Boccaccio, Filocolo; Italy (probably Mantua), c. 1464
MS. Canon. Ital. 85
Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford
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Details
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This item is described in 2 online catalogues.?
For the main catalogue entry, see: Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries
Other descriptions: Bodleian Archives & Manuscripts
Description
From Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries
This is an extract only. For more information, see the catalogue record in Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries.
Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries contains descriptions of all known Western medieval manuscripts held in the Bodleian Libraries, and of medieval manuscripts in selected Oxford colleges. Learn more.
Title
Boccaccio, Filocolo; Italy (probably Mantua), c. 1464
Shelfmark
MS. Canon. Ital. 85
Associated place
French
Italian
Place of origin
Italian, Mantua or possibly Ferrara
Date
c. 1464
Language
Italian
Contents
Form
codex
Support
parchment
Physical extent
2 (medieval parchment bifolium) + 240 + 2 (medieval parchment bifolium) leaves, with a short 18th-century description of the manuscript in Italian, unfoliated, pasted to fol. 241r.
Hands
Humanistic script. Written by Andrea de Laude for Lodovico Gonzaga, c. 1464, as is shown by a letter from Andrea to Lodovico in the Gonzaga archive dated 30 Jan. 1464 and referring to the copying of the manuscript (J. J. G. Alexander, 'The scribe of the Boccaccio Filostrato identified', BLR 9 (1973-8), 303-4, with text). De la Mare and Reynolds (p. 53) identified the scribe's hand in Turin, Biblioteca Nazionale Universitaria di Torino, Ms. N. VI. 11 (Dante, Commedia, badly damaged in 1904; see further under Decoration). They also suggested (ibid.) an identification with Andrea Morena da Lodi, who copied Paris, BnF MS. Italien 81, but there are several differences between the script of the Oxford and Paris manuscripts.
Decoration
Half-page miniatures at the beginning of each book illustrating 'episodes described or referred to early in each book' (Alexander 1994): (fol. 1r) Juno in her chariot drawn by peacocks with Pope, Cardinal and two attendants (fol. 25r) Venus, Mount Cythera, and Cupid tempering his arrows (fol. 67r) Four youths in a walled garden with falcon and dog (fol. 114v) A group of horsemen in a city square (fol. 190v) Filocolo/Florio and Biancafiore parting from the Admiral The artist of the miniatures has also been identified (first in print by Pächt and Alexander in 1970) in British Library Harley MS. 3567 (written for Cardinal Francesco Gonzaga), and (by Fumian in 2014) in Turin, BN, Ms. N. VI. 11, written perhaps also by Andrea de Laude for an unknown patron (see above, Hands). The artist of the Harley manuscript was identified by Meroni in 1966 as Pietro Guindaleri of Cremona (-1506) whose documented work is Turin, BN, Ms. I. I. 22-23 (Pliny, Natural History), although this identification has not been universally accepted (see the entry in Dizionario biografico dei miniatori italiani: secoli IX-XVI, ed. M. Bollati (Milan, 2004)). The artist of the Turin Dante was tentatively identified by Fumian in 2014, on the basis of documentary evidence, as Jacopo Bellanti da San Pietro di Galatina. For more detailed descriptions of the miniatures see Alexander 1994 and de la Mare and Reynolds 1991-1992, who suggest that the border and initials (below) may have been the work of different artists.
Strapwork borders on gold ground at the beginning of each book; Alexander 1994 compared the borders of Madrid, Biblioteca Nacional, MS. Vit. 22-5 (Plautus, written for Lodovico Gonzaga III).
Large interlace initials on gold ground at the beginning of each book; 5-line initials in different styles (gold with vine-stem decoration on coloured grounds, or coloured interlace on gold grounds, or coloured with acanthus decoration on gold grounds). De la Mare and Reynolds compared the initials in BL Addit. MS. 14777, BL Harley MS 3691, and Victoria and Albert Museum L. 366-1956.
Binding
17th century?, Italian or French?: pasteboards; red leather with all-over gilt tooling in a diamond-shaped panel with elaborate corner- and centre-pieces, all areas richly infilled with a small fleur-de-lis tool; spine similarly gilt (damaged and re-laid); edges of boards also gilt-tooled with a narrow roll; gilt gauffered edges. Rebacked, 19th or 20th century, Bodleian. 364–365 c. 240 c. 65–70 (book closed) (Barker-Benfield, 2020).
Acquisition
Purchased by the Bodleian in 1817.
Provenance
Produced for Lodovico III Gonzaga of Mantua (above, Hands); arms of Gonzaga of Mantua integral to the border decoration.
Perhaps dispersed from the Gonzaga library either during its sack in 1630 or in the sale of the library at Venice at 1707 by Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga (C. H. Clough, ‘The Library of the Gonzaga of Mantua’, Librarium 15, no. 1 (1972), 50-63); there is no evidence of ownership by Bernardo Trevisan or Jacopo Soranzo.
On fol. ii verso is (18th-century?) a device with initials 'S E' and below 'Francesco Squarcione ?', referring to the Italian painter (d. 1468); the connection with the present manuscript is unclear.
Matteo Luigi Canonici, 1727–1805, source of acquisition not known.
Giuseppe Canonici , -1807
View full record in Medieval manuscripts in Oxford libraries
From Bodleian Archives & Manuscripts
This is an extract only. For more information, see the catalogue record in Bodleian Archives & Manuscripts.
Bodleian Archives & Manuscripts contains descriptions of the Bodleian Libraries’ archival collections, including post-1500 manuscripts. Some manuscripts with records in other catalogues are also described here as part of a description of a larger archive. Learn more.
Title
Boccaccio, Filocolo
Shelfmark
MS. Canon. Ital. 85
Date
c. 1463-1464
Language
Italian
Physical extent
1 volume
View full record in Bodleian Archives & Manuscripts
Collection contents
Canonici Italian
Boccaccio, Filocolo
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