Jean Miélot, also Jehan, (born Gueschard, Picardy, died 1472) was an author, translator, manuscript illuminator, scribe and priest, who served as secretary to Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy from 1449 to Philip's death in 1467, and then to his son Charles the Bold.[1] He also served as chaplain to Louis of Luxembourg, Count of St. Pol from 1468, after Philip's death.[2] He was mainly employed in the production of de luxe illuminated manuscripts for Philip's library. He translated many works, both religious and secular, from Latin or Italian into French, as well as writing or compiling books himself, and composing verse. Between his own writings and his translations he produced some twenty-two works whilst working for Philip,[3] which were widely disseminated, many being given printed editions in the years after his death, and influenced the development of French prose style.

Jean Miélot
Bornc.1420
Gueschart, Kingdom of France
Died1472
Lille, Kingdom of France
OccupationPersonal Secretary, Translator, Manuscript Illuminator
NationalityFrench
Period15th century
Notable worksRomuléon (Miélot)
An author portrait of Jean Miélot writing his compilation of the Miracles of Our Lady, one of his many popular works. The setting is probably the ducal library. Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris.

Career

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Presentation miniature by Jean le Tavernier, 1454–7, Brussels. Jean Miélot giving Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, his translation of the Traité sur l'oraison dominicale. Bibliothèque Royale, Brussels.

Little is known of his early career. He was born at Gueschard, between Abbeville and Hesdin, in what is now the Somme department, but was then in Picardy, and from 1435 part of the Duchy of Burgundy.[4] He was recruited by the Duke after he translated and adapted the Speculum Humanae Salvationis into French in 1448, and as well as his court salary he was made a canon of Saint Peter's in Lille in 1453, serving until his death in 1472, when he was buried in the church. He was probably not usually resident.[5] As a priest and as an employee of the court he would have been exempt from guild regulations, which was probably an advantage to his career.[6] He seems to have had lodgings in the palace, which are perhaps realistically shown in a miniature in Brussels,[7] and also to have run a workshop of scribes in Lille. After the Feast of the Pheasant in 1454, an enthusiasm in the Court to revive the Crusades led to commissions to translate travel books about the Middle East.

Because of the particular Burgundian fashion for presentation miniatures, where the author is shown presenting the book (in which the miniature itself is contained) to the Duke or another patron, we have an unusually large number of portraits of Miélot for a non-royal person of the period, which mostly show consistent facial features - he would have been very well known to the artists, and may well have had influence in allocating commissions to them. These are in books he wrote - in both senses of the word, as he usually scribed Philip's copy himself.[8]

Philip the Good was the leading bibliophile of Northern Europe, and employed a number of scribes, copyists and artists, with Miélot holding a leading position among the former groups (see also David Aubert). His translations were first produced in draft form, called a "minute", with sketches of the images and illuminated letters. If this was approved by the Duke, after being examined and read aloud at court, then the final de luxe manuscript for the Duke's library would be produced on fine vellum, and with the sketches worked up by specialist artists. Miélot's minute for his Le Miroir de l'Humaine Salvation survives in the Bibliothèque Royale Albert I in Brussels, which includes two self-portraits of him richly dressed as a layman.[9] The presentation portrait to La controverse de noblesse, a year later, shows him with a clerical tonsure.[10] His illustrations are well composed, but not executed up to the standard of manuscripts for the court. His text, on the other hand, is usually in a very fine Burgundian bastarda blackletter script, and paleographers can recognise his hand.[citation needed]

Works

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Another image of Miélot writing. Bibliothèque Royale, Brussels.[11]

A fuller list, in French, with partial details of surviving manuscripts and a bibliography, is on-line at Arlima.

Translations

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Folio 41r "Wheel of Fortune" from Epitre d'Othéa; Les Sept Sacrements de l'Eglise, c. 1455 at Waddesdon Manor

Own works

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Mostly copies, compilations or adaptations relying heavily on other writers.

  • Le Miroir de l'Humaine Salvation, one of four French versions of the Speculum Humanae Salvationis[17]
  • Miracles de Nostre Dame an important compilation.
  • A version of the Epître d'Othéa by Christine de Pisan, augmented with material from the Genealogia Deorum Gentilium of Boccaccio.
  • His commonplace book or workbook survives in the BnF (Ms. fr. 17001, apparently not originally bound up together), containing draft translations and drawings and initials, as well as verses, including some written for court occasions. They are more of more historical than literary interest. There is a "labyrinth" design containing the letters of MIELOT.[18]

Notes

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  1. ^ Sometimes spelled "Miellot" in the 18th and 19th centuries.
  2. ^ Wilson & Wilson, p.59
  3. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia
  4. ^ It was ceded in the 1435 Treaty of Arras. Gueschard was a commune in 1854, but now appears to have been swallowed up by Abbeville.
  5. ^ Wilson & Wilson, p.59, though Arlima (external link) say he was made a canon in 1452.
  6. ^ T Kren & S McKendrick, 19
  7. ^ below and Brussels Royal Library, MS 9278, fol. 10r Archived 2008-06-17 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Two further images of Miélot are shown here
  9. ^ Wilson & Wilson, pp.50-60. Self-portraits pp. 51 and 56
  10. ^ The Frontispiece to the Chroniques de Hainaut: An Introduction to Valois Burgundy drawing, near bottom
  11. ^ For full image see Brussels link below.
  12. ^ Craig Kallendorf, A Companion to the Classical Tradition, p. 24, 2007, Blackwell Publishing, ISBN 1-4051-2294-3
  13. ^ Humanism and Good Governance, article by Christine Raynaud, in Fifteenth-century Studies, 1998
  14. ^ Princes and Princely Culture, 1450-1650, pp.75-77 Arjo Vanderjagt, 2003, Brill
  15. ^ T Kren & S McKendrick, 116 and 182
  16. ^ T Kren & S McKendrick, 245
  17. ^ MS in Glasgow and Illuminated copy, with presentation miniature
  18. ^ Wilson & Wilson, pp. 66-71

References

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