The Giant Bibles of Twelfth-Century England
A series of three lectures in the British Library by Christopher de Hamel
The
great Latin Bibles, in huge multiple volumes, are by far the largest
and most spectacular manuscripts commissioned in England in the 12th
century, decorated with magnificent illuminated pictures. The
lectures will consider the purpose of such books and why they were
suddenly so fashionable and also why they passed out of fashion in
England during the second half of the 12th century.
1: The Bury Bible
Mon 27 Oct 2014, 18.15-19.30
The
first lecture will consider the purpose of such books and why they were
suddenly so fashionable. It will look principally at the Bible of Bury
St Edmunds Abbey, now in the Parker Library at Corpus Christi College,
Cambridge. The manuscript was commissioned in the time of Anselm, abbot
of Bury 1121-48. A chronicle of the abbey records that the cost for it
was found by Hervey, brother of Talbot the prior, and that the
manuscript was incomparably decorated by the hand of Master Hugo. The
work is usually dated to around 1130. Hugo is the earliest professional
artist in England whose name is known.
This lecture will discuss
what we can tell about Hugo and his work, from close examination of the
manuscript itself. It will look at the larger questions of where
exemplars and materials were found for the Bible, and at the phenomenal
expense of such undertakings.
2: The Winchester Bible
Thu 30 Oct 2014, 18.15-19.30
The
Winchester Bible is still in the cathedral where it was commissioned,
doubtless by Henry of Blois, bishop of Winchester 1129-71. It too was
illuminated by professional painters, who apparently also worked on
frescoes in Spain. This year the manuscript is being rebound in
preparation for exhibition in New York and eventual installation in a
new display gallery in Winchester Cathedral.
The lecture will
take advantage of its disbinding to make new observations about its
production, and to suggest new dates for the different phases of the
work, undertaken in parallel with a second (but lesser) giant Bible from
Winchester, now in the Bodleian Library, MS Auct. E. Infra 1 and 2.
These two Bibles were constantly changed and upgraded during production,
which came to an abrupt end on the death of Henry of Blois on 8 August
1171. They were then taken up again a decade later, the Bodleian Bible
was finally completed, and the two sets were corrected against each
other. The Winchester volumes, however, were eventually abandoned a
second time and were wrapped up still unfinished.
3: The Lambeth Bible
Mon 3 Nov 2014, 18.15-19.30
One volume of the vast
Lambeth Bible has been in the library of Lambeth Palace since its
foundation in 1610. The long-lost second volume is owned by All Saints’
Church in Maidstone and is on permanent deposit at the Maidstone Museum.
Despite its fame and quality of illumination, nothing has been hitherto
known about the Bible’s original owner or patron.
This lecture
will propose that it was commissioned around 1148 for Faversham Abbey by
King Stephen, king of England 1135-54, elder brother of Henry of Blois
and protagonist with the Empress Matilda in the civil war of the 12th
century. This involves analysis of the unusual iconography of the
miniatures, rich in dynastic imagery, and an investigation of the
earlier career of the principal artist in the production of manuscripts
in a professional scriptorium at Avesnes Abbey in Flanders.
Road trip to London. Who wants to go?
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