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Book of Hours of Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain
One of the most significant works of art of the late Middle Ages.
· The facsimile edition represents the restoration of the book’s original composition, bringing together folios currently found in the collections of the National Library of Spain (Madrid), the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (Germany) and the Philadelphia Museum of Art (USA).
· Consisting of 650 pages, every single one of which is illustrated and illuminated in gold and silver by Flemish painters of renown, with 87 large-format miniatures and 583 pages embellished with quarter-page decorations in which a variety of animals, plants and insects are represented. The master credited with the Book of Hours of Marie of Burgundy, the master of the Dresden prayer book, Lieven van Lathem, Nicolas Spierinc and Simon Marmion, have been praised for their mastery of trompe-l’oeil effects in the ornamental borders of the books they illuminated, a lavish hand with decorative elements and the large number of extremely sophisticated iconographic resources they brought to their tasks. All of these aspects make this book of hours one of the most significant works of art produced during the waning of the Middle Ages.
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· This codex, also known as Voustre Demeure, originally belonged to Margaret of York, sister of King Edward IV of England, and wife of Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy. They became the parents of Marie of Burgundy and grandparents of Margaret of Austria and Philip the Fair. Charles the Bold was thus the great-grandfather of Charles I of Spain (Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire). It would appear the codex was presented as a gift to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain by the Emperor Maximilian, Marie of Burgundy’s widowed husband, on the occasion of the double marriage of their children, Margaret and Philip, to the Spanish rulers’ offspring, John and Joan.
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