The Office of the Dead is a crucial inclusion in the Book of Hours, but it is often ignored when it comes to discussions of manuscript illumination. Today we discuss the use and history of the Office of the Dead. Why is the Office of the Dead included in Books of Hours? How is the office of the dead related to the rise of trick-or-treating on Halloween? And why did the Office of the Dead develop? Who used this prayer cycle, and why?
Resources
The “Ideal Death” in a Book of Hours
Book of Hours with a Mass for the Dead illuminated
Job on the Dung Heap at the beginning of the Office of the Dead
Timeless Treasures: 10 Manuscripts to Celebrate 10 Years in New York
Thinking Broadly: Rolls, Codices, Codicology, Connoisseurship, Paleography, and Media ”Revolutions” with Sonja Drimmer
Enameling Techniques
The Winter Show: A History
Margins and Monsters with Sherry Lindquist
The Secret Best Seller: Misery
What is a Medieval Bestseller?
Time, Desire, & Revival Jewels
Watermarks & Paper Making
A History of the Destruction of Troy
Stenciled Choir Books
New Year’s Gifting & the Magi
Medieval Nativity Scenes & Christmas Decorations
The Annunciation and Life of the Virgin
Basic Gemstone Cutting
Renaissance Pendants, Painting, and Fashion
FEASTS
Sacred Measurements
Time, Daylight, and a November Calendar
The Biography of a Book of Hours
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