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Source Description

This small Book of Hours, made for use in the diocese of Cambrai ca. 1300-10, is especially interesting for its profusion of humorous drolleries. Humans, animals, and hybrids are featured in the margins of each page of the book. Small scenes record a variety of activities, such as cooking, playing games, climbing, fishing, making music, and dancing. Two of these scenes may depict the earliest known images of tennis being played. These drolleries amused the faithful during their prayers, while showing scenes that work as metaphors for the soul fighting the vices. The original female owner seems to have been established in the diocese of Cambrai, judging from clues in the text in the Office of the Dead. A number of signatures on the leaves at the beginning and end of the manuscript provide the book with a rich provenance. A priest in the sixteenth century wrote a message in code on fol. 1v asking that the book be returned to him if lost. Members of the ducal house of Savoy owned this book in the seventeenth century, as evinced by the gilt armorial shield of Charles Emmanuel II (1634-75), duke of Savoy, stamped on the covers.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
88823
label
Leaf from a Book of Hours: Men Playing Tennis
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
3
Source metadata
id
88823
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Leaf from a Book of Hours: Men Playing Tennis
description
This small Book of Hours, made for use in the diocese of Cambrai ca. 1300-10, is especially interesting for its profusion of humorous drolleries. Humans, animals, and hybrids are featured in the margins of each page of the book. Small scenes record a variety of activities, such as cooking, playing games, climbing, fishing, making music, and dancing. Two of these scenes may depict the earliest known images of tennis being played. These drolleries amused the faithful during their prayers, while showing scenes that work as metaphors for the soul fighting the vices. The original female owner seems to have been established in the diocese of Cambrai, judging from clues in the text in the Office of the Dead. A number of signatures on the leaves at the beginning and end of the manuscript provide the book with a rich provenance. A priest in the sixteenth century wrote a message in code on fol. 1v asking that the book be returned to him if lost. Members of the ducal house of Savoy owned this book in the seventeenth century, as evinced by the gilt armorial shield of Charles Emmanuel II (1634-75), duke of Savoy, stamped on the covers.
provenance
Acquired by Phillippe Boudard, Savoy, France, 1543 [1]. Jehan Cedati, Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Grenoble, France, 16th century [2]. A member of the ducal house of Savoy, 17th century [3]. Léon Gruel, Paris, late 19th-early 20th century [4]; purchased by Henry Walters, Baltimore, early 20th century (?); by bequest to Walters Art Museum, 1931.[1] Inscription on fols. 1v and 3r: Johannes boudardus canonicus regularis sancti Petri Tarentasiensis Iohan(?) philippe boudard. Name is repeated on fols. 197-202r and signed and dated on fol. 201r[2] Inscription with his request to return the book if lost written in code assigning the numbers 1 to 5 to the vowels a to u on fols. 1v-2r: ""Ces presentes heures sont a messir Jehan Cedati prestre de noustre Dame de Grenoble et qui les trouvea leu rende""[3] Cross of Savoy in shield on fol. 198r; armorial shield of Charles Emmanuel II, duke of Savoy, 1634-75, on binding[4] No. 1300 on front pastedown
date
1st quarter 14th century (Gothic)
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
illuminated manuscripts
leaves (folios)
imageCount
3
pageCount
3
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
10.8
height
7.4
dimensionsRaw
Folio H: 4 1/4 × W: 2 15/16 in. (10.8 × 7.4 cm)
Source extras
med
ink and paint on parchment
creator_ids
6505
collection_ids
MSS
exhibition_ids
none
Page inventory
seq
1
type
photo
mediaId
72812baea7c67b73
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
2
type
photo
mediaId
4345cbb648ed3fb3
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
3
type
photo
mediaId
b17c51eb03878e17
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no