52 Weeks of Inspiring Illustrations, Week 43: Faces, fauna, flora and St Francis: funny things lurking in a medieval music manuscript

speccoll
Monday 15 April 2013

I didn’t intend to write about the gradual at all for this post, I just happened to be looking at it one day when it was out for Tom Wilkinson the chapel organist to see. He is going to conduct the chapel choir in singing one of the Kyrie settings for a celebration service on 21st April for the 500th anniversary of the foundation of St Leonards College.

A 15th century Gradual, probably produced in the south of France. This is the University's second heaviest manuscript and it measures over half a metre tall! (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
A 15th century Gradual, probably produced in the south of France. This is the University’s second heaviest manuscript and it measures over half a metre tall! (St Andrews msM2148.G7)

It’s not an easy book to just get out casually for a look, being our second heaviest manuscript, longer but not as thick as the works of Augustine of Hippo, so I was taking the opportunity of a peak and became fascinated by the inventiveness of the artist or artists who created the initials. For instance look at the many different forms of A and D, common because of the words Alleluia and Dominus appear so frequently in the Mass:

Pen decorated initial 'A' and an initial 'A' with face from a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘A’ and an initial ‘A’ with face from p. 375 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial 'A' and initial 'V' with face and fleur-de-lys from p. 95 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘A’ and initial ‘V’ with face and fleur-de-lis from p. 95 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial 'A' with face from p. 83 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘A’ with face from p. 83 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Five pen decorated initial A's (left to right, top: p. 309, 292, 11; bottom: p. 59, p. 53) from a 15h century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Five pen decorated initial ‘A’s (left to right, top: p. 309, 292, 11; bottom: p. 59, p. 53) from a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initials A and D from a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initials ‘A’ and ‘D’ from p. 42 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial 'D' from p. 169 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘D’ from p. 169 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial 'D's (left to right, top and bottom: p. 65, p. 90, p. 73 and p. 107) from a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘D’s (left to right, top and bottom: p. 65, p. 90, p. 73 and p. 107) from a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)

Also the wonderful creativity of simple ink lines in the R and the Q and a variety of S:

Pen decorated initial 'R' from p. 140 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘R’ from p. 140 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial 'Q' from p. 225 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘Q’ from p. 225 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial 'S' from p. 252 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘S’ from p. 252 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)

There are inhabited initials, with faces or people in them; zoomorphic initials, which have animals in them, mainly rather floppy looking dog-like creatures, although there is one that looks like Nessie; and decorated initials, with the fleur-de-lis being a common motif, as well as abstract designs based on trees, leaves, flowers, chevrons, stripes and bubbles.

Pen decorated initial 'Q' with unidentified animal from p. 64 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘Q’ with unidentified animal from p. 64 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial 'S' with serpent from p. 400 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘S’ with serpent from p. 400 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial 'D' with dog from p. 73 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘D’ with dog from p. 73 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial 'D' with tree from p. 351 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘D’ with tree from p. 351 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)

The colour palette is limited – black embellished with yellow, or blue and red, with a pink wash giving many of the faces a ruddy glow. The faces are all very distinctive suggesting they could have been portraits of living people, other friars or even self-portraits perhaps. Some of them have their tongues out or scowl at us, others hide behind the downstroke or in corners or either side of a curve; one shares the letter with a fish, another with a serpent.

Pen decorated initial 'D' with face from p. 278 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘D’ with face from p. 278 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initials 'I', 'D', 'C', 'V' and 'L' all with faces and one with a fish! (left to right, top and bottom: p. 75, p. 204, p. 280, p. 162 and p. 132) from a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initials ‘I’, ‘D’, ‘C’, ‘V’ and ‘L’ all with faces and one with a fish! (left to right, top and bottom: p. 75, p. 204, p. 280, p. 162 and p. 132) from a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)

The gradual is a choir book of Gregorian plainchant, large enough for a group of choristers to gather around to sing the daily mass, divine offices and for special services in the Roman liturgical rite. Our gradual contains antiphons, introits, psalms, offertories and tracts for daily religious life in a monastery in the Middle Ages as they worked their way through the church calendar. It is on parchment, bound in white leather over very thick oak boards, and dates from around 1400.

Pen decorated initials 'I', 'A', 'I', 'S' and 'V' with faces and animals (left to right, top and bottom: p. 386, p. 146, p. 445, p. 271 and p. 345) from a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initials ‘I’, ‘A’, ‘I’, ‘S’ and ‘V’ with faces and animals (left to right, top and bottom: p. 386, p. 146, p. 445, p. 271 and p. 345) from a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)

It was given to the University Library in 1894 by local MP Stephen Williamson, but we have no information on where he got it from or where it had been before that. It was very probably created in a Franciscan friary, as a number of Franciscan saints days are celebrated including St Francis, his companion Antony of Padua, St Clare of the Poor Clares, and Bonaventura. A French origin is suggested by the fleur-de-lis motif which links it with the Angevin royal house, patrons and benefactors of the Franciscan order. There are instructions to the fratribus and fratres (brothers or friars) in the text and an interlinear gloss Beati Francisci has been added.

Pen decorated initial 'O' with St Francis and winged Christ from p. 402 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘O’ with St Francis and winged Christ from p. 402 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)

At the Feast of St Francis, the initial O of O patriarcha pauperum francisce contains St Francis himself, in front of a church on Mount Alverno, in the traditional pose with palms raised for the stigmata and a winged Christ on the cross in the background. It’s not a very sophisticated drawing but it makes the point.

Pen decorated initial 'V' with 11 apostles receiving the Holy Spirit from p. 254 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)
Pen decorated initial ‘V’ with 11 apostles receiving the Holy Spirit from p. 254 of a 15th century Gradual (St Andrews msM2148.G7)

As well as St Francis, an inhabited initial missed by Ker and Piper contains a sketch of the apostles, full of fearful trepidation, receiving the Holy Spirit as tongues of fire at Pentecost, in the initial V of Veni sancte Spiritus, reple tuorum corda fidelium, et tui amoris in eis ignem accende (Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of Thy faithful and kindle in them the fire of Thy love), the traditional invocation of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. You can just make out 11 of them.

This is a beautiful manuscript which repays detailed examination and I’m sure has more stories to tell. It will be exciting to hear a chant from this very volume sung here in St Andrews more than 600 years after it was written down on this parchment and decorated with these intriguing initials. That will really bring the manuscript to life.

Maia Sheridan

Manuscripts Archivist

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3 thoughts on "52 Weeks of Inspiring Illustrations, Week 43: Faces, fauna, flora and St Francis: funny things lurking in a medieval music manuscript"

  • Dennis Ray
    Dennis Ray
    Monday 15 April 2013, 5.05pm

    The people in this world, who are lucky enough to study, fondle and converse about such beautiful objects, are among the most fortunate of us all. Thank you for continuing to share!

    Reply
  • The Victorian Librarian
    The Victorian Librarian
    Thursday 18 April 2013, 10.51am

    Reblogged this on The Victorian Librarian and commented: If you are not already following the entertaining work of the St Andrews University Library Special Collections Department on their "Echoes from the Vaults" blog, I highly recommend that you do so. Go. Go now! This entry from a couple of days ago is all about the eco-system of medieval manuscript illumination, where all manner of characters and plants can be found in the initials and margins of each page, living their often strange and fascinating little lives. The drawings in this example, a 15th-century gradual, give some clues as to the text's origins.

    Reply
  • Reading (or Singing) the collections, week 28: A performance from the Gradual | Echoes from the Vault
    Thursday 20 August 2015, 10.46am

    […] Gradual, which is featured in week 43 of our inspiring illustrations blog, is a choir book of Gregorian plainchant, large enough for a group of choristers to gather around […]

    Reply

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