Catalogue Roberti Fine Art, TEFAF Maastricht 2026 (1) compressed - Flipbook - Page 119
the Hours of the Passion of Christ composed by St.Bonaventure (fol.107r); a prayer of St. Ambrose
on the Articles of the Passion, for which Anastasius I, pope 398–401, granted 50 days’ indulgence
(fol.131v); a prayer of Bede on the Last Words, efficacious in preventing the user meeting harm or
dying unconfessed (fol.137v); a prayer to St.Gregory on the Five Wounds of Christ, supported by an
offer of 50 years’ indulgence (fol.140r); prayers to say before the Image of Piety as it appeared to
St.Gregory who offered maximum indulgence to users (fol.142r); a prayer to say before a Crucifix
for which are offered as many days’ indulgence as there were wounds in Christ during his Passion,
as Gregory III, pope 731–741, granted on the petition of the Queen of England (fol.152r); a prayer
to say before the image of the Face of Christ (fol.156r); prayers to Christ revealed by Christ himself
to a holy cleric (fol.159r); the Passion according to SS.Matthew (fol.160r), Mark (fol.124r), Luke
(fol.185r) and John (fol.196r), followed by prayers on the Instruments of the Passion (fol.205v); the
Penitential Psalms (fol.209r) and Litany (fol.220r) with several Germanic saints including SS.Gall,
Otillia and Elizabeth; the Athanasian Creed (fol.230v); a confession to say on going to bed (fol.235r)
and other prayers for different times of day including getting up (fol.239r); a blessing for which
Innocent III, pope 1198–1216, granted 300 days’ indulgence (fol.241r), prayers to use when going to
church (fol.250v), etc.; prayers to God the Father (fol.252r), to the Trinity (fol.254r) and to the
Eternal Wisdom (fol.256r); rosary prayers to the Virgin (fol.256r); prayers on the Seven Sorrows of
the Virgin (fol.269r); the Stabat Mater for use of which Pope Boniface offered seven years’
indulgence, and other prayers to the Virgin; a prayer composed by Sixtus IV, pope 1471–84, for use
of which he granted 11,000 years’ indulgence; a prayer on the Bodily Joys of the Virgin (fol.280v); a
prayer revealed by an angel to St.Bernard (fol.283r); a prayer to the Virgin for which Pope Celestine
offered 300 days’ indulgence (fol.284r); a prayer on the Spiritual Joys of the Virgin (fol.288v); and
verses on the Virgin, the efficacy of which was proven in Aragon in 1400 when a devout layman
who used these verses had his head cut off and his whole spirit remained in the severed head and
allowed him to make confession and receive absolution before he died (fol.294r);
VOLUME II, Suffrages to SS.Michael (fol.1r), one’s guardian angel (fol.3r), John the Baptist (fol.7r),
Matthias (fol.9r), Philip (fol.11r), James the Less (fol.12r), Peter (fol.13v), Paul (fol.15v), James the
Greater (fol.17r), Bartholomew (fol.18v), Matthew (fol.20r), Simon (fol.21r), Jude (fol.22r), Andrew
(fol.23r), Thomas (fol.24r), Kylian (fol.25r), Christopher (fol.26r), Pantaleon (fol.27v), Cyriac (fol.28r),
Laurence (fol.29r), Eustace (fol.30r), Maurice and Companions (fol.31r), Denis (fol.32r), John the
Evangelist (fol.33v), Mark (fol.35r), Luke (fol.36r), Sebastian (fol.39r), Vincent (fol.40v), Blaise
(fol.41v), Valentine (fol.43r), George (fol.44r), Erasmus (fol.45v), Vitus (fol.47r), the 10,000 Martyrs
(fol.48r), Stephen (fol.49v), the Fourteen Helpers (fol.50v), Erhard (fol.52v, missionary in Bavaria,
especially Regensburg), Anthony (fol.53v), William (fol.54v), Thomas Aquinas (fol.55r), Gregory
(fol.56r), Benedict (fol.57r), Ambrose (fol.58r), Jubinus