Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

The Berthold Sacramentary

169. MS M.710 fol. 73r
170. MS M.710 fol. 73v
171. MS M.710 fol. 74r
172. MS M.710 fol. 74v
173. MS M.710 fol. 75r
174. MS M.710 fol. 75v
175. MS M.710 fol. 76r
176. IV. Sanctorale
177. MS M.710 fol. 76v, silk down
178. MS M.710 fol. 77r
179. MS M.710 fol. 77v
180. MS M.710 fol. 78r, silk lifted

The Berthold Sacramentary is named after Berthold, the abbot of Weingarten from 1200–1232 who commissioned it.  From every point of view the codex (ca. 1215–17)—whether for its cover, illuminations, or even script—is the masterpiece of Weingarten illumination. It is also the most luxurious German manuscript of the time and a major monument of Romanesque art.  Although the manuscript was formerly known as the Berthold Missal it is, in fact, a Sacramentary. Unlike the Missal (which has all of the texts recited by the priest at Mass), the Sacramentary contains only those for the celebrant of high Mass. The book still retains its original jeweled binding, which includes representations of the abbey's patron saints (Martin and Oswald) and Abbot Berthold himself.

Most of the twenty-four full-page miniatures are by an exceptionally forceful and expressive artist who has been named the Master of the Berthold Sacramentary, after this book. The richly applied gold leaf is mirror-like, and the original curtains placed over the miniatures and the initials to protect the gold leaf are still sewn in the manuscript.