Sobieski Hours

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The final miniature in the manuscript, accompanying the prayer to Saint Michael the Archangel on folio 204 verso, depicts Saint Michael as a protector against Satan. In the foreground, he is shown as an angel armed with a sword and shield, attacking a demon tormenting pilgrims on their way to Mont Saint-Michel Abbey. In the background, he appears as a winged knight in ornate armor, striking down a demon assaulting a ship. The miniature is notable for its realistic depiction of common people and for the accurate, detailed rendering of the architectural monument.[1]

The Sobieski Hours is an illuminated manuscript of a book of hours produced in 15th-century France, which is attributed mainly to the anomoyous Paris-based illustrator, the Bedford Master. In the 17th-century, the manuscript came into the possession of the Polish King, John III Sobieski. Through inheritance and the marriage of his granddaughter Maria Clementina Sobieska to James Stuart, it made its way to the British Isles. Today, it is part of the British Royal Collection.

The manuscript is made on vellum and richly decorated and features numerous miniatures, elaborately adorned initials, and decorative borders painted in bodycolour and highlighted with gold leaf. It consists of 234 folios, each numbered in pencil, with dimensions of 28.6 × 19.7 × 6.5 cm.[2] In addition to the Bedford Master, the manuscript also involved the work of two other renowned anonymous masters, the illustrators known as the Master of Sir John Fastolf [fr] and the Master of the Munich Golden Legend [fr].[2]

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