Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary (in Primers and Books of Hours)
Officium Parvum Beatae Mariae Virginis
Magnificat anima mea Dominum, et exsultavit spiritus meus in Deo salutari meo.
Our renderingMy soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour.
What it is
The Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Officium Parvum BMV) was the core devotional text of virtually every medieval Primer and Book of Hours, and the single text most frequently prayed by royal and noble children in their formal religious formation. Originally a monastic supplement to the Divine Office, attested from approximately the mid-8th century and reinforced at the 1095 Council of Clermont, it became the foundation of lay piety by the 12th–13th centuries. Eleanor of Castile purchased 'seven primers' in 1289 for royal household use, and every English royal nursery Primer from the 14th to 16th centuries placed the Little Office at its heart. Its cycle of canonical Hours — structured around psalms, hymns, the Magnificat, Benedictus, Nunc Dimittis, and Marian antiphons — provided the daily devotional architecture of court piety across five centuries.
Why it still matters
The Little Office of the Virgin is fully prayed today by Catholics, Anglicans, and many ecumenical Christians; modern editions from Baronius Press make the complete daily cycle accessible, and praying it reproduces exactly the devotional rhythm that was taught to royal and noble children for seven centuries.
Kept alongside
Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Officium Parvum Beatae Mariae Virginis)
Officium Parvum Beatae Mariae Virginis
The Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary, a short daily cycle of eight canonical hours in honor of the Virgin, was the most common private prayer book of lay noble households across medieval Europe. For the Arpad and Anjou dynasties in Hungary, Marian devotion was a defining feature of royal piety: approximately 30 percent of all known monastic dedications by Arpad kings were to Mary, and the Anjou royal house bore the Marian lily (fleur-de-lis) as its heraldic emblem. No specific royal Hungarian Marian prayer book survives with a named owner, and the attribution rests on the universality of the text at European royal courts combined with the documented primacy of Marian devotion in Hungarian dynastic identity. The Office remains liturgically intact and is still prayed by Secular Franciscans and lay Catholics worldwide.
Jesu dulcis memoria (The Sweet Memory of Jesus / Jubilus rhythmicus de nomine Jesu)
Dulcis Iesu memoria (Jesu dulcis memoria)
A 42-stanza Latin poem in four-line rhyming stanzas, surviving in its earliest form in a Bodleian manuscript (MS Laud. Misc. 668) dated to the end of the 12th century. Likely composed by an anonymous English Cistercian rather than Bernard himself, but medieval attribution to Bernard circulated universally from the 13th century onward, embedding it in the Bernardine devotional canon read in Cistercian houses and their noble patron networks. The poem provided the texts later used as Office hymns for the Feast of the Holy Name of Jesus and was known as the 'Rosy Hymn' in medieval literature. Its Plantagenet-England provenance and Cistercian origin make it era-typical for court chapel use.
Leiden Saint Louis Psalter (Psalter of Saint Louis of Leiden)
Psautier de saint Louis de Leyde
The Leiden Saint Louis Psalter (Leiden University Library, BPL 76A) is a lavishly illuminated Latin psalter produced in northern England c. 1190 for Geoffrey Plantagenet, Archbishop of York, a son of Henry II of England. It passed to Philip II Augustus of France, and thence to Blanche of Castile, who used it to teach her son—the future Saint Louis IX—to read and pray as a child; a 14th-century inscription on folio 30v records that this was the psalter from which he learned in his childhood. After Louis's death the manuscript passed through the French Capetian line to Agnes of Burgundy, Jeanne de France, and Philip VI before arriving at Leiden University Library in 1741. The psalter's documented role as a saint's childhood primer makes it unique among royal psalters: no other surviving manuscript carries such a direct inscribed witness to a canonised king's formation in prayer.