William de Brailes

Folio 43r from the De Brailes Hours (British Library Add MS 49999) showing a signed self-portrait by "W de Brailes who painted me" (left margin).[1]

William de Brailes (active c. 1230 – c. 1260) was an English Early Gothic manuscript illuminator, presumably born in Brailes, Warwickshire. He signed two manuscripts, and apparently worked in Oxford, where he is documented from 1238 to 1252, owning property in Catte Street near the University Church of St Mary the Virgin, roughly on the site now occupied by the chapel of All Souls College, where various members of the book trade lived. He was married, to Celena, but evidently also held minor orders, as at least three self-portraits show him with a clerical tonsure.[2][3] This was not unusual: by this date, and with the exception of the St Albans monk Matthew Paris, the only other English illuminator of the period about whom we have significant personal information, most English illumination seems to have been done in commercial workshops run by laymen.[4]

  1. ^ Morgan, no 73. British Library, another image, Penitent David
  2. ^ Morgan, p.30
  3. ^ Jonathan Alexander; Medieval Illuminators and their Methods of Work; p.25, Yale UP, 1992, ISBN 0-300-05689-3 Leaf from a psalter (MS 330.iii), lower right roundel, next to angel. Fitzwilliam see below for another.
  4. ^ Morgan, p. 30

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