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4 - ‘Women Who Read Are Dangerous’: Illuminated Manuscripts and Female Book Collections In the Early Renaissance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2021

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Summary

Abstract

This paper looks at what Renaissance women were supposed to read according to the educational manuals of their time, and what we know about their de facto reading habits. The noblewomen Margaret of York and Margaret of Austria represent two poles within the spectrum of possibilities – one focusing in particular on beautifully illuminated spiritual treatises, the other aiming at an encyclopedic library with a wide range of literary genres. The bedroom and the study are singled out as the most private spaces to which a woman could withdraw from her daily chores. Here she could enjoy reading and writing, praying and meditating.

Keywords: Women; Books; Education; Devotion; Margaret of York; Margaret of Austria

In recent years, the number of publications, conferences, and exhibitions on women as patrons of the arts and as collectors of manuscripts has grown immensely. When dealing with women as patrons, many facets have to be taken into account such as marital status, financial means, and political role within the family network. In the Renaissance, only a very small number of noble women actively built up a proper collection of artefacts, such as the Marchioness Isabella d’Este, the Archduchess Margaret of Austria and the dowager Duchess Mary of Hungary. Many more women, however, owned a small set of manuscripts and printed books. Lavishly decorated manuscripts were passed on from one generation to the other: from mother to daughter, from godmother to godchild, from aunt to niece and so forth. In addition to inheritance, books could be received as gifts or were acquired on the open market.

This may be one of the reasons why in the Renaissance there was an ever-growing number of illustrations in which women hold a book in their hands, whether they are female saints or the Virgin Mary.2 In other cases, one can enn counter the portrait of a patron or the image of a female author, such as Christine de Pizan (1364-c.1429). In a late fifteenth-century edition of her book Le Livre de la Cite des Dames (‘The Book of the City of Ladies’) she is portrayed in her majestic study (Figure 4.1), holding up a large manuscript covered in green cloth; additional volumes are placed on benches and in cupboards.

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Antipodean Early Modern
European Art in Australian Collections, c. 1200–1600
, pp. 75 - 96
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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