his young apprentice. The scribe already has divided his page into
two columns of four roundels each, a format often used for the
paired illustrations of moralized Bibles. The inspirations for such
designs were probably the roundels of Gothic stained-glass windows
(compare the borders of the Belle Verrière window,FIG. 18-16,at
Chartres and the windows of Louis’s own, later Sainte-Chapelle,
FIG. 18-25).
The dedication page of Blanche of Castile’s moralized Bible pre-
sents a very abbreviated portrayal of Gothic book production, similar
to the view of a monastic scriptorium discussed earlier (FIG. 16-11).
The manufacturing process used in the workshops of 13th-century
Paris did not differ significantly from that of 10th-century Tábara. It
involved many steps and numerous specialized artists, scribes, and
assistants of varying skill levels. The Benedictine abbot Johannes
Trithemius (1462–1516) described the way books were still made in
his day in his treatise In Praise of Scribes:
If you do not know how to write, you still can assist the scribes in
various ways. One of you can correct what another has written. An-
other can add the rubrics [headings] to the corrected text. A third
can add initials and signs of division. Still
another can arrange the leaves and attach the
binding. Another of you can prepare the covers,
the leather, the buckles and clasps. All sorts of
assistance can be offered the scribe to help him
pursue his work without interruption. He needs
many things which can be prepared by others:
parchment cut, flattened and ruled for script,
ready ink and pens. You will always find some-
thing with which to help the scribe.^3
The preparation of the illuminated pages
also involved several hands. Some artists, for ex-
ample, specialized in painting borders or initials.
Only the workshop head or one of the most ad-
vanced assistants would paint the main figural
scenes. Given this division of labor and the
assembly-line nature of Gothic book production,
it is astonishing how uniform the style is on a
single page, as well as from page to page, in most
illuminated manuscripts.
PSALTER OF SAINT LOUISThe golden background of
Blanche’s Bible is unusual and has no parallel in Gothic windows. But
the radiance of stained glass probably inspired the glowing color of
other 13th-century Parisian illuminated manuscripts. In some cases,
masters in the same urban workshop produced both glass and books.
Many art historians believe that the Psalter of Saint Louis (FIG. 18-34)
is one of several books produced in Paris for Louis IX by artists associ-
ated with those who made the stained glass for his Sainte-Chapelle.
Certainly, the painted architectural setting in Louis’s book of Psalms
reflects the pierced screenlike lightness and transparency of royal Ray-
onnant buildings such as Sainte-Chapelle. The intense colors, espe-
cially the blues, emulate stained glass. The lines in the borders resem-
ble leading. And the gables, pierced by rose windows with bar tracery,
are standard Rayonnant architectural features.
The page from the Psalter of Saint Louis shown here (FIG. 18-34)
represents Abraham and the three angels, the Old Testament story
believed to prefigure the Christian Trinity (see “Jewish Subjects in
Christian Art,” Chapter 11, page 293). The Gothic artist included
two episodes on the same page, separated by the tree of Mamre men-
tioned in the Bible. At the left, Abraham greets the three angels. In
French Gothic 483
18-34Abraham and the three angels, folio 7
verso of the Psalter of Saint Louis,from Paris,
France, 1253–1270. Ink, tempera, and gold leaf on
vellum, 5 3 –^12 . Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris.
The architectural settings in the Psalter of
Saint Louisreflect the screenlike lightness and
transparency of royal buildings such as Sainte-
Chapelle (FIG. 18-25). The colors emulate those
of stained glass.
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