Passional of Abbess Kunigunde (Passionale Abbatissae Cunegundis)
Passionale Abbatissae Cunegundis
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
This richly illuminated anthology was commissioned by Kunigunde of Bohemia (1265–1321), daughter of King Ottokar II and abbess of St George's Convent at Prague Castle, making it a direct Přemyslid royal production. Its five mystical treatises on Christ's Passion — two composed by the Dominican friar Kolda of Koldice specifically for Kunigunde — blend affective passion piety with Bohemian Dominican mysticism. The manuscript (National Library of the Czech Republic, MS XIV A 17) contains the earliest surviving coloured depiction of the Bohemian heraldic emblem, confirming its dynastic context. Evidence of ritualized physical interaction — veneration gestures and deliberate image-touching — shows it was actively used as a devotional instrument, not merely preserved.
Why it still matters
The Passion meditations within it anticipate the affective spirituality of later works such as the Imitation of Christ; any Christian today can enter the same contemplative mode by meditating on the Instruments of the Passion (Arma Christi) it depicts.
Kept alongside
Four Letters of Saint Clare of Assisi to Saint Agnes of Prague
Epistolae quattuor Clarae Assisiensis ad Agnetem Pragensem
Agnes of Prague (1211–1282) was a daughter of Přemyslid King Ottokar I who refused imperial marriage and founded the first Poor Clare house north of the Alps in 1234; Clare's four surviving Latin letters to her constitute the primary devotional and formation text of the earliest Přemyslid female religious community. Clare addresses Agnes with profound maternal intensity — instructing her on poverty, contemplation, and the gaze upon the crucified Christ. The earliest manuscript evidence of the correspondence survives in a Prague codex of c. 1280–1330, confirming the text's Bohemian circulation. The fourth letter, written near Clare's death, has been called one of the most beautiful pieces of medieval spiritual prose.
Svatováclavský chorál (Saint Wenceslas Chorale / Hymn)
Svatý Václave, vévodo české země
The oldest surviving Czech-language religious song, the Wenceslas Chorale is a prayer addressed directly to the sainted Přemyslid duke, asking him to intercede for his people before God. It is described as already 'old and well-known' in a 13th-century chronicle, placing its origins well within the Přemyslid period. The hymn was sung in the court chapel on the Feast of Wenceslas and served as a vernacular counterpart to the Latin liturgical office; its three original strophes made it accessible to lay courtiers and royal children alike, functioning as both a dynastic loyalty anthem and a genuine intercession.
Velislai Biblia Picta (Velislav Picture Bible)
Velislai biblia picta
Commissioned by Velislav the Canon, a notary in the service of Bohemian King John I (Luxembourg, successor of the Přemyslids) and Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV, this 747-miniature picture Bible is one of the largest pictorial devotional works of medieval Central Europe. Crucially, it appends dedicated visual legends of Saint Ludmila and Saint Wenceslas — the two dynastic Přemyslid saints — to its biblical narrative, embedding court patronal devotion within a biblical framework. As a biblia pauperum-style text, it was designed to be contemplated visually as an aid to meditation, serving both literate and semi-literate members of the Prague court in private devotion.