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

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Seitenstetten Missal

109, MS M.855, fol. 53r
110, MS M.855, fol. 53v
111, MS M.855, fol. 54r
112, MS M.855, fol. 54v
113, MS M.855, fol. 55r
114, MS M.855, fol. 55v
115, MS M.855, fol. 56r
116, MS M.855, fol. 56v
117, MS M.855, fol. 57r
118, MS M.855, fol. 57v
119, MS M.855, fol. 58r
120, MS M.855, fol. 58v

In 1254, the monastery at Seitenstetten burned to the ground. Circumstances were so dire that the archbishop of Salzburg intervened, granting indulgences, or the forgiveness of sins, for anyone offering financial support to the monks. As the well-connected son of the duke of Silesia, Archbishop Ladislaus (ca. 1237–1270) came to Salzburg via Padua, where he had studied at the renowned university. He likely played a role in the commissioning of this missal, coinciding with the rededication of the monastery. Of the manuscript’s three local artists, the one responsible for this diptych of the Virgin and Child with a facing Crucifixion demonstrates firsthand knowledge of contemporary Paduan painting, which must have been facilitated by the archbishop’s connections. The donor at the foot of the Virgin is likely the abbot of Seitenstetten.