SR
← The Library/HoræThe Hours/Era III · The Hours of Princes
Confirmedprivate/court-restricted

Psalterium Davidis (Beatrice Psalter of the Corvina)

Psalterium Davidis cum Canticis, Litaniis et Orationibus

Francesco Rosselli (illuminator, incipit page); Gundisalvus Hispanus (scriptor); standard Psalter texts·Latin·1479–1481·Psalter
PsalterHoræ
In the original — Latin
Beatus vir qui non abiit in consilio impiorum, et in via peccatorum non stetit.

Our renderingBlessed is the man who has not walked in the counsel of the ungodly, nor stood in the way of sinners.

What it is

This intimate psalter was produced in Buda between 1479 and 1481 for Queen Beatrice of Aragon, consort of Matthias Corvinus, with the opening page illuminated by Florentine master Francesco Rosselli during his documented residency in Buda. The codex (224 parchment leaves) contains the full Psalterium with Canticles, Te Deum, Litanies, and Prayers — a complete personal devotional office. The Aragonese arms of Beatrice's natal house appear prominently. It is now held at the Herzog August Bibliothek, Wolfenbüttel, as Cod. Guelf. 39. Aug. 4°, confirming its direct Corvinus court provenance.

Why it still matters

The Psalms with canticles and litanies remain among the most universal Christian devotional texts; praying through this same selection weekly follows the tradition of every medieval queen's private office.

Kept alongside

Horæ

Breviary of Matthias Corvinus

Breviarium Matthiae Corvini Regis Hungariae

This monumental 597-folio breviary was illuminated by Attavante degli Attavanti for Matthias Corvinus between 1487 and 1492, and was explicitly conceived for liturgical use in the royal chapel of Buda Castle. It is one of the finest products of the Bibliotheca Corviniana, featuring elaborate Renaissance frontispieces, marbled columns, and a barrel-vault architectural frame. Though never fully completed and delivered during Matthias's lifetime — remaining instead in Italy — it represents the king's aspirations for his court's sacred liturgical life. It is now held in the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana as Urb. lat. 112.

c. 1487–1492Latin·Hunyadi/CorvinusConfirmed
Horæ

Missal of Matthias Corvinus (Brussels Missal)

Missale Romanum dictum Matthiae Corvini

Produced in Florence between 1485 and 1487, this lavishly illuminated Roman Missal (431 folios, 40 × 28 cm) was commissioned by Matthias Corvinus for the royal chapel at Buda Castle. Attavante signed his work on the altar illustration folio with the date 1485, and the coat of arms of Matthias and Queen Beatrice of Aragon appears throughout. It contains the full Temporal, Sanctoral, and votive mass cycles. After the Battle of Mohács in 1526, Mary of Hungary took it with the rest of the royal chapel's treasures to Brussels, where it remains today in the Bibliothèque royale de Belgique as KBR ms. 9008.

1485–1487Latin·Hunyadi/CorvinusConfirmed
Horæ

Graduale of King Matthias (Matthias Graduale)

Graduale Regis Matthiae Corvini

The Matthias Graduale is the most richly decorated illuminated manuscript in the entire Corvina collection, made expressly for the royal chapel of Buda Castle around 1480–1490. It is the sole surviving volume of a series of three or four choirbooks, preserving the changing chants of the Mass from Holy Saturday through the end of the ecclesiastical year. A Lombard Italian master illuminated the opening pages while a Flemish master produced the remaining 45 miniatures. The manuscript is now at the National Széchényi Library, Budapest, as Cod. Lat. 424, and is described by corvina.hu as the most richly decorated Corvina made for chapel use.

c. 1480–1490Latin·Hunyadi/CorvinusConfirmed