
A illuminated page from the
Très Riches Heures showing ''the day for exchanging gifts'' from the month of January

A Book of Hours from the late 1470s.
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The prayer ''Obsecro te'' illustrated by a miniature of the
Pieta, from the Book of Hours of
Angers, 1470s.
A 'book of hours' is the most common type of surviving
medieval illuminated manuscript. Each book of hours is unique in one way or another, but all contain a collection of texts, prayers and psalms, along with appropriate illustrations, to form a reference for
Catholic Christian worship and devotion.
The
Latin name for a book of hours is ''horae'', the
English one ''primer''. The original books were always written in Latin. There are over 800 books of hours made in England scattered to libraries all over the world.
Content
In its original form, a book of hours would list the appropriate texts for each liturgical hour of the day. However, over time, other references were often added, especially calendars of the religious and secular year along with the prayers and masses required for certain holy days. Owners often added their own notes.
The typical medieval manuscript called a book of hours is an abbreviated
breviary, the book containing the
liturgy recited in cloistered
monasteries. The books of hours were composed for the lay people who wished to incorporate elements of
monasticism into their devotional life. Reciting the hours typically centered upon the recitation or singing of a number of
psalms, accompanied by set prayers. A typical book of hours contained:
★ The
Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary, which included the fifteen
Psalms of Degrees;
★ The
Office for the Dead, which included the seven
Penitential Psalms;
★ The
Litany of Saints
Most books of hours began with these basic contents, and expanded them with a variety of prayers and devotions. The Marian prayers ''Obsecro te'' ("I beseech thee") and ''O Intemerata'' ("O undefiled one") were frequently added, as were devotions for use at
Mass, and meditations on the
Passion of
Christ.
History
Originally the prayers in a book of hours were private ones but by the 12th century had become routine liturgical ones in the monasteries. After the
Fourth Lateran Council, laypeople also become interested in them. Many of them were made for women. After the 1340s and the
Black Death, the lay interest of these prayer books increased further.
Originally only the royalty, nobility, and the rich could afford to have their personal book of hours. Sometimes the books included prayers specifically composed for their owners or adapted to their tastes or gender, including adding their personal names to suitable prayers. Some of the surviving ones include portraits of their owners.
By the 15th century, various stationer's shops mass-produced books of hours in the Netherlands and France. By the end of the 15th century, the advance of
printing made the books more affordable and sometimes even commoners and servants could afford to buy one of the printed, unbound books of hours for their own use, leading them to become more popular than
Psalters.
Decorations
As many books of hours are richly illuminated, they form an important record of life in the
15th and
16th centuries as well as the
iconography of medieval
Christianity. Some of them were also decorated with jewelled covers, portraits,
heraldic emblems, numerous illustrations, textual illuminations and marginal decorations. Many were bound as
girdle books for easy carrying. Many, like the ''Talbot Hours'' of
John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury, include a portrait of the owner, and in this case his wife, kneeling in adoration of the Virgin and Child. Large miniature cycles often covered the
Labours of the Months, decorating the calendar, the ''Life of the Virgin'' in eight scenes decorating the ''Hours of the Virgin'', which were sometimes decorated with the
Passion of Christ instead.
The amount of money the books of hours represented made them also important
status symbols that the wealthy wanted to have whether they were pious or not. Wealthy people also sometimes competed trying to outdo each other with decorations of the books they commissioned. The books were also often passed along as gifts to favoured children, friends and servants and even as signs of dynastic allegiances. A mother could pass her book on to her eldest daughter, and the same book could pass along in the same family for centuries. Various queens gave books to their favoured ladies in waiting.
Long-lived books of hours could also be modified for their new owner. After defeating
Richard III,
Henry VII gave Richard's book of hours to his mother, and she modified it to include her name. Many surviving books have numerous handwritten annotations, personal additions and marginal notes but some new owners also commissioned new craftsmen to include more illustrations or scripts. Sir Thomas Lewkenor of Trotton hired an illustrator to add details to what is now known as the ''Lewkenor Hours''.
The pages of books with a less glorious fate could have been just used for notes and scrap paper. Flyleaves of many surviving books include notes of household accounting or records of births and deaths. Some owners had also collected autographs and remembrances of visitors.
Towards the end of the
15th century, printers produced books of hours with
woodcut illustrations. Stationers could mass-produce manuscript books on
vellum with only plain artwork and later "personalize" them with equally mass-produced sets of illustrations from local printers.
Sample books of hours
One of the most famous books of hours, and one of the most richly illuminated medieval manuscripts, is the ''
Très Riches Heures'' painted sometime between
1412 and
1416 in
France for
John, Duke of Berry.
The ''De Brailes Hours'' was made around 1240. It is the earliest surviving English book of hours and includes four portraits of its first owner.
The Rothschild Prayerbook
''The Rothschild Prayerbook'', use of Rome, was made c. 1505 and is only three and a half inches thick.
Louis Nathaniel von Rothschild owned it but
Nazis confiscated the medieval 'Rothschild Book of Hours' immediately after the March 1938
German annexation of Austria from members of the
Viennese branch of the
Mayer Amschel Rothschild family. Through the efforts of
Bettina Looram-Rothschild, the niece and heir of the owner, the government of
Austria returned the book and other works of art to her in 1999. It was sold for Ms Looram-Rothschild by
Christie's auction house of
London on July 8, 1999 for £8,580,000 ($13,400,000), a world auction record price for an illuminated manuscript.
The Connolly Book of Hours
''The Connolly Book of Hours'', was produced during the fifteenth century and is an excellent example of a manuscript Book of Hours produced for a non-aristocratic patron. It was the subject of a 1999 volume by
Timothy M. Sullivan, et al, that documented and contextualized all the illuminated leaves in the book.
See also
★
Canonical hours
★
Horologion
Notes
References
★ ''The Oxford Dictionary of Art'' ISBN 0-19-280022-1
★
Duffy, Eamon, ''The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England 1400-1580'' (Yale, 1992) ISBN 0-300-06076-9
★ ''The Hours of Mary of Burgundy'' (facsimile edition, Harvey Miller, 1995) ISBN 1-872501-87-7
★ Eamon Duffy - ''A Very Personal Possession'' (''History Today'' November 2006)
External links
:General information:
★
Thomas Merton's Book of Hours; Catholic Bestseller available from Ave Maria Press
★
A Hypertext Book of Hours; full texts and translation
★
Museum of the Book, The Hague. Explanation and many examples illustrated
★
Late Medieval and Renaissance Illuminated Manuscripts - Books of Hours 1400-1530 - An excellent guide containing tables describing all the various uses; also with original Latin texts and high-resolution photographs of many books.
:Full turn the pages online individual manuscripts:
★
The Sforza hours Turn the pages of the Sforza Hours at the
British Library (May require software loading, and time).
★
Book of Hours (Ms. Library of Congress. Rosenwald ms. 10) From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division of the Library of Congress.
The same in pdf format.
★
MS Richardson 7. Heures de Nôtre Dame at Houghton Library, Harvard University.