Book of Hours bearing the signature of Mary of Guise
Book of Hours [with signature 'Marie R' of Mary of Guise]
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
A late fifteenth-century French Book of Hours bearing on folio 1r the signature 'Marie R' of Mary of Guise (1515–1560), daughter of Claude de Guise and mother of Mary Queen of Scots, who served as Queen Regent of Scotland. The manuscript is now at the National Library of Scotland (St Benedict's Abbey, Fort Augustus deposit), bought in 2000 from the Abbey's trustees. Mary of Guise was raised in a household of intense Catholic piety at Joinville, where the Guise chapel was served by nine canons and four choristers singing daily; this signed volume is the surviving record of her personal devotional practice as regent in Scotland. The manuscript bridges the Guise family's French Catholic formation with their political mission to hold Scotland for Rome.
Why it still matters
The Office of the Virgin and Hours of the Cross within such manuscripts remain an excellent daily prayer structure for Catholics; this copy is a reminder that women of the Guise house used private books to sustain faith under immense political pressure.
Kept alongside
Book of Hours given by Mary Queen of Scots to Louis de Lorraine, Cardinal of Guise
Book of Hours [Gardner Museum, Boston — Mary Queen of Scots / Cardinal Guise provenance]
This Book of Hours was probably a gift from Francis II to his wife Mary Queen of Scots and was subsequently presented by Mary to her great-uncle Louis de Lorraine, Cardinal of Guise (1527–1578), around 1560. It is now in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, purchased in 1887 from the Crawford library sale. The provenance documents a chain of devotional gift-giving within the Guise-Lorraine house and illustrates how personal prayer books functioned as dynastic bonds as well as spiritual instruments. The Cardinal of Guise was himself a powerful Counter-Reformation churchman who received the volume in the turbulent opening year of the Wars of Religion.
Psalter (for the Education of Giovanni de' Medici)
The documented use of the Latin Psalter as the basis of young Giovanni de' Medici's religious instruction by his mother Clarice Orsini is one of the most precisely attested Medici devotional education episodes. When Poliziano attempted to teach the Medici boys using Homer and classical authors, Clarice expelled him from the villa at Cafaggiolo (c. 1479) and substituted the Latin Psalter, insisting on traditional Catholic instruction. Giovanni later became Pope Leo X, giving the episode retrospective significance; it is documented through Poliziano's own letters and subsequent Renaissance scholarship. The underlying text — the Psalter itself — was the universal prayer book of medieval and Renaissance Christendom and carries the highest possible devotional relevance independent of this particular episode.
Spiritual Exercises (Exercitia Spiritualia)
The foundational Jesuit method of prayer and discernment composed by the Spanish-Basque Ignatius of Loyola, structuring a four-week guided retreat through meditations on sin, the life of Christ, the Passion, and the Resurrection. Its Habsburg connection runs deep: Joanna of Austria (1535–1573), daughter of Charles V and sister of Philip II, was secretly admitted to the Society of Jesus under the alias 'Mateo Sánchez' after undertaking the Exercises under the direction of Francis Borgia, former Duke of Gandia and a close Habsburg courtier—making her the only woman ever enrolled in the Jesuit order. Philip II was unaware of his sister's membership, yet the Ignatian network shaped the spiritual climate of the court from within.