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Source Description
The Missal of Eberhard von Greiffenklau is a masterpiece of Dutch manuscript painting. It was originally produced in the second quarter of the fifteenth century for von Greiffenklau, prebendary of Utrecht from 1446. The manuscript features work by the Masters of Zweder van Culemborg, active in the Utrecht area between 1420 and 1440, so-named after the bishop of Utrecht (1425-1433), for whom they produced a magnificent Missal in the late 1420s (now Bressanone, Bibl. del Seminario Maggiore). This Missal also features work by the celebrated Master of Catherine of Cleves, linking it to possibly the finest Dutch illuminated manuscript ever made; the Hours of Catherine of Cleves of ca. 1440 (Morgan Library & Museum, M.917 and M.945). This extremely elaborate Missal is illuminated with one full-page miniature, fifty-two column miniatures and sixty-eight historiated initials throughout the manuscript, with the temporale and sanctorale sections being particularly richly decorated. In the late fifteenth century, a selection of prayers and sequences were added to the end of the manuscript in Germany, probably Mainz, and the volume was subsequently rebound with its current brown calf over boards, blind, rebacked binding either at that time or in the early sixteenth century.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
8054
label
The Missal of Eberhard von Greiffenklau
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
8054
sourceUrl
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
The Missal of Eberhard von Greiffenklau
description
The Missal of Eberhard von Greiffenklau is a masterpiece of Dutch manuscript painting. It was originally produced in the second quarter of the fifteenth century for von Greiffenklau, prebendary of Utrecht from 1446. The manuscript features work by the Masters of Zweder van Culemborg, active in the Utrecht area between 1420 and 1440, so-named after the bishop of Utrecht (1425-1433), for whom they produced a magnificent Missal in the late 1420s (now Bressanone, Bibl. del Seminario Maggiore). This Missal also features work by the celebrated Master of Catherine of Cleves, linking it to possibly the finest Dutch illuminated manuscript ever made; the Hours of Catherine of Cleves of ca. 1440 (Morgan Library & Museum, M.917 and M.945). This extremely elaborate Missal is illuminated with one full-page miniature, fifty-two column miniatures and sixty-eight historiated initials throughout the manuscript, with the temporale and sanctorale sections being particularly richly decorated. In the late fifteenth century, a selection of prayers and sequences were added to the end of the manuscript in Germany, probably Mainz, and the volume was subsequently rebound with its current brown calf over boards, blind, rebacked binding either at that time or in the early sixteenth century.
provenance
Eberhard von Greiffenklau (?), Cleves, 15th century. Dr. Jakob von Hefner-Alteneck [1811-1903], Munich; Sale, Munich, Galerie Hugo Helbing, June 6 1904, lot 500; purchased by Jacques Rosenthal, Munich, 1904. Acquired by Henry Walters, Baltimore; by bequest to Walters Art Museum, 1931.
date
2nd quarter 15th century
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
illuminated manuscripts
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
27.5
height
19.8
depth
6.2
dimensionsRaw
Overall H: 10 13/16 x W: 7 13/16 x W: 2 7/16 in. (27.5 x 19.8 x 6.2 cm); Folio H: 7 11/16 × W: 6 13/16 in. (19.5 × 17.3 cm)
Source extras
style
Gothic~International Gothic
med
ink and pigments on parchment bound between boards covered with fifteenth- or sixteenth-century brown calf with blind, rebacked, corners repaired in tan calf
creator_ids
7231
7230
collection_ids
MSS
exhibition_ids
2831
2725
2289
683
2093
457
101
22
3310
3816
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
ef61fb2f64e061ae