September- Four men playing a game that resembles golf

The Golf Book (British Library Add MS 24098) is the common name for an illuminated manuscript Book of Hours in the Use of Rome dating from the 1540s. Only 23 pages remain of the original created by the illuminator Simon Bening and his studio in Bruges. It owes its popular name to one illustration in the calendar, with people playing a game resembling that of golf.[1] It is presumed to have been made for a Swiss patron as the book includes a miniature painting of St Boniface of Lausanne.[2]

Description

The extant folios of the Golf Book are decorated with 21 full-page miniatures and a number of smaller paintings. In its current state the book opens with a page belonging to the suffrages of the saints, which depicts a bishop, probably St Boniface of Lausanne. The next section (folios 2v–17v) features fragments of the Little Office of the Virgin illustrated with the cycle of the Passion of Christ. The main miniatures are influenced by a series of engravings of a Passion attributed to the Master of the Gardens of Love.

  • Matins: Agony in the Garden
  • Lauds: Kiss of Judas
  • Prime: Christ brought before Pilate
  • Terce: Flagellation
  • Sext: Jesus nailed to the cross
  • None: Crucifixion
  • Vespers: Deposition
  • Compline: Burial of Jesus

The last section (folios 18v–30r) features the calendar. The representation of each month covers two facing pages, with a full-page illustration on the left-hand page showing the occupations of the months.

At present, the extant folios of the book are in the wrong order; the suffrages of the saints and the Office of the Virgin are placed before the calendar.[3]

See also

References

  1. "A Good Walk Spoiled". Medieval manuscripts blog. British Library. 22 May 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  2. "Add MS 24098". Digitised Manuscripts. British Library. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  3. Miranda García-Tejedor, Carlos (2021). Golf Book. Barcelona: M. Moleiro Editor. ISBN 9788416509782.


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