Hours of Isabella Stuart

It was originally produced for Yolande of Aragon (1380–1442), Duchess of Anjou, but is named after Isabella Stuart, who was one of its earliest owners and had her family coat of arms added to the book.

[6][7] Yolande of Aragorn was known for her intelligence and political acumen, and was a patron of the arts, commissioning c. 1400–1414 the building of the chapel of John the Baptist in the Château d'Angers.

She at one time owned the "Belles Heures of Jean de France, Duc de Berry" book of hours, and made it available to the Rohan Master while he was working on this book, which was probably intended for her daughter, also named Yolande (1412–40), on the occasion of her marriage to Francis I, Duke of Brittany.

[8] After the death of his first wife, Francis married Isabella Stuart, the second daughter of James I of Scotland and Joan Beaufort, and gifted her the book.

[9] It was reilluminated for Isabella to include images of the Scottish princess in heraldic dress (the ermine of Brittany and the lion of Scotland) and her own coat of arms.

Virgin and Child in a church, Fitzwilliam Museum , Cambridge. [ 1 ]