Bifolio from a Book of Hours: Initial V with Floral Border (recto); Text (verso)

Description

The word dirge, today meaning a mournful hymn for funerals, comes from the opening Latin in the Office of the Dead, seen just after the decorative letter A at upper left. During the Middle Ages, dirge became the shortened way to refer to the Office of the Dead. Although primarily recited at funerals, the office was also prayed at home as a reminder of mortality and a protection against sudden death. Surrounding the text, which contains Psalm 5, is a border decoration of acanthus leaves, believed to grow in paradise, as well as a parrot, a squirrel, a beetle, and flowers.

Provenance

[Librairie van Loock, Brussels, Belgium]; Ms. Jeanne Miles Blackburn, Maitland, Fl, gifted to the Cleveland Museum of Art (-2006); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (2006-)

Bifolio from a Book of Hours: Initial V with Floral Border (recto); Text (verso)

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c. 1460–1500

Accession Number

2006.12

Medium

ink, tempera and gold on vellum

Dimensions

Each leaf: 13.9 x 10.6 cm (5 1/2 x 4 3/16 in.)

Classification

Manuscript

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

The Jeanne Miles Blackburn Collection