Libellus de dictis quatuor ancillarum S. Elisabethae confectus (Testimony of the Four Handmaids of Saint Elizabeth)
Libellus de dictis quatuor ancillarum s. Elizabeth confectus
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
Elizabeth of Hungary (1207–1231), daughter of King Andrew II of the Arpad dynasty, was sent to the Thuringian court at age four and spent her entire adult life in Germany; she never returned to Hungary. The Libellus records the sworn testimonies of her four handmaids before the papal canonization commission in January 1235 and served as the primary evidentiary document for her canonization by Pope Gregory IX on 27 May 1235. It provides first-person witness to her prayer life, acts of mercy to the poor and sick, and spiritual direction under the rigorist Conrad of Marburg. Though its composition is entirely a product of Thuringian-German and Franciscan circles, the text was claimed with pride by the Arpad dynasty as evidence of royal sanctity and shaped the emerging Franciscan Third Order tradition across Europe.
Why it still matters
The Libellus is one of the rare medieval devotional documents narrated primarily by laywomen; its accounts of Elizabeth's Eucharistic joy and compassion for the sick translate directly into Franciscan Third Order spirituality still practiced today. Reading a passage before works of mercy or hospital visiting connects the practitioner to one of the most vivid sanctity-in-action texts of the thirteenth century.
Kept alongside
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.
Admonitions (Libellus de institutione morum)
Libellus de institutione morum ad Emericum ducem
The Libellus de institutione morum, Hungary's foundational Mirror for Princes, was composed by a foreign cleric at King Stephen I's court as a formation letter addressed to his son and heir, Prince Emeric. Its ten short chapters cover Catholic faith, protection of the church, honour due to bishops, justice, hospitality to foreigners, wise counsel, prayer, fasting, and the cultivation of virtue and mercy. The text served for centuries as the opening document of the Corpus Juris Hungarici and defined the spiritual obligations of the Christian king for all subsequent Arpad and Anjou heirs. As the first major Latin prose work produced in the Kingdom of Hungary, it survives only in 15th–16th-century codex copies; its original title is unknown.
Legend of Saint Margaret of Hungary (Margit-legenda / Margaret Codex)
Legenda Beate Margarite de Ungaria / Margit-legenda
Margaret of Hungary (1242–1270) was the daughter of King Béla IV of the Arpad dynasty, vowed as a child to God in exchange for Hungary's deliverance from the Mongols and placed in the Dominican monastery on Rabbit Island (now Margaret Island, Budapest). Her confessor, the Dominican friar Marcellus, composed the first Latin life c. 1272–1275; an extended Legenda maior followed from the Avignon period c. 1340. The surviving Hungarian text, the Margaret Codex, was copied by the Dominican nun Lea Ráskay around 1510, making it one of the most significant monuments of early Hungarian prose. Margaret was beatified only in 1789 by Pius VI and canonized in 1943 by Pius XII, meaning the medieval legends circulated for centuries without formal papal authorization, yet shaped Dominican and royal Hungarian piety profoundly.