Page:A guide to the manuscripts and printed books illustrating the progress of musical notation - British Museum - 1885.djvu/19

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miniatures, etc., by English artists. Harp and fiddle. [Lansd. M.S. 383.]

92. England: late 12th century. Psalter, in Latin; with miniatures, etc., by English artists. Harp and bells. [Royal MS. 2 A. xxii.]

93. England: 13th century. Psalter, in Latin; with miniatures, etc., by English artists. Bequeathed by John Grandison, Bishop of Exeter [1328-1369], to Isabel, daughter of Edward III. and wife of Ingelram de Coucy. Various instruments. [Add. MS. 21,926.]

94. Netherlands: 13th century. Psalter, in Latin; with illuminated initials by Flemish artists. Bells. [Add. MS. 27,591.]

95. France: early 14th century. Missal, in Latin; with initials and borders by French artists. Belonged to the monastery of Grasse, in the diocese of Languedoc. Angels with horn and bells, organ, guitar, bagpipes and drum, harp, and fiddle. [Add. MS. 17,006.]

96. England: about A.D. 1284. Psalter, in Latin; with initial letters and borders by English artists. Partly executed for Alphonso, eldest son of Edward I., on his contemplated marriage with a daughter of Florent, Count of Holland, the work being interrupted by the Prince's death. The MS. afterwards belonged to Elizabeth, daughter of Edward I., and wife, successively, of John, Count of Holland, and of Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford. Fiddle and bagpipes. [Add. MS. 24,686.]

97. England: early 14th century. The Apocalypse, in French; with outline tinted drawings by English artists. Trumpets. [Royal MS. 19. B. xv.]

98. England: early 14th century. Hours of the Virgin, in Latin; with borders, grotesques, etc., by English artists. Zither and drum. [Harl. MS. 6563.]

99. France: early 14th century. The Apocalypse, in Latin; with miniatures by French artists. Belonged to the Cistercian monastery of La Vaudieu, in the diocese of Liége. Various instruments. [Add. MS. 17,333.]

100. Netherlands: early 14th century. Bestiary, or moralizations from the habits of animals, in Latin; with coloured drawings by Flemish artists. Hurdy-gurdy, played to attract dolphins. [Sloane MS. 3544.]

101. England: 13th century. Psalter, in Latin; with