
The Painted Histories of the Welles-Ros Bible (Paris, BnF Fr.1)
Scripture Transformed in Fourteenth-Century England
Sorozatcím:
Boydell Studies in Medieval Art and Architecture;
Kiadó: Boydell Press
Megjelenés dátuma: 2025. június 10.
Kötetek száma: Print PDF
Normál ár:
Kiadói listaár:
GBP 95.00
GBP 95.00
Beszerezhetőség:
Még nem jelent meg, de rendelhető. A megjelenéstől számított néhány héten belül megérkezik.
Rövid leírás:
A lavishly illustrated study of the Welles-Ros Bible, exploring its provenance, ownership, design and production.
Hosszú leírás:
A lavishly illustrated study of the Welles-Ros Bible, exploring its provenance, ownership, design and production.
At some point between c.1366 and 1373, the noblewoman Maud de Ros, widow of the Lincolnshire baron John de Welles, commissioned what is now the earliest surviving entire translated Bible from England. The Welles-Ros Bible contains the most complete edition of the Anglo-Norman Bible - a close, often literal translation of the Vulgate into insular French - as well as 82 narrative, highly personalized illustrations.
As this first long-form study of the manuscript argues, Maud commissioned the Bible to serve as a mirror, guide, family archive, dynastic chronicle, and source of spiritual instruction and consolation for her youthful son, John, 5th Baron Welles (1352-1421). Moreover, Maud played a key role in the production of the text edition and the design of many of the images. This book analyzes the manuscript, its text, and its vivid illuminations in the context of rich traditions of medieval biblical translation, production, and illustration, offering fresh insights into the roles of images in shaping and mediating scripture and religious experience. Adding to our understandings of life among the lower nobility in later fourteenth-century England, this cultural history of a major artefact also expands our picture of the cultural patronage and creative agency of laywomen, as well as medieval strategies of memorialization, responses to the Plague, and ideas about gender, identity, sexuality and the emotions.
At some point between c.1366 and 1373, the noblewoman Maud de Ros, widow of the Lincolnshire baron John de Welles, commissioned what is now the earliest surviving entire translated Bible from England. The Welles-Ros Bible contains the most complete edition of the Anglo-Norman Bible - a close, often literal translation of the Vulgate into insular French - as well as 82 narrative, highly personalized illustrations.
As this first long-form study of the manuscript argues, Maud commissioned the Bible to serve as a mirror, guide, family archive, dynastic chronicle, and source of spiritual instruction and consolation for her youthful son, John, 5th Baron Welles (1352-1421). Moreover, Maud played a key role in the production of the text edition and the design of many of the images. This book analyzes the manuscript, its text, and its vivid illuminations in the context of rich traditions of medieval biblical translation, production, and illustration, offering fresh insights into the roles of images in shaping and mediating scripture and religious experience. Adding to our understandings of life among the lower nobility in later fourteenth-century England, this cultural history of a major artefact also expands our picture of the cultural patronage and creative agency of laywomen, as well as medieval strategies of memorialization, responses to the Plague, and ideas about gender, identity, sexuality and the emotions.
Tartalomjegyzék:
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Note on the Text / Editorial Conventions
Introduction
1. Genesis
2. Creating the Book
3. Histories
4. Recondite Visions and Life Lessons
5. Picturing a Baron's World
6.Consolation and Remembrance
Coda
Appendix: The Welles-Ros Bible
Manuscripts Cited
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Note on the Text / Editorial Conventions
Introduction
1. Genesis
2. Creating the Book
3. Histories
4. Recondite Visions and Life Lessons
5. Picturing a Baron's World
6.Consolation and Remembrance
Coda
Appendix: The Welles-Ros Bible
Manuscripts Cited
Bibliography
Index