Saturday 19 April 2014

Otto Ege and other leaves at UC Santa Barbara

The University of California at Santa Barbara (actually a few miles west of Santa Barbara, near Goleta) has a small but interesting collection of medieval manuscripts in their library's Special Collections department, including a Reims Book of Hours and three Bibles, which will be the subjects of future posts. 

The campus is right on the coast, making it a doubly nice place to visit:

They also have a varied collection of leaves and fragments, some illuminated. Some, but not all, were described by Christine Rose, "Medieval MS Fragments at UCSB Library", Soundings: Collections of the University Library, vol.XVIII, no.24 (1987), pp.35-59. A listing of the majority of the leaves and fragments is available online and as a PDF from here.

The most handsome leaf has an historiated initial: it shows a sainted bishop (St Clement) kneeling on (green) ground, praying to and being blessed by the Hand of God in heaven, some laymen behind him, and in front of him a sheep or lamb standing on a blue rock, with a stream of water flowing from near its raised fore-leg:

UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 2.2, verso
The image represents the legend that after St Clement was banished to marble quarries in the Crimea for not renouncing his faith, he quenched the thirst of his companions by (like Moses) striking a rock water and causing water to flow from it, having been led there by a lamb.

This is a comparable late 15th century depiction of the event:
[Source]
The image is appropriate to the text, which begins
"Oremus omnes ad dominum Iesum Christum dixit beatus Clemens ut confessoribus su[catchword:]is fon[tis venas aperiat ut de beneficiis eius gratulemur]"
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 2.2, verso
Next to, and partly obscured by, the illumination is an instruction to the illuminator, of which only the first several words are unambigous ("St Clement the Pope in prayer, and a lamb ..."):
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 2.2, verso, detail
"S[an]c[tu]s clemens papa.
i[n] orat[i]o[n]e & agnus p[er]cut[...]
t[er]ra[m] un??? egrediat[ur] unus??? [...]s"

Given the story being depicted, the words "percut[iens?]" and "terram" doubtless refer to him striking the ground, and "egrediatur" to the water that comes out.

The smudginess around the lamb appears to be the result of having erased an initial letter "O" that had been placed there in error:
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 2.2, verso, detail
The recto of the leaf has the feast of St Cecilia (22 November), confirming that the Clement initial and text pertain to his main feast on 23 November:
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 2.2, recto
Three other leaves at UCSB are easily recognised as coming from ex-Ege manuscripts (they are all now enclosed between mylar sheets, making them difficult to photograph):
  • Aristotle, Ethics; Germany, Erfurt; 1365
    • UCSB Box 1.3 (olim Mss. frag. 13)
    • Gwara HL51
    • Last leaf (with quire signature) of quire 4(?); 19th(?)-cent. ink and modern pencil foliations, both "15"
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 1.3, recto
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 1.3, verso
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 1.3 recto, detail of foliation
  • Livy, Ab urbe condita; Italy, 1456
    • UCSB Box 1.4
    • Gwara HL52
    • Book III.43-46: "[place]||bat ni decemviri funus militare ... iter nuntii missa in castra ||"
    • Others leaves are, for example, here, and here.
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 1.4, recto
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 1.4, verso
  • Lectionary; Italy, mid-12th cent.
    • UCSB Box 1.8 (olim Mss. Frag. 17)
    • Gwara HL3
    • Including the 16th Sunday after Pentecost, and the following Wednesday: "|| facis aut quis est qui dedit tibi hanc potestatem ... si in vicum introieris nemini ||" (Luke 20:1-8; Luke 7:11-16; Mark 8:22-26)
    • Modern pencil foliation "109"
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 1.8, recto
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 1.8, verso
One familiar non-Ege leaf comes from a mid 13th-century Psalter that was sold at Sotheby's, 24 June 1980, lot 53, and broken-up. It had an unusual ownership of Reims (cathedral?): "Iste liber est de fabrica ecclesie Remensis", c.1300, and another inscription of c.1500 "Iste liber est de fabrica ecclesie signiacensis" (possibly the Cistercian abbey of Signy, in the archdiocese of Reims).
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 1.11, recto
UCSB Library, Special Collections, Mss. 175, Box 1.11, verso

The Sotheby's description reports that the calendar had specific Reims feasts including St Rigobert (3 January, "totum duplex"), his translation (14 June); St Arnulph (18 July) and Nichasius (23 July), both archbishops of Reims; and the feast of all holy bishops of Reims (7 July).

Other leaves are here , here, and this one was recently sold at Sotheby's:

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