The contents of the book are typical of those of a book of hours, though the quantity of illumination is extremely unusual. •
The Calendar: Folios 1–13 ::A generalized
calendar (not specific to any year) of church feasts and saints' days, often illuminated with representations of the
Labours of the Months, is a usual part of a book of hours, but the illustrations of the months in the
Très Riches Heures are exceptional and innovative in their size, and the best known element of the decoration of the manuscript. Up to this point any scenes of the labours had been smaller images on the same page as the calendar text, Each illustration is surmounted with its appropriate hemisphere showing a solar chariot, the signs and degrees of the
zodiac, and numbering the days of the month and the martyrological letters for the
ecclesiastic lunar calendar. Each month of the calendar is allotted an opening of two pages, on the righthand page the calendar listing notable
feast days and on the left the miniature. January is the largest miniature in the calendar and includes the Duke of Berry at a New Year’s Day feast (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969). ::Several of the miniatures depict the Duke, fields or castles he owned, and places he visited. This shows the personal function of the book of hours, as it is customized to suit the patron (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). ::The September miniature was almost certainly painted in two phases: first, the upper section with the sky and château was painted in the middle of the fifteenth century, around 1438–1442, in the time of
René of Anjou and
Yolande of Aragon; then the lower scene of grape-picking was completed by
Jean Colombe from a sketch left by his predecessor. In general, artists started with the background, then painted in the characters before finishing with their faces. ::In the foreground, it is grape-picking time. The woman in a white and red apron looks pregnant. Other young peasants are picking the purple bunches, while one of them is tasting the grapes. A further character holding a basket is walking towards a mule which is carrying two panniers. The grapes are being loaded either into the mules' panniers or into the vats on the cart pulled by two oxen. ::In the background stands the Château de Saumur with its chimneys and weathervanes decorated with golden fleurs-de-lys. It was built by Louis II d'Anjou then given to his wife Yolande d’Aragon, the mother of King René and mother-in-law of Charles VII, over whom she had a considerable sway. The presence of this château can be explained by the important role played by Yolande in the early years of the reign of Charles VII and by how much the king enjoyed staying there. On the left, behind the enceinte, stands a clock-tower, the chimneys of the kitchens and a gate leading to a drawbridge. A horse is coming out and a woman with a basket on her head is on her way in. ::In front of the château, between the vines and the moat can be seen a tilting ground surrounded by palisades, where tournaments were held. ::The architectural design of the château draws the gaze up towards the dreamily poetic volutes. The towers conceal their protective nature beneath festive trappings, redolent of fabulous adventures in the forests of Arthurian legends and suggestive of the presence of God in His creation. As François Cali put it: "These extravagant towers are a dream landscape with constellations of canopies, pinnacles, gables and arrows, with their crockets fluttering against the light." ::In the middle of the grape pickers, a character is showing his behind. This intentionally grotesque touch contrasts with the extraordinary elegance of the château. Jean Colombe's peasants lack the dignity they have in the other miniatures. '', f. 113v,
Jean Colombe •
Anatomical Zodiac Man: Folio 14 ::The Anatomical Zodiac Man concludes the calendar. The twelve signs of the zodiac appear over the corresponding anatomical regions. It contains Berry's
coat of arms of three
fleurs-de-lis on a blue background. Such an image appears in no other book of hours, but
astrology was one of Berry's interests, and several works on the subject were in Berry's library. The two figures are sometimes regarded as male and (looking out at the viewer) female, but Pognon finds both "strangely hermaphrodite", and intentionally so. •
Readings from the Gospels: Folios 17–19 •
Prayers to the Virgin: Folios 22–25 •
Fall of Man: Folio 25 ::This part is represented in four stages within the same miniature. The Fall of Man is thought to have been by Jean de Limbourg and was to belong to a series of miniatures not originally intended for the Très Riches Heures. •
Hours of the Virgin Matins: Folios 26–60 ::Illustrated with a cycle of the
Life of the Virgin, with the page showing the
Rest on the Flight to Egypt by Jean Colombe. •
Psalms: Folio 61–63 ::The illustrations for the psalms employ a literal interpretation of the text that is rare for the late medieval period (Manion 1995). •
The Penitential Psalms: Folio 64–71 ::This section begins with the "Fall of the Angels", which bears a lot of similarity to a panel painting by a Sienese painter dating from 1340 to 1348, now at the Louvre (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969). The Limbourgs may have known this work. This miniature has been identified as not originally intended for the Très Riches Heures. The final opening has a double-page image of the
Procession of Saint Gregory that surrounds the text columns, with depictions of the skyline of Rome. •
Hours of the Cross: Folios 75–78 ::In this section Christ is depicted as the
Man of Sorrows, exhibiting wounds and surrounded by instruments of the passion. This is a common iconographic type in fourteenth-century manuscripts (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). •
Hours of the Holy Ghost: Folios 79–81 '', f. 79r •
Office of the Dead: Folios 82–107 ::Colombe painted all the miniatures of this section, other than “Hell”, which was painted by a Limbourg brother. “Hell” is based on a description from a thirteenth-century Irish monk
Tundal (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). This miniature may not have been originally intended for the manuscript. Meiss and subsequent writers have argued that the full-page miniatures that
codicological data show were inserted on single leaves were not originally designed for the Très Riches Heures (including the
Anatomical Man, folio 14v;
The Fall, folio 25r; the
Meeting of the Magi, folio 51v; the
Adoration of the Magi, folio 52r; the
Presentation, folio 54v; the
Fall of the Rebel Angels, folio 64v;
Hell, folio 108r; the
Map of Rome, folio 141v). Margaret Manion, however, has suggested that, "although the subjects are handled in an innovative manner, they fit within the context of the prayerbook and could well have been part of a developing collaborative plan." •
Short Weekday Offices: Folios 109–140 ::The
Presentation of the Virgin takes place in front of
Bourges Cathedral, in Berry's ducal capital (Longnon, Cazelles and Meiss 1969). •
Plan of Rome: Folio 141 •
Hour of the Passion: Folio 142–157 •
Masses for the Liturgical Year: Folios 158–204 ::Folio 201 depicts the martyrdom of
Andrew the Apostle. The Duke of Berry was born on
Saint Andrew's Day, 1340; consequently this miniature was of great importance to him (Cazelles and Rathofer 1988). ==Stylistic analysis==