Excalibur (1981) dir. John Boorman
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Excalibur (1981) dir. John Boorman

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Pavel Tatarnikov Arthur of Avalon
Georges Rochegrosse, Le Chevalier aux Fleurs (The Knight of the Flowers) (detail) (1894), oil on canvas
Bouzov Castle in Moravia, Czech Republic
Medieval book transport
You are looking at two โwrapsโ (top), the outside and inside of a box (middle), and a leather satchel (bottom). What they share is not just their old age (they are all medieval), but also the purpose for which they were made: to transport a book from A to B. The actual reason for transporting books in these objects varied considerably. The wraps are late-medieval girdle books, which were hanged from the ownerโs belt by the knot. The text inside - which was often of legal or religious nature - could be consulted quickly and easily: just unwrap it and read. The box (and the ninth-century book inside) had a more exotic use: the package functioned as a charm for good luck on the battlefield, where it was carried in front of the troops by a monk. The satchel, which also dates from the ninth century, was just a bag to transport a book while on the go - it was popular among monks. Read more about these fascinating devices in my blog post โMedieval Books on the Goโ (here). ย
Pics - ย Wrap at top: Stockholm, Royal Library (16th century,ย source);ย Wrap below it:ย Yale, Beinecke Library, MS 84 (15th century, source);ย Box: Dublin, Royal, Irish Academy, D ii 3 (8th/9th century,ย source);ย Satchel: Dublin, Trinity, College, MS 52 (Book of Armagh, 9th century,ย source).

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Ferdinand II armour. Created by Lucio Piccinino (1550-1589). Gift from Alessandro Farnese, Duke of Parma and Piacenza
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Ancient Greek coins of Aegina island ๐๐
dragon fights
in the margins of the prayer book of charles the bold, a diminuitive prayer book (measuring about 5 x 3.5 in, or 13 x 9 cm) comissioned by charles the bold, duke of burgundy, and written and illuminated in flanders, late 15th c.
source: Los Angeles, J. Paul Getty Museum, Ms. 37

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Gauntlets of Charles V
Emilia in the rosegarden (Teseida) by Giovanni Boccaccio