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| MS 2226 | |
THE NEO-ASSYRIAN ALMANAC PROPITIOUS MONTHS AND DAYS FOR ACTIVITIES DURING THE WHOLE YEAR, SUCH AS: IF HE BRINGS HIS WIFE INTO HIS HOUSE, IF A BABY IS BORN, IF HE RECITES THE SHIGU-PRAYER, ETC. |
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MS in Neo-Assyrian on fine yellow-coloured clay, Nimrod, Assyria, 705-681 BC, 1 tablet, lower left-hand part, 8,1x6,9x2,6 cm, 7 and 2 columns, 18+17+18 lines in a magnificent cuneiform script by the scribe, Nabû-zuqup-kena. For the Middle Babylonian almanac, see MS 2781. Context: The present tablet joins the lower right-hand piece, K 98, now in British Museum, published by A.H. Sayce in Zeitschrift für Assyriologie, 2 (1887), pp. 333-35. Commentary: Colophon: Favourable days for doing what one wants, or on which any one may attain his wish: favourable: together with 25 lines of commentary on it. Extracts from "If he destroys and builds" based on many tablets, "If a city is set on a hill", "If he destroys and builds", and "Favourable (Days)". An original of Babylon, belonging to Nabû-zuqup-kena, scribe. Cfr. MS 1687, tablet no. 66 in the series "If a town is situated on a hill". |
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Nabû-zuqup-kena was a well known Assyrian scribe. His grandfather Gabbi-ilani-eresh had been chief scribe to the kings Tukulti-Ninurta II and Ashurnasirpal II (891-859 BC). His grandson, Ishtar-shumu-eresh, son of Nabû-zeru-lsir, was a major expert and advisor to the kings Esarhaddon and Ashurbanipal (669-631 BC), titled scribe. Nabû-zuqup-kena seems to have been less active as a royal advisor, but more devoted to training royal scribes and copying texts. He records in one colophon that he strained his eyesight copying out texts for the education of his son Ishtar-shumu-eresh. Nabû-zuqup-kena's private library was largely taken over by king Ashurbanipal, when he began to collect his royal library. Exhibited: "The Story of Time", Queen's House at the National Maritime Museum and The Royal Observatory, Greenwich, Dec. 1999 - Sept. 2000.
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See MS 1692, Name glyphs from the Aztec calendar, Mexico, 1525-1550
| MS 1371 | |
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MS in Latin (texts 1, 3) and Middle English (texts 2, 4-8) on vellum, Arras or St. Omer, North France, mid 13th c. (text 1), England, 1356 (text 3) & 15th c. (texts 2, 4-8), 208 ff. (-5), 12x9 cm, single column, (8x5 cm), 18 lines in Gothic book script of medium grade and quality by 2 scribes, versal capitals throughout in burnished gold or blue with penwork, linefillers throughout in red, blue and gold, about 180 illuminated initials in thickly raised burnished gold on red and blue grounds, often with full-length bar borders, 6 calendar miniatures, and 9 large historiated initials in gold and colours with 3/4 borders with grotesques. Binding: England, 18th c., blindstamped calf, sewn on 4 thongs. Provenance: 1. Probably Longbriddy Church, Dorset (16th c.) ; 2. Thomas Weld of Lulworth Castle, Dorset (d. 1810) and his descendants (until 1980); 3. Sotheby's 24.6.1980:55; 4. Sotheby's 18.6.1991:121. Commentary: Texts 5, 7, and 8 are unique and unpublished. See also MS 710, Magna Carta with calendar, Yorkshire, 1300-1307 See also MS 673, Missal with list of festival days, Essex, 1405-1410 |
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| MS 1581 | |
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MS in Latin on vellum, York or Ripon, Yorkshire, ca. 1425, 37 ff. (complete), 15x11 cm, single column, (10x9 cm), 7-21 lines in a rotunda Gothic book script of medium quality, 136 drawings of animals, beehives, wheatfields, tools, moons, churches, ships, shipwrecks, fires, etc. in gold, silver and colours with green dominating, 114 miniatures of saints, kings, commoners, etc., and 1 full-page miniature of the zodiac man, all in gold, silver and colours. Binding: England, early 19th c., russia, sewn on 4 cords. Context: From a possible Scandinavian archetype of 13th or 14th c., there was copied the English girdle calendar of Harry the Haywarde from 1389, Bodleian Library Rawlinson D. 939. From this was copied BL Royal 17.A.XVI dated 1420 and BL Harley 2332 dated 1412. From the latter the present MS was copied. From either MS 1581 or BL Royal 17.A.XVI was copied E.F. Bosauquet MS dated 1433, which possibly was the exemplar of the first printed calendar with woodcuts, ca. 1500, Bodleian MS Douce A 632 and 3 copies in BL. This might have been the exemplar of the Scandinavian MS calendars: the oldest Danish girdle calendar from 1513, which again is related to 2 Norwegian girdle calendars dated 1558: The Hegra Calendar and the Oslo Calendar, as well as MS 2913. (John B. Friedman: Harry the Haywarde and Talbat his dog, in: Art into Life, ed. C.G. Fisher and K.L. Scott, Michigan State University Press, 1995.) |
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Provenance: 1. William Tresham, Yorkshire (ca. 1500); 2. W.K. Bixby, St. Louis, Missouri (1906-1917); 3. Bixby sale, New York 26.2.1917; 4. Sotheby's 24.6.1986:68; 5. H.P. Kraus, New York (1986-1990); 6. Sam Fogg cat. 14(1991):17. Exhibited: "The Story of Time", Queen's House at the National Maritime Museum and The Royal Observatory, Greenwich, Dec. 1999 - Sept. 2000. See also MS 039, Psalms with calendar, Belgium, 15th c. |
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| MS 1372 | |
| MISSAL, USE OF ROMA, PRECEDED BY A CALENDAR | ![]() |
MS in Latin on vellum, Southern Tyrol, Austria, 2nd half of 15th c., 107 ff. (-4), 30x21 cm, 2 columns, (19x13 cm + 21x15 cm), 27 and 37 lines in a rounded Gothic book script of medium grade and quality, 2- to 6-line painted initials in red, blue or green throughout, some with flourishes or penwork. diam.1,0x1,5 cm (D.S.-B.1:1), 3 small cylinders diam. 0,4xca.1,2 cm (D.S.-B.4:1). Binding: Southern Tyrol, Austria, 2nd half of 15th c., tawed skin, once dyed green, over slightly bevelled wooden boards, sewn on 3 double thongs, tabs at top and bottom of spine for storage in a book-chest, the wood reused from an earlier binding. Provenance: 1. Sotheby's 18.6.1991:127. See also MS 013, Calendar in the Cathérine de Médici hours. Tours, ca. 1480 |
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| MS 2913 | |
CALENDAR WITH GOLDEN NUMBERS, FEASTDAYS, OCCUPATIONS OF THE MONTHS AND HOURS OF LIGHT AND DARKNESS, TABLE WITH GOOD AND EVIL DAYS |
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MS in Norwegian and Latin on vellum, Uvdal, Norway, 1636, 30 ff. (complete), 5,5x5,5 cm, single column, (5x5 cm), 15 lines in capitals, Norwegian Gothic cursive script and a variant of Roman numbers, 80 miniatures of saints or their symbols, 12 circular diagrams, 12 miniatures of the occupations of the months, all in full colours; the book flattens out into a long strip, 67x11 cm, each section cut and folded around each month. Binding: Norway, 1636, not bound but plied together to form a book, in its original girdle type leather covered wooden box. Context: Very similar to 2 Norwegian girdle calendars dated 1558: the Hegra Calendar in Trondheim, Det Kgl. Norske Videnskabers Selskabs Bibliotek, and the Oslo Calendar, cf. MS 1581. Layout and illustrations are nearly identical, but the two earlier calendars are rather crudely executed compared to the present one. Provenance: 1. Sotheby's (private treaty sale). Commentary: The feast day of St. Olav, 29 July is marked with an axe and "S. OLOF", as usual in Norwegian calendars. A scribal colophon states: " Er giord i Ufdhall A. 1636", Made in Uvdal anno 1636. In 1696 tables for solar circle, Sunday letters for 1696-1704 and for 1696-1716 were added. |
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