Drolleries

Drolleries
For the type of humor, see Droll humor. For the short comical sketch from the 17-th century, see Droll.
Page from a 14th century Psalter, showing a drollery on the right margin.

Drolleries (or drollery), often called a "grotesque", are decorative thumbnail images in the margins of Illuminated manuscripts, most popular from about 1250 through the 15th century, although found earlier and later. The most common types of drollery images are those which appear as mixed creatures, either between different animals, or between animals and human beings, or even between animals and plants or inorganic things. Some examples found include cocks with human heads, dogs carrying human masks, archers winding out of a fish’s mouth, bird-like dragons with an elephant’s head on the back. Often they have a thematic connection with the subject of the text of the page, and larger miniatures, and they usually form part of a wider scheme of decorated margins, though some are effectively doodles added later.

One manuscript, The Croy Hours, has so many it has become known as The Book of Drolleries.

Another manuscript that contains many drolleries is the Luttrell Psalter, which has hybrid creatures and other monsters on a great deal of the pages.

References

  • Michelle P. Brown (1994), Understanding Illuminated Manuscripts: A Guide to Technical Terms, ISBN 0-89236-217-0