Grey-FitzPayn Hours
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (April 2022) |
The Grey-FitzPayn Hours is an illuminated
book of hours[1] formerly thought to have been commissioned by Sir Richard de Grey for his bride Joan FitzPayn, but now thought to have been made for members of the Pabenham and Clifford families, produced in the English Midlands
around 1300 to 1308.
Description
It follows the
Use of Sarum, standard in England from the mid-13th century onwards. It is 24.5 cm by 17 cm, with 93 folios, 2 full-page miniatures, 3 large figured initials and other ornamental initials and borders. It is now at the Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum
, MS. 242.
References
- JSTOR 3045652. Retrieved 18 April 2022.