Book of Hours. Use of Sarum.

Book of Hours. Use of Sarum.
Flanders or Northern France (St. Omer?), ca. 1325–1330.
Illuminated manuscript on vellum. (BRMS 13)

The illuminated manuscript known as the “Sellers Hours” is the earliest Book of Hours preserved in any Texas collection. Extremely colorful and resplendent with burnished gold leaf, the tiny book features fifteen miniatures and ten lively vignettes of the Labors of the Months in the calendar, each set within pinnacled Gothic niches and surrounded in the margins by elaborate decorative motifs and fantastical hybrid creatures. Illuminated in the vicinity of St. Omer near the Franco-Flemish border, the Sellers Hours was produced for Sarum Use, featuring particular texts and devotions to local saints preferred by English owners, including a rare memorial to St. Thomas Becket of Canterbury.

The Sellers Hours also includes an extremely rare illustration for devotion to the English martyr Thomas, Earl of Lancaster. This provides the earliest possible date for the book itself, as Thomas of Lancaster was assassinated by his cousin, Edward II, in 1322. The Earl’s cult arose circa 1325 but lasted only a few years as efforts to canonize him in 1327 failed, leaving only a handful of such images and devotional texts.

Books of Hours
Book of Hours. Use of Sarum.