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Memento Mori from BL Eg 1070, f. 53

description

Summary

Detail of a full-page miniature of a Memento Mori. Image taken from f. 53 of Book of Hours, Use of Paris ('The Hours of René d'Anjou'). Written in Latin, calendar and rubrics in French.

The Egerton Manuscript Collection is named after its founder, Sir Thomas Egerton (1540-1617), 1st Viscount Brackley, was a lawyer, statesman, and patron of the arts during the reigns of Queen Elizabeth I and King James I of England. He served as Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and later as Lord Chancellor of England, holding high positions in the legal and political realms.

Sir Thomas Egerton acquired a substantial number of historical and literary manuscripts. In 1617, shortly before his death, Sir Thomas Egerton bequeathed his collection of manuscripts to the British Museum, which was the precursor to the British Library.

The Triumph of Death was a fairly common theme for late medieval artists. Like the another theme, Memento Mori, it was intended to remind viewers of mortality and death. Triumph of Death often depicts an army of skeletons massacring people of every age and gender. Sometimes, a wild carnivalesque atmosphere was emphasized in the popular motif of the Danse Macabre, or Dance of Death. Understanding the macabre spirit of death-culture in late medieval Europe requires an understanding of the terror and panic of epidemic disease, and, more generally, a fear of catastrophe and sudden death. The population of the medieval world experienced death first-hand: wide-scale death, physical decay, and the subsequent crumbling of societal infrastructure. The Black Death was the period in Europe from approximately 1347 to 1353, when bubonic plague ravaged and initiated a long-term period of cultural trauma. In fourteenth-century Europe, the mortality rate from plague was between 50% and 90% of those people who contracted the disease. The most recent works increase estimates of the total population loss to 65% in both Asia and Europe. Previous estimates state that about one-third of the population died from the disease in the years spanning the Black Death.

In art, mementos mori are artistic or symbolic reminders of mortality. Memento mori is a Latin expression meaning "remember that you have to die". It was then reused during the medieval period, it is also related to the ars moriendi ("The Art of Dying") and related literature. Memento mori has been an important part of ascetic disciplines as a means of perfecting the character by cultivating detachment and other virtues, and by turning the attention towards the immortality of the soul and the afterlife.

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memento mori memento mori bl eg medieval manuscripts death paris the hours of rene d anjou book of hours a book of hours use of paris latin manuscript medieval miniatures book of hours use of paris illustrated books calendar illuminated calendar medieval manuscript rene d anjou anjou british library
date_range

Date

1405 - 1410
collections

in collections

Triumph of Death

Plaque, Disasters, expectation the Apocalypse, and macabre of Death in late medieval Europe.

Memento Mori

The Art of Dying: artistic and symbolic reminders of mortality.
create

Source

British Library
link

Link

http://europeana.eu/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

label_outline Explore Rene D Anjou, Memento, Mori

Memento polka - Public domain American sheet music

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Friar statue bronze building. A statue of a person holding a sign

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MASTER Sergeant Hank Wiswell from the 66th Rescue Squadron pins a memento on the scarf during the memorial ceremony for the twelve airmen killed in the helicopter accident. The airmen died when two HH-60G Pavehawk helicopters crashed 25 miles north of Indian Springs in the Pintwater Mountain Range, at night, during a simulated rescue mission of a survivor on the ground

Secretary of Defense (SECDEF), the Honorable William S. Cohen (left) and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori pose for photographers prior to their meeting at the Kantei Building in Tokyo, Japan. SECDEF Cohen is in Japan to meet with government officials and defense leaders

The Honorable Donald H. Rumsfeld (left), Secretary of Defense, receives paperwork from Yoshiro Mori (right, obscured), Japanese Prime Minister, and Seishrio Eto, Japanese SENIOR Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs, at the Pentagon, Room 3E928, Washington, D.C., Feb.16, 2001, to discuss the February 9th collision between the submarine U.S. Navy Los Angeles Class Attack Submarine USS GREENVILLE (SSN 772) and a 190ft Japanese teaching trawler, the Ehime Maru. OSD Package No. KV-OSD-02 (PHOTO by Robert D. Ward) (Released)

U.S. Air Force COL. Edward J."Easy"Ryder, Vice Commander, 31st Fighter Wing, accepts a memento from The Honorable Donald H. Rumsfeld, U.S. Secretary of Defense. The Secretary visited Aviano Air Base, Italy for a town hall meeting with military and civilian members on the base. (U.S. Air Force photo by STAFF SGT. Staci L. Rosenberger) (Released)

[Assignment: 48-DPA-02-05-08_SOI_K_Mori] Secretary Dirk Kempthorne [meeting at Main Interior] with delegation from the Federated States of Micronesia, led by Micronesia President Emanuel Mori [48-DPA-02-05-08_SOI_K_Mori_DOI_9655.JPG]

Design for a Knife Handle with a Memento Mori

Topics

memento mori memento mori bl eg medieval manuscripts death paris the hours of rene d anjou book of hours a book of hours use of paris latin manuscript medieval miniatures book of hours use of paris illustrated books calendar illuminated calendar medieval manuscript rene d anjou anjou british library