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 |  | he
manuscript begins with a calendar, which lists month
by month the fixed Christian holidays, mostly the
feasts of saints. This page represents the first half
of September. In this manuscript, the most important
days are indicated by blue letters, and the second-most
important by red. To the left of each feast day are
columns of numbers and letters that were used to calculate
new and full moons and the dates of movable feasts
such as Easter.
It was customary in the Middle Ages
to decorate calendar pages with the signs of the zodiac and with activities appropriate
to the time of year. In this manuscript, the activity, or labor, associated with
September is the harvesting of grapes for wine. At left, a
woman picks bunches of grapes from the vine; she can't help indulging in the
juicy fruit. The man in the center hands a basket filled with grapes to another
man who, standing in a large wooden barrel, stomps on the grapes. |
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| When
the book was unbound, it was revealed that the September calendar (shown above)
shared the same leaf of parchment with the May calendar (shown at left). At the
bottom of the May page, a naked man and woman are shown holding a shield in front
of them, representing the zodiacal sign of Geminithe twins. Why
do you think the zodiacal sign for May appears on the same leaf of parchment as
the September calendar? Next |
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