scholarâs raised, open-palmed right hand indicates his attention to the princeâs words.
Pictorial instructions to the illuminator (as on fols. 35v, 51v, 63v, and 82r) are evident in the form of highly abbreviated sketches of a scholar's cap (shown as an inverted half-moon) and a crown. Whether provided by the stationer, the scribe, or an artist, such schematic pictorial cues reminded the illuminator to execute a stock subject from memory, or they prompted him to consult verbal instructions or pictorial models or patterns. The schematic symbols of scholarly and royal headgear on this folio prompted the artist to execute the image of a scholar before a king in the initial above.
fol. 35v:
The standing scholar in the miniature appears to count on his fingers, the gesture for disputation, while the cross-legged ruler raises his right hand, palm open, in the gesture for attention.
Pictorial instructions to the illuminator (as on fols. 28v, 51v, 63v, and 82r) are evident in the form of highly abbreviated sketches of a scholar's cap (shown as an inverted half-moon with a faintly rendered brim) and a crown. Whether provided by the stationer, the scribe, or an artist, such schematic pictorial cues reminded the illuminator to execute a stock subject from memory, or they prompted him to consult verbal instructions or pictorial models or patterns. The schematic symbols of scholarly and royal headgear on this folio prompted the artist to execute the image of a scholar before a king in the miniature above.
fol. 41v:
For a similar image of a prince governing his family (in which no servant is represented), see Cambridge, Cambridge University Library MS Ff.3.3, fol. 67r, a manuscript of De regimine principum written and illuminated in early fourteenth-century France with an added index written in fifteenth-century England.
fol. 51v:
Pictorial instructions to the illuminator (as on fols. 28v, 35v, 63v, and 82r) are evident in the form of two ovals rendered at the lower left of a schematically executed crown. Whether provided by the stationer, the scribe, or an artist, such schematic pictorial cues reminded the illuminator to execute a stock subject from memory, or they prompted him to consult verbal instructions or pictorial models or patterns. The schematic symbols on this folio prompted the artist to execute the image of a king instructing his children in the initial above.
fol. 63v:
For a similar image of a prince governing his family, see Cambridge, Cambridge University Library MS Ff.3.3, fol. 67r, a manuscript of De regimine principum written and illuminated in early fourteenth-century France with an added index written in fifteenth-century England.
Pictorial instructions to the illuminator (as on fols. 28v, 35v, 51v, and 82r) remain as a faintly rendered crown. Whether provided by the stationer, the scribe, or an artist, such schematic pictorial cues reminded the illuminator to execute a stock subject from memory, or they prompted him to consult verbal instructions or pictorial models or patterns. The schematic symbols on this folio would have prompted the artist to execute the image of a king addressing his queen and sons in the adjacent miniature.
fol. 73v:
A verbal instruction for the artist appears in the lower margin on this folio in the form of a partially legible Latin phrase, âRex et ___(?)â (King and ___(?)). Whether provided by the stationer, the scribe, or an artist, such abbreviated verbal cues served as reminders of the subjects to be depicted in the illustrations. If this instruction was intended for an artist, as is likely, then it may provide evidence that one or both of the illuminators could read Latin.
fol. 82r:
The standing scholarâs raised right hand and index finger indicate that he is speaking. His gesture is answered by the prince, whose raised hand and open palm indicate that he is listening.
A verbal instruction for the artist appears in the lower margin on fols. 81v-82r, in the form of the Latin phrase âRex et filosoforusâ (King and philosopher). Whether provided by the stationer, the scribe, or an artist, such abbreviated verbal cues served as reminders of the subjects to be depicted in the illustrations. If, as is likely, this instruction was intended for an artist, then it may provide evidence that one or both of the illuminators could read Latin. As on fols. 28v, 35v, 51v, and 63v, pictorial instructions for the illuminator occur on this page: in the right margin are abbreviated sketches of a scholar's cap (shown as an inverted half-moon) and a crown. The combination of verbal and pictorial instructions on this page suggests that the pictorial cues were intended to remind the artist to consult a specific pictorial model or pattern.
Binding
The binding is not original.
Brown calf leather with later-blocked John Louis Goldsmid arms over millboard, by Faulkner ca. 1815, rebacked; twentieth-century blue marbled paper pastedowns and brown ribbon
Provenance
Copied in England, probably London, in the first quarter of the fourteenth century
Owned by monastery, 1463 (cropped inscription on fol. 121r reading: "Liber monasterii sancti gaultheri [?]...16 novembris anno domini millesimo 463 et regis edwardi iiij[ti] viij[vo] pro x l. 10 [?] s." [transcription from Charles Briggs])
Ebenezer Mussel, London
William Bayntum, London, May 30, 1766 sale, no. 90, purchased from Ebenezer Mussel (inscription on fol. 121r)
John Louis Goldsmid, London, June 4, 1787 sale, purchased from William Bayntum (arms on cover)
Christie's, London, December 11, 1815 sale, no. 293, purchased from John Louis Goldsmid
Joseph Barrois collection, no. 22
Fourth Earl of Ashburnham, London, 1849, purchased from Joseph Barrois
Sotheby's, June 11, 1901, no. 241, purchased from Lord Ashburnham sale
C. Fairfax Murray, 1901-before 1912, purchased from Sotheby's
L. Rosenthal, 1912
Leon Gruel, Paris, after 1912
Henry Walters, Baltimore, before 1931, purchased from Leon Gruel
Acquisition
Walters Art Museum, 1931, by Henry Walters' bequest
Bibliography
Giles, of Rome Archbishop of Bourges. Li livres du gouvernement des rois; a XIIIth century French version of Egidio Colonna's treatise De 'regimine principum, now first published from the Kerr ms. Translated by Samuel Paul Molenaer. London: Macmillan & Co., 1898.
De Ricci, Seymour. Census of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the United States and Canada. Vol. 1. New York: H. W. Wilson Company, 1935, p. 846, cat. no. 507.
Freeman Sandler, Lucy. Gothic Manuscripts 1285-1385. A Survey of Manuscripts Illuminated in the British Isles. Vol. 5. London: Harvey Miller Publishers, 1986. I:, pp. 25, 30-32, ills. 174, 176; II:, p. 79.
Briggs, Charles F. Giles of Rome's De Regimine Principum: Reading and Writing Politics at Court and University, c. 1275-1525. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. pp. 33, 39, 40, 56-60, 76, 153, figs. 1 (fol. 2r), 5 (fol. 41v).
Contributors
Principal catalogers: Herbert, Lynley; Noel, William; Smith, Kathryn
Cataloger: Grollemond, Larisa
Editors: Herbert, Lynley; Noel, William
Copy editor: Joyal, Stephanie
Conservators: Owen, Linda; Quandt, Abigail
Contributors: Bockrath, Diane; Emery, Doug; Grollemond, Larisa; Noel, William; Tabritha, Ariel; Toth, Michael B.
Publisher
The Walters Art Museum
License
Licensed for use under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported Access Rights, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/legalcode. It is requested that copies of any published articles based on the information in this data set be sent to the curator of manuscripts, The Walters Art Museum, 600 North Charles Street, Baltimore MD 21201.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4