Biblia Sacra Latina, Versio Vulgata
F-e68m
Note from Otto Ege:
This copy of the Latin version by St. Jerome was made during the period when France stood at the height of her medieval glory. A decade or two before, Louis IX (Saint Louis), the strongest monarch of his age, had made France the mightiest power in Europe. This favorable political situation rendered possible the "golden age" of the manuscript, and Paris became the center in which the finest manuscripts were written and sold.
In the quarter century from 1275 to 1300, marked advances were effected in the art. The bar borders came to be executed in rich opaque gouache pigments, with ultramarine made of powdered lapis lazuli predominating. The foliage scroll work inside the initial frame created a style that persisted with little or no change for nearly two hundred years. The script was well executed and was without rigidity or tension. All these elements, together with the sparkle which was created by the casual distribution of the burnished gold accents, give to this leaf a striking atmosphere of joyous freedom.
General Information
Northern Textualis
Original Condition
Current Condition
The vellum is thin, white, and supple, with minimal yellowing. Both pages have gloss on the margins.
Book Decoration and Musical Notation
Lining is done in light ink or lead. The bulk of the text is in brown ink, with red, blue, coral, white, and beige for the decorations. Elaborate initials and foliage, highlighted book names and chapter numbers, and extensive use of gold leaf.
1 inital on recto (measuring 21 mm x 11 mm) with tail down. The left side becomes a decorated margin going all the way to the top and curling into an animal head. It has blue and coral as well as various ivy leaves protruding in blue, coral, and gold.
3 initials on verso. Measuring (from the top) 23 mm x 11mm, 20mm x 18 mm and in the second column 19 mm x 16 mm. Both columns have border outline on the left hand side in blue, coral and white dotting. Ivy leaves in gold.