BOOK OF HOURS


Meaning of BOOK OF HOURS in English

devotional book widely popular in the later Middle Ages. The book of hours began to appear in the 13th century, containing prayers to be said at the canonical hours in honour of the Virgin Mary. The growing demand for smaller such books for family and individual use created a prayerbook style enormously popular among the wealthy. The demand for the books was crucial to the development of Gothic illumination. These lavishly decorated texts, of small dimensions, varied in content according to their patrons' desires. One of the most splendid examples, the Trs Riches Heures of the Duc de Berry, was created in northern France and the Low Countries during the 14th and 15th centuries. Now held in Chantilly at the Muse Cond, it is an excellent pictorial record of the duke's spectacular residences, with magnificent calendar pages illuminated by the Pol de Limbourg and his brothers (c. 141418), as well as many biblical scenes and illustrations of the lives of the saints. Other renowned examples are the Hours of Jeanne d'Evreux (c. 1325), now held in The Cloisters, New York City, and the Book of Hours of Charles of Angoulme and the Livres d'Heures de Rohan in the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris.

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