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Hours of Jeanne d'Évreux

Heures de Jeanne d'Évreux

Jean Pucelle·Latin·c. 1324–1328·Book of Hours
Book of HoursHoræ
In the original — Latin
Domine labia mea aperies, et os meum adnuntiabit laudem tuam.

Our renderingO Lord, open my lips, and my mouth will declare your praise.

What it is

Made by Jean Pucelle c. 1324–28 for Jeanne d'Évreux, queen consort of the last Capetian king Charles IV, this tiny masterpiece (9 × 6 cm, 209 folios) was bequeathed in Jeanne's 1371 will directly to her nephew Charles V of France — documented in her own words as 'un bien petit livret d'oraisons que le roy Charles… avoit faict faire pour Madame, que Pucelle enlumina' — confirming Valois custody from that point. It pairs Infancy and Passion scenes in innovative grisaille, and contains the Hours of the Virgin, the Office of Saint Louis, Penitential Psalms, and a litany, making it one of the richest lay devotional programmes of the entire medieval period. Its miniature scale — small enough to cradle in a palm — embodies prayer as an act of intimate personal attention rather than public display.

Why it still matters

The Passion devotion at its heart and the Hours of the Virgin remain among the most enduring forms of structured private Christian prayer; its tiny physical scale and personal imagery model prayer as intimate conversation rather than formal performance.

Kept alongside

Horæ

Gospel Sequences (Four Evangelical Readings)

Passiones / Sequentiae Evangeliorum

The Gospel Sequences are four short selected readings — John 1:1–14 (the Prologue), Luke 1:26–38 (the Annunciation), Matthew 2:1–12 (the Magi), and Mark 16:14–20 (the Great Commission) — which open virtually every Book of Hours as the first devotional text after the calendar. They were read in this deliberate theological order: first the eternal mystery of the Incarnation, then the historical moment of the Annunciation, then the Nativity proclaimed to the nations, then the mission of the Church to the world. The sequence gave every prayer session a Christological foundation before the Hours of the Virgin and the Penitential Psalms commenced. For noble children learning Latin from the Book of Hours, these four passages were among the first complete scriptural texts committed to memory.

as a fixed opening section in Books of Hours from c. 1230–1280Latin·All European noble courts · French royal court +1Court-typical
Horæ

Office of the Dead

Officium Defunctorum

A structured set of Vespers, Matins, and Lauds prayed for the souls of the departed, the Office of the Dead appears in all three manuscripts directly associated with the Medici queens. In Catherine de' Medici's Smith-Lesouëf 42, a binding error causes a quire of the Office to appear mid-manuscript within the Suffrages — confirmed by the New Liturgical Movement's detailed codicological analysis. Marie de' Medici's Walters prayer book (W.494) incorporates Office of the Dead miniatures recycled from an older Flemish manuscript of c. 1450, demonstrating how royal owners actively personalised their relationship to prayers for the dead. The central responsory 'Libera me, Domine, de morte aeterna' gave the whole office its emotional keynote as a framework for royal mourning.

c. 1200–1400 in the lay prayerbook formLatin·Medici · Valois +5Confirmed
Horæ

Hours of the Cross

Horae de Cruce / Officium de Passione Domini

A short cyclic Office in which the hymn Patris sapientia veritas divina is divided across the eight canonical hours, each stanza connecting a specific hour to a moment of Christ's Passion — arrest at Matins, condemnation at Prime, scourging at Terce, crucifixion at Sext, death at None, burial at Vespers, descent to the dead at Compline. Standard in royal and noble Books of Hours from the late fourteenth century, it was virtually always bound together with the Hours of the Holy Spirit as a companion office. The attribution to Pope John XXII rests on manuscript tradition alone and is not confirmed by external documentation, but the composition's wide diffusion across French, English, Flemish, and Iberian Books of Hours attests to its practical centrality in court devotion. Its economy of form — a complete Passion meditation in a few stanzas — made it accessible to noble laity with limited Latin.

c. 1316–1334 (Johannine attribution) or earlier; standard by c. 1380Latin·French royal court · English royal court +1Court-typical