The Master of the Dresden Prayerbook was an anonymous master illuminator active in Flanders between 1460 and 1520. He is named after the manuscript now in the State Library of Saxony. Over fifty manuscripts are attributed to him.[1]
The Temperate and Intemperate portraying temperate (nobles) and intemperate (peasants) and Valerius Maximus instructing Emperor Tiberius on the difference
Christ before Caiaphas, Master of the Dresden Prayer Book
The receiver-general of Flanders Jan van der Scaghe and his wife Anne de Memere praying before the Blessed Virgin Mary with Child by Master of the Dresden Prayer Book or Ghent Associate of the Vienna Master of Mary of Burgundy
^"Master of the Dresden Prayer Book (Flemish, active about 1480 - 1515) (Getty Museum)".
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of the Dresden Prayerbook worked as his assistant on this book, suggesting he was an apprentice; a number of other anonymous masters have been postulated...
Bening and theMasteroftheDresdenPrayerbook began exporting high-quality books of hours as luxury goods to all European countries. The Flemish workshops...
defended two aspects ofthe new prayerbook. He cited the conventional halakhic sources for praying in German; on the matter ofthe sacrificial cult he...
Forces the Devil to Hold His Prayerbook (c. 1481), is Late Gothic in style, but also shows the influence ofthe Italian artist Mantegna. In the 1500s,...
British Library, Add MS 15281 (Prayerbookof Sigismund I of Poland) London, British Library, Add MS 10142 (Ancient Laws of Denmark) San Marino, California...
might save at least a few from the glowing flames." Luther advocated setting synagogues on fire, destroying Jewish prayerbooks, forbidding rabbis from preaching...
and excerpts from the Kabbalah and the High Holiday Prayerbook) (In the 1995 revision, Berlinski included sections from The Beadle of Prague (1983)) (1983)...