Old-Time Art Imagery - Graphic Illustrations and Images from Old-Time Illuminated Manuscripts and Books

Old-Time Art Imagery

Graphic Illustrations from Medieval Manuscripts and Old-Time Books

 
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Celtic / Insular Illuminated Manuscripts:

  • Book of Kells
  • Book of Armagh
  • Book of Cerne
  • Book of Deer
  • Book of Dimma
  • Book of Durrow
  • Book of Mulling
  • Cathach of St. Columba
  • Durham Gospels
  • Hereford Gospels
  • Lichfield Gospels
  • Lindisfarne Gospels
  • Carolingian Manuscripts:

  • Ebbo Gospels
  • Echternach Gospels
  • Sacramentary of Gellone
  • Romanesque / Protogothic manuscripts:

  • Martyrdoms of St. Peter & Paul (MS 28)
  • Passionale (MS Harley 624)
  • Gothic manuscripts:

  • Bestiary (MS Sloane 3544)
  • Miscellaneous manuscripts:

    Cathach of St. Columba

    Library or archive where the manuscript kept
    Dublin, Royal Irish Academy
    Catalogue Number (Shelfmark)
    MS 12
    Language
    Latin
    Script
    Insular minuscule
    Century
    VII
    Origin
    Ireland
    Official Foliation
    58
    Dimensions
    270x190

    The Cathach of St. Columba is an early seventh century Irish Psalter. It is traditionally associated with St. Columba (died 597), and was identified as the copy made by him of a book loaned to him by St. Finnian, and which led to the Battle of Cúl Dreimhne in 561. Paleographic evidence, however, dates, the manuscript to the seventh century. The 58 folios in the damaged and incomplete vellum manuscript (originally 110 leaves) contain the text of Psalms 30:10 to 105:13 in Latin (the Vulgate version). Rubrics written in Old Irish appear above the text of the Psalms. It may be the oldest known Irish manuscript and may contain the earliest examples of a written Goidelic language apart from Ogham inscriptions.

    The decoration of the Cathach is limited to the initial letter of each Psalm. Each initial is in black ink and is larger than the main text. They are decorated with trumpet, spiral and guilloch patterns and are often outlined with orange dots. These patterns are not merely appended to the letters or used to fill spaces. They instead distort the shape of the letters themselves. The letters following the enlarged initials gradually reduce in size until they reach the same size as the main text. Although the motifs of the Cathach decoration are not similar to decorations in later manuscripts, such as the Book of Durrow (which followed the Cathach by as many as seventy years), the ideas of decoration which distorts the shape of the letters and the diminution of initial letters are ideas which are worked out in great detail in later Insular art.

     

    Cathach of St. Columba Illustrations

    Illustration 1
    Cathach of St. Columba - initial letter G Page (Folio): 48

    initial letter G

     

     

     
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