Anjou Legendarium (Hungarian Angevin Legendary)
Legenda Aurea — Anjou Legendarium
A verified public-domain excerpt for this text is still being set. The folio is catalogued and linked below; an original Sub Rosa rendering will follow.
What it is
The Anjou Legendarium is an expanded Hungarian version of the Golden Legend, painted in Bologna by artists working in trecento style, probably commissioned at the Anjou court of Hungary between 1325 and 1345. Its 140-plus vellum pages contain 549 individual scenes depicting saints' lives particularly important to the Anjou dynasty, including Hungarian royal saints Stephen, Emeric, and Ladislaus, each framed in vivid gold-ground miniatures with brief Latin tituli. The exact patron is genuinely disputed among scholars, with Charles I of Hungary, Archbishop Csanád Telegdi of Esztergom, and James of Piacenza all proposed as possible commissioners; no scholarly consensus has emerged. Portions of the manuscript are now held at the Vatican Library, the Morgan Library in New York, and the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg.
Why it still matters
The saints' lives drawn from the Golden Legend remain widely read for meditative purposes; the legendary's focus on Franciscan and royal-martyr saints offers rich material for retreat use or personal lectio divina on the communion of saints.
Kept alongside
Golden Legend (Legenda Aurea) — Hungarian Royal Court Use
Legenda Aurea
The Legenda Aurea, compiled by the Dominican friar Jacobus de Voragine c. 1259–1266, was the single most widely read collection of saints' lives in medieval Christendom, surviving in more manuscripts than any other medieval text except the Bible. Its specific use at the Anjou court of Hungary is inferred from the Anjou Legendarium (c. 1325–1345), approximately 50 of whose 59 illustrated stories are drawn directly from the Legenda Aurea; however, the Legendarium's patronage is itself disputed among Charles I of Hungary, Archbishop Csanád Telegdi, and James of Piacenza. No independent manuscript evidence places a copy of the Legenda Aurea itself at the Hungarian Anjou court, and universal distribution across literate European courts means its presence can only be assumed. Jacobus was appointed Archbishop of Genoa in 1292, well after the work was completed in his years as a Dominican friar.
Psalterium (Psalter for royal and court devotion)
Psalterium
The Latin Psalter — the 150 biblical Psalms with liturgical additions — was the primary daily prayer book of every medieval royal household chapel, used for the Divine Office and private devotion. Hungarian royal scriptorium production is attested under Béla III (1172–1196), who patronized manuscript production at Esztergom, and the Pray Codex's sacramentary component presupposes the Psalter's daily use. While no specific Arpad or Anjou royal psalter survives with a named owner, the Anjou court's documented Bolognese manuscript commissions make royal psalter-hours all but certain, and the psalter was the universal foundation of medieval Christian prayer life without exception. Weekly recitation of all 150 Psalms was the structural backbone of the Divine Office as practiced in every Hungarian royal chapel of this era.
Legenda Sancti Ladislai regis (Life of Saint Ladislaus of Hungary)
Legenda Sancti Ladislai regis
The hagiographic legend of King Ladislaus I (c. 1040–1095) was composed after his canonization by Pope Celestine III on 27 June 1192, with the official legend compiled after 1204; it is entirely distinct from the earlier Gesta Ladislai regis, a chronicle piece from Coloman's reign c. 1109. The Legenda presents the canonized Arpad king as the ideal Christian ruler — a crusader, lawgiver, and defender of the faith — surviving in two variants (maior and minor) in the Scriptores rerum Hungaricarum collection. It was incorporated into the Anjou Legendarium's visual programme, and the collective cult of the three holy Arpad kings (Stephen, Emeric, Ladislaus) crystallized under Louis the Great (r. 1342–1382), when the text gained renewed political and devotional significance. The Legenda shaped Hungarian royal ideology for centuries, fusing Christian sanctity with the ideal of just secular governance.