Ingeborg Psalter
Psautier d'Ingeburge / Psalterium Ingoburgis
Now Musée Condé, Chantilly (MS 9, olim 1695), the Ingeborg Psalter was made c. 1193–1200 for Ingeborg of Denmark on the occasion of her marriage to King Philip II Augustus of France. It is one of the earliest examples of a luxury personal psalter made for a queen as her private devotional book, and among the most significant surviving monuments of early Gothic painting, with twenty-seven full-page miniatures preceding the 150 psalms. As a psalter it represents the precursor tradition from which the Book of Hours later evolved, and its existence at the highest level of French royalty documents the continuous tradition of royal women's private devotion stretching from the Psalter tradition into the Horae era. When Ingeborg died in 1236, the manuscript remained in the royal collections.