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Northumbria and the Book of Kells
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 September 2008
Extract
It is a century and a half since the Book of Kells began to be revered as the supreme work of Irish calligraphy and art in the Early Christian period, and a quarter of a century since Monsieur François Masai challenged that traditional opinion, arguing that the Book was in fact made in Northumbria, apparently at Lindisfarne, or at least in some centre influenced both by Lindisfarne and Wearmouth–Jarrow – a definition which, he thought, could well apply to Iona. Masai's Essai sur les Origines de la Miniature dite irlandaise, completed in Brussels in 1944, makes no pretence to be based on research at first hand; it was written as a critique of traditional beliefs about the origins of Hiberno-Saxon illumination, with particular reference to works by Mlle Françoise Henry and Mrs Geneviève Marsh-Micheli. As such, it strikes me as a brilliant success, although some of its conclusions are false and some are not as well founded as they could have been, if Masai had revised his war-time text on the basis of a post-war examination of the manuscripts themselves. It was as a follower of Masai – his was the first book I read on Hiberno-Saxon art – that I persuaded Dr E. A. Lowe to consider, shortly before his death in August 1969, the attribution of the Book of Kells which will appear in the second edition of Codices Latini Antiquiores, part 11; and since Dr Lowe cited me as ‘an expert in this field’, I am under an obligation to publish the arguments that I advanced in 1968 and 1969, partly in letters and partly through reports which he received from his successive assistants Dr Braxton Ross and Dr Virginia Brown. The core of what I have to say is a reconsideration of a group of manuscripts, described in CLA, in the history of which Wearmouth–Jarrow had an important part to play. Lowe's devotion to the Venerable Bede and to the manuscripts produced at Wearmouth–Jarrow is well known, and I should like my lecture to count as a tribute not only to Bede's memory but to the memory of the palaeographer whose work has thrown such a bright light on the intellectual history of Bede's monastery.
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References
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Page 220 note 1 This paper is a revised version of the Jarrow Lecture delivered in St Paul's Church at Jarrow on Ascension Day 1971. Parts of the Book of Kells, the Durham Gospels and the Lindisfarne Gospels are reproduced by kind permission of, respectively, the Board of Trinity College, Dublin, the Dean and Chapter of Durham Cathedral and the Trustees of the British Museum. Of the many friends who have helped me in various ways, some by reading part of the text, I am most in debt to Gerald Bonner, Virginia Brown, Rosemary Cramp, Ian Doyle, Isabel Henderson, Kathleen Hughes, Braxton Ross, Robert Stevenson, Christopher Verey (especially for the Appendix) and David Wilson. My wife has been generous with indispensable advice and encouragement over many years. The following important paper reached me just too late for mention at the appropriate points: R. B. K. Stevenson, ‘Sculpture in Scotland in the Sixth–Ninth Centuries A.D.’, Kolloquium über spätantike und frübmittelalterlicbe Skulptur 11 (Mainz, 1971), 65–74. See also the additional notes, below, pp. 245–6.
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Page 226 note 1 See above, p. 223.
Page 226 note 2 CLA 111, no. 299 and ix, no. 1423a and b.
Page 226 note 3 CLA v, nos. 605 and 606a and 11, no. 139.
Page 226 note 4 CLA 11, no. 125.
Page 226 note 5 CLA 11, no. 276.
Page 226 note 6 CLA 11, no. 133.
Page 226 note 7 ‘The pure milk of Irish calligraphy’ was to be found in CLA 11, no. 266; 111, no. 311, vii, no. 998 and 11, nos. 275 and 276; and 11, nos. 286 and 270.
Page 227 note 1 For Italian and insular gospel books, McGurk, Patrick, Latin Gospel Books from A.D. 400 to A.D. 800, Publications de Scriptorium 5 (Brussels and Antwerp, 1961), 7–15.Google Scholar
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Page 228 note 7 Cod. Lind., pp. 96–7, 103–4 and 283.
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Page 229 note 2 Cod. Lind., pp. 105, n. 3 and 283. The Orosius is CLA 111, no. 328.
Page 229 note 3 Cf. Bruce-Mitford, Cod. Lind., pp. 255–7.
Page 229 note 4 See above, p. 224; McGurk, Latin Gospel Books, nos. 86 and 87.
Page 229 note 5 Cod. Lind., pp. 95–6.
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Page 229 note 8 CLA 11, 2nd ed., no. 217.
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Page 230 note 2 Cod. Lind., pp. 250 and 255.
Page 230 note 3 CLA 11, no. 152; Mynors, Durham Cathedral Manuscripts, pp. 21–2 and pls. 8–10.
Page 230 note 4 Cod. Lind., pp. 273–4; see above, p. 224, n. 5.
Page 231 note 1 Cod. Lind., pp. 73–4 and 96.
Page 231 note 2 Latin Gospel Books, pp. 10 and 14–15.
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Page 232 note 1 Bieler, Codex Durmacbensis, p. 89; Brown, Cod. Lind., pp. 72–3 and 97–101. In K, note supra- and subscript letters, the several forms of a, current m and n written vertically and the ligature of the former with suprascript u, ligatures, expanded letters, uncial m and the monograms of u with uncial r and half-uncial n and s.
Page 232 note 2 CLA 11, nos. 159, 256 and 231.
Page 232 note 3 K, 12v and 2 or; for D, Cod. Lind., pp. 100–1 and pls. 4 and 11.
Page 232 note 4 For E, Cod. Lind., pp. 96–7 and pls. 5 and 12–13; L, I33r and v.
Page 232 note 5 CLA 11, no. 147.
Page 232 note 6 Cod. Lind., pls. 10 and 12.
Page 232 note 7 E.g. K, 8r–18r passim and 188v. For E and D, Cod. Lind., pp. 99–100 and pls. 6–7 and 9–14.
Page 232 note 8 CLA 11, nos. 125, 148b, 149, 187 and 274. Durham A.II.16, fols. 24–33 and 87–101 is CLA 11, no. 148b.
Page 232 note 9 Cod. Lind., pp. 99, 218, 260 and 287 and fig. 50.
Page 232 note 10 Ibid. pp. 260 and 287; ‘The Art of the Codex Amiatinus: Jarrow Lecture 1967’, JBAA 32 (1969), 21 and fig. 3 (including examples from K).Google Scholar
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Page 232 note 13 Cod. Lind., pp. 77–8.
Page 232 note 14 Ibid. pls. 42–3.
Page 233 note 1 D, 4V, 382V, 66r, 69r, 70*v, 72r, 72v, 73v, and 102v; cf. the initials for prefaces, 39r and 40r.
Page 233 note 2 ‘Two Notes’, pp. 106–7.
Page 233 note 3 E.g. K, 253v–84v (Luke xvi. 13–xxiii. 56).
Page 233 note 4 D, 4V, 382v, 66r, 69r, 70*v, 72v, 73v and 102v. For smaller initials with diminuendo, e.g. D, I7r, 34v, 35v, 52r and 69r. Cf. Nordenfalk, ‘Before the Book of Durrow’, pp. 156–7.
Page 233 note 5 Multiple tassels occur in the Cathach, 11r and 43r (Ibid. figs. 8c and 15b); in D, 7r and 28r; and in K, e.g. 93v. Single, enlarged tassels occur in D, 21r and 36r; and in K, e.g. 94r. The single tassels in K have been simplified into triangles.
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Page 234 note 4 CLA xi, nos. 1642 and 1605 and 1, no. 63.
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Page 235 note 3 CLA x, nos. 1558 and 1559; Bruce-Mitford, Cod. Lind., pp. 193–4.
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Page 236 note 1 English Uncial, pp. 10–13.
Page 236 note 2 CLA x, viii–xviii.
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Page 236 note 8 See below, p. 246, n.3.
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Page 237 note 6 Early Christianity in Pictland (Jarrow, n.d.), esp. pp. 12–16.
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Page 238 note 6 Sculptured Stones of Scotland, 2 vols., Spalding Club (Aberdeen, 1856–67), esp. II, 14–15.
Page 238 note 7 See above, p. 237, n. 3.
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Page 238 note 13 ‘Pictish Art’, pp. 106–10; The Picts, pp. 115–27.
Page 239 note 1 Ibid. pp. 51–9 and 81–2.
Page 239 note 2 Reflections, pp. 5–12.
Page 239 note 3 Notably the Hilton of Cadboll cross slab (Allen, ECMS, pp. 61–3) and a fragment from Tarbat, apparently by the same hand, now in Edinburgh (Ibid. pp. 73–5).
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Page 239 note 5 Allen, ECMS, pp. 351–3.
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Page 239 note 7 K, 124v and 174v (eagle), 71r and 188v (fish), 76v (wolf) and 89r (horse-and-rider). Cf. Henderson, The Picts, pp. 117–27.
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Page 239 note 9 The Picts, pp. 137–40.
Page 239 note 10 Letter of 14 October 1971; and see above, n. 6. Mrs Henderson also quotes Allen, Romilly, Proc. of the Soc. of Ant. of Scotland 25 (1890–1891), 426Google Scholar: ‘in the arrangement of the design [Nigg] approaches more nearly to the ornamental pages of the Irish books of the Gospels than any other [sculpture]’.
Page 239 note 11 ‘Chronology and Relationships’, pp. 86–91, suggesting that the ring in the crosses of lona and of Ireland derives from Pictish cross slabs.
Page 240 note 1 The Picts, pp. 62–6 and 91–103.
Page 240 note 2 Allen, ECMS, pp. 351–63, 373–4 and 511–13 (St Andrews); 296–305 and 329–40 (Meigle); 209–15 (Aberlemno); 234–42, 267–80 and 281 (St Vigeans); and 61–83 (Easter Ross).
Page 240 note 3 See below, p. 246, n. 4.
Page 240 note 4 Cod. Lind., pp. 18–19.
Page 240 note 5 See above, p. 238, n. 12. Henderson, The Picts, pp. 124–6 and pls. 37–8, derives the eagle of St John in CCCC 197, p. 245, from Pictish carvings such as the symbol stone from Knowe of Burrian, Birsay, Orkney; but I believe that the books inspired the greater naturalism of the carvings, which would otherwise have had to develop ex nibilo.
Page 240 note 6 Ordnance Survey Map of Britain in the Dark Ages, ed. Phillips, C. W., 2nd ed. (Southampton, 1966)Google Scholar, shows that the Northumbrian, and especially the Pictish sites are basically coastal, with landward extensions up river valleys.
Page 240 note 7 Hughes, Early Christianity in Pictland, p. 8.
Page 240 note 8 Bruyne, Donatien de, Les Préfaces de la Bible latins (Namur, 1920), p. 39.Google Scholar
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Page 241 note 3 Allen, ECMS, pp. 94–5; cf. the stone from Lethnott, Forfarshire, Ibid. pp. 262–3.
Page 241 note 4 See above, p. 232, n. 7.
Page 241 note 5 Stuart, John, The Book of Deer, Spalding Club (Edinburgh, 1869), pp. xxi–xxivGoogle Scholar, sets out the all-too-inconclusive evidence for the late survival of ancient manuscripts in the Pictish area. The Book of Deer itself (Cambridge, University Library, Ii.6.32) contains marginal arabesques (Ibid. pls. xxi–xxii); but the script looks Irish, and arabesques occur in Ireland as early as the Book of Armagh (c. 807).
Page 241 note 6 See above, p. 234, n. 2.
Page 241 note 7 CLA iv, xxiii.
Page 241 note 8 CLA ix, no. 1298; and see above, p. 233, n. 6.
Page 242 note 1 CLA viii, no. 1198.
Page 242 note 2 CLA 111, no. 328; Cod. Lind., pl. 20a.
Page 242 note 3 Early Christian Irish Art (Dublin, 1954), pp. 14–15.Google Scholar
Page 242 note 4 Vorkarolingische Miniaturen, pp. 22–3.
Page 242 note 5 See above, p. 237, n. 1.
Page 243 note 1 Henderson, The Picts, pp. 88–9.
Page 243 note 2 Ibid. p. 157.
Page 243 note 3 Cod. Lind., pp. 81–3.
Page 243 note 4 The unity of this group is discussed by Brown, Cod. Lind., p. 82, but he there connected them with the work of the rubricator.
Page 244 note 1 The word ‘serif’ is in inverted commas because the stroke in question is not properly a serif, as is explained in the text.
Page 244 note 2 Cod. Lind., pp. 89–100 and 246–50.
Page 244 note 3 On the Italo-Northumbrian text, see Novum Testamentum Latine – pars prior, Quattuor Evangelia, ed. J. Wordsworth and H. J. White (Oxford, 1889–1898), pp. 780–1.Google Scholar
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