- William Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, 7th Earl Fitzwilliam1
- William Wix1
- William Wynham1
- Winslow Lewis1
- Wolfgang G. Scholz1
- Wolfman, Wm1
- Woodward-Ruth Collection1
- Written in Flanders in the second quarter of the fifteenth century. A clipping accompanying the book from the GTS(?) Bulletin June 1968 says that Dr. John Plummer of the Pierpont Morgan Library identified the book1
- Written in France in the fourth quarter of the fifteenth century. The ownership portrait on f. 29 and the feminine forms in several prayers indicate that the book was made for a woman.1
- Written in Spain in the sixteenth century. A typed description of unknown origin attached to front pastedown suggests that the manuscript was written by an Italian scribe about 1500.1
- Zane, Hieronymus1
- Zanichelli, Mauro1
- Zucchi, Antonio, active 19th century1
- as being from the School of the Master of the Golden Scrolls, active in Belgium, probably Bruges in the decade 1420-30, and suggests the addition of Saint Rupert in the calendar connects the book to Salzburg. Purchased by General Theological Seminary in 1968. Inhouse call number: LIT 1200 1420-1430.1
- church of St. Catherine1
- convent of San Pedro Regalado1
- d'Hézy, Bernard1
- de Farges d'Espeisse1
- galerie Sothmann antiquariaat1
- he married Clarice Sherman Noble in 1892; they had five children; by 1902, he was second vice-president of the Eastern District Savings Bank. De Ricci states that the collection (of 101 fragments with 70 others laid into the album) was given to NYU in 1884 (the same year in which Homer L. Bartlett graduated).1