Hedwig Codex
Hedwig Codex | |
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Saint Hedwig of Silesia venerated by Duke Louis and his consort Agnes | |
Also known as | Vita beatae Hedwigis |
Type | illuminated manuscript |
Date | 1353 |
Place of origin | Silesia |
Language(s) | Latin |
Illuminated by | Court workshop of Duke Louis I of Legnica |
Patron | Louis I of Brzeg and Agnes of Głogów-Żagań |
Material | Tempera colors, colored washes, and ink on parchment bound between wood boards covered with red-stained pigskin |
Size | 13 7/16 x 9 3/4 in. |
Previously kept | Shrine of St Hedwig |
The Hedwig Codex is a medieval illuminated manuscript of the life of Saint Hedwig of Silesia, spouse of the Piast duke Henry the Bearded. Based on her hagiography (Vita beatae Hedwigis), the illustrated codex was produced in 1353 at the court workshop of Hedwig's descendant, Duke Louis I of Legnica in Lubin. According to a letter by Bishop Preczlaw of Pogarell he dedicated it to the newly established collegiate church at Brzeg.
Upon the Protestant Reformation and the dissolution of the Brzeg collegiate chapter, the codex was kept at Ostrov (Schlackenwerth) in Bohemia. Purchased by the J. Paul Getty Trust, the original manuscript is today part of the Getty Museum collection as MS Ludwig XI 7. A facsimile edition was published in Berlin in 1972 as Der Hedwigs-Codex von 1353, edited by the German art historian Wolfgang Braunfels.
Bibliography
- Wolfgang Braunfels, ed., Der Hedwigs-Codex von 1353: Sammlung Ludwig, 2 volumes (Berlin, 1972).
- Jacqueline E. Jung, "The Tactile and the Visionary", available at yale.edu.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to MS. LUDWIG XI 7 (Getty museum) - Hedwig Codex. |