The Macclesfield Psalter

Original owner

Owners

The manuscript was made for the young man shown kneeling in prayer in front of a shrine (fol. 246r). The wording of the Confession prayer, which begins on the same page, suggests that he was being trained for a career in the Church. It is likely that he was associated with John de Warenne, 7th Earl of Surrey and Sussex (1286-1347), and his nephew and heir, Richard Fitzalan (c. 1313-1376), 3rd Earl of Arundel, both of whom were distinguished art patrons in East Anglia and influential figures at the court of Edward III. The only extant coat of arms in the volume (fol. 37v) has yet to be identified with certainty, but the gold, red and white colours of the herald’s banner on fol. 39r match the heraldic and livery colours of the earls of Arundel. A Dominican friar, depicted in the lower margin beneath Psalm 107 (fol. 158r), was most probably the young man’s confessor.

This coat of arms has been tentatively associated with four families: Warberton, Gorges, Morville and Mortimer of Attleborough. A hybrid in a bright, red cloak is depicted in the border.

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