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  1. New York, NY, November 30, 2009—The Hours of Catherine of Cleves, a fifteenth-century Dutch manuscript that is among the most beautiful and sophisticated illuminated works ever created, is the subject of a major exhibition at The Morgan Library & Museum, from January 22 through May 2, 2010. Titled Demons and Devotion: The Hours of Catherine ...

  2. Bespreking van: Rob Duckers,The hours of Catherine of Cleves: devotion, demons and daily life in the Fifteenth Century Antwerpen:Ludion ,2010 978-90-5544-821-0

  3. 1 de sept. de 2002 · Hardcover. $30.79 17 Used from $4.81 5 New from $30.79. When this magnificent volume first appeared in 1966, it was celebrated for its extraordinary beauty. Now, it is available once again. Illustrating one of the great art treasures of the world, The Hours of Catherine of Cleves is a fifteenth-century illuminated manuscript containing a series ...

    • Hardcover
  4. 157 half- and full-page miniatures with opulent frames make the Hours of Catherine of Cleves the largest coherent picture gallery of Dutch art from the 15th century. Many of these pictures are not only extraordinary in terms of form and content but also unique in the truest meaning of the word: nowhere else in late medieval art do we find parallels or correspondences to this work.

  5. 19 de mar. de 2021 · English. 359 pages : 21 cm. A hard cover book with pages from the ornately illuminated manuscript in the Gothic art style, produced in about 1440 by the anonymous Dutch artist known as the Master of Catherine of Cleves. It is one of the most lavishly illuminated manuscripts to survive from the 15th century and has been described as one of the ...

  6. Après la décapitation de Catherine Howard, Anne et son frère, le duc de Clèves, envisagent une nouvelle union d’Anne et d’Henri. Cependant Henri refuse. En mars 1547, le Conseil privé d’ Édouard VI lui demande de quitter le château de Bletchingley, sa résidence habituelle, pour le manoir de Penshurst , afin de céder la place à Thomas Cawarden, le maître des cérémonies du Roi.

  7. Finally, Catherine's codex is famous for the artist's innovative borders, no two of which are alike. Who Was Catherine of Cleves? Catherine of Cleves (1417–1476) is known for two things: her Book of Hours and her protracted political battle against her husband. In 1430 she married Arnold of Egmond (1410 –1473), becoming duchess of Guelders.