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Leaf from a Bible, Paris, middle third of the 13th century

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 1

Scope and Contents

Dealer description: Illuminated vellum manuscript leaf with an unusual and especially appealing historiated initial showing King Ahasuerus, Esther, and Mordecai, all connected by a hangman's rope, from a Bible in Latin. Text from the opening through the first three chapters of Esther. (Paris, middle third of the 13th century) 248 x 152 mm. (9.75" x 6"). Double column, 55 lines of text in a very small, pleasing gothic book hand. Capitals struck with with red, chapter numbers and headlines in red and blue, two prominent chapter initials in red or blue with elaborate penwork in the same two colors, and one side with a fine historiated initial telling the story of Esther and Mordecai, the main part of the captial in three compartments (measuring, together, approxiamtely 60 x 8 mm) at the top of the column and with a marginal extender stretching the entire length of the text. Faint marginal discoloration, minor soiling and rumpling, generally in nearly fine condition.

This is a remarkably engaging early Bible leaf with an initial that is replete with narrative communicated in an unusually imaginitive visual manner. The Book of Esther tells the story of how the faithful court official Mordecai is saved from being ahnged at the ahnds of the Persian king Ahasuerus' treacherous minister Haman. And it tells of the successful attempt made by the Jewish queen Esther to save her people from Haman's edict of extermination, an order prompted by the fact that Mordecai, a Jew, refuses to prostrate himself in Haman's presence. Our initial seems to conflate the two stories in a clever and artful way. In the bottom compartment of the long initial "I," we see Mordecai, dressed only in tatters from waist to knees, with a noose around his neck. He is done entirely in white against a magenta background, a depiction that suggests his impending lifelessness (there is also a tiny dragon nipping at his feet). The rope stretches upward through the floow of the middle compartment and into the top compartment, where the regally attired king sits with both hands grasping the deadly cord. A good firm tug, and Mordecai is dead. But in the crucial middle compartment sits Esther, who also grasps the rope in such a way as to provide the critical slack necessary to save the would-be victim. As in seen here, the historiation of Bibles produced during the 13th century tends to relate to the text in some specific way (though there are also a certain proportion of generic figures). What is infrequently seen is the incorporation of multiple elements of the story. And what is even more uncommon is the case, as here, where the artist takes imaginitive liberties with his subject in an effective visual wayin order to emphasize something grand and inherently difficult to portray - like a queen saving her people. (ST11316)

Dates

  • ca. 1250-1460

Language of Materials

From the Collection: Materials are in Latin.

Conditions Governing Access

This material is open for research.

Stored onsite at the Woodson Research Center in the vault.

Extent

From the Collection: 0.25 Linear Feet (1 box)

Creator

Repository Details

Part of the Woodson Research Center, Rice University, Houston, Texas Repository

Contact:
Fondren Library MS-44, Rice University
6100 Main St.
Houston Texas 77005 USA