Please note that these pages are from our old (pre-2010) website; the presentation of these pages may now appear outdated and may not always comply with current accessibility guidelines. |
To mark Easter, a beautifully illuminated Byzantine copy of the Greek Gospels features as our book choice this April. Probably produced in southern Italy or Sicily, this manuscript dates from the mid to late Twelfth Century. Each of the four Gospels is prefaced by a full page author portrait, lavishly coloured with rich inks and gold. It is a superb example of provincial Byzantine art. |
|
|
The vast majority of Byzantine illuminations are found in religious
texts. In particular, large numbers of Gospel books were made. According to
Lowden, these mostly conform to a standard pattern, containing decorated
Canon Tables, with images and decorative headpieces prefacing the start of
each of the four Gospels. Their craftsmanship is nonetheless
superlative. Our manuscript eloquently demonstrates the Byzantine love of
rich colours and glittering surfaces normally associated with the sister
arts of icon painting and mosaics. It should be noted that these artefacts were not purely
functional. Their mesmeric power was intended to induce intense
spiritual contemplation, offering a glimpse into heaven. The portrait of Matthew found before the first Gospel is unfortunately somewhat damaged. This an unwelcome result of the Byzantine practice of polishing the parchment to achieve a smooth and glossy finish; as there is little to adhere to, the pigments applied in the illustration often flake away over time. |
|
|
|
Matthew is depicted with a gold pen in his right hand and a gold covered book under his left arm. He is seated on a canopied seat in front of a lectern, the stem of which is ornamented with the Christian symbol of a fish. Golden nimbed, he is dressed in purple toga and sandals. The illustration prefacing Saint Mark's Gospel is better preserved. He, too, is poised to write, seated before a lectern. |
|
|
|
|
|
All of these surviving manuscripts contain different readings, ranging from spelling mistakes to major shifts in the text. According to Elliott and Moir, there are an estimated 300,000 variants in total. The manuscripts have been studied closely by textual scholars in an effort to group similar texts into families to trace back a genealogy of the texts. However, attempts to recreate the actual 'original' Gospels in this way have proven to be impossible. |
It has been established, however, that very few later manuscripts
exhibit significant variants. Instead, they nearly all support readings as
found in a small number of works surviving from the Second to Fourth
Centuries, when the New Testament text assumed the comparative stability of
a work of canonical status. To put this in perspective,
although 95% of the extant Greek manuscripts date from after the Eighth
Century (some seven centuries after the originals were composed), the text
of modern editions relies heavily on only four manuscripts: Codex Sinaiticus (discovered by
Constantin von Tischendorf,
whose personal library is also kept in Special Collections), Codex Alexandrinus, Codex
Vaticanus and Codex Bezae. These all date from around the Fourth and
Fifth Centuries. As a comparatively late copy of the standard Byzantine
version of the Greek Gospels, this makes our manuscript relatively
unimportant for the purposes of tracing the textual transmission the Bible.
As a unique artefact, however, it is still invaluable as a witness of Middle
Byzantine art and culture.
Besides the four Gospels, our manuscript contains other liturgical and theological texts. The first section is actually an addition that dates from the Fourteenth/Fifteenth Century. Written on coarser vellum than the rest of the manuscript, it begins with instructions for the order of the Marriage Service. This part is written in an Italian that is transcribed phonetically in Greek characters, complete with accents. This suggests that the manuscript remained in Italy for some time after its original composition in Sicily or the south of the country in the Twelfth Century. |
|
|
The Gospels are preceded by the Canon Tables of Eusebius. These tables show which passages in each Gospel are similar to passages in the other Gospels. The text of each Gospel is divided into numbered sections and the table cites the number for the parallel passages as found in the different texts of the Gospels. The accompanying epistle from Eusebius to Carpianus explains the system. |
|
The Gospels in this manuscript were copied in two sections by two scribes. The first scribe supplied Matthew, and the second from Mark to John. The script is a professionally written Greek Minuscule. Minuscule is a cursive form of script that could be written fairly rapidly and compactly. It was introduced at the end of the Eighth/beginning of the Ninth Century, and soon became popular among scribes throughout the Greek world. It quickly superseded Uncial, a more upright, laborious script. Minuscule is a conservative hand which changed very little in the centuries that it was used; this makes dating manuscripts using palaeographical evidence alone particularly problematical. This is especially the case with liturgical works which were traditionally less prone to change in execution, manuscripts from different centuries being copied out using the same regular pattern. Our manuscript has been variously dated as being produced from the Eleventh to the Thirteenth Centuries. The most recent work on it by John Lowndes suggests that it belongs to the Twelfth Century. |
|
|
|
William Hunter
bought this manuscript in 1776 for £9.10s at the sale of César de
Missy's library (lot 1638). Originally from Berlin, De Missy (1703-1775)
was a New Testament scholar and chaplain to George III; he spent his
life collecting materials for an edition of the New Testament. His close
study of this book is evident from the manuscript additions that he has
made to aid navigation around the dense text: his numbering of the
verses of the Gospels is evident throughout. Hunter bought eleven Greek manuscripts
at the De Missy sale - that is, two thirds of the manuscripts on offer.
The manuscript came to Glasgow University, along
with Hunter's other books and collections, in 1807.
This manuscript is on display in the Special Collections foyer (level 12), together with two Byzantine Evangelisteria, until June 2006. |
Other Greek manuscripts in Hunter's collection from the César de Missy sale: Religious manuscripts Classical literature The following were useful in compiling this article:Edited by David Buckton Byzantium: treasures of Byzantine art and culture from British collections London:1994 Level 11 Main Lib Fine Arts A6250 1994-B (NB entry on our manuscript pp. 178-179 by John Lowden; this article particularly draws on the introductory article 'Byzantine manuscript illumination' by John Lowden, pp. 19-20). Ian C. Cunningham Greek manuscripts in Scotland: summary catalogue Edinburgh: 1982 Level 11 Main Lib Bibliog D92 1982-C Keith Elliott and Ian Moir Manuscripts and the text of the New Testament: an introduction for English readers Edinburgh: 1995 Level 10 Main Lib Theology FT55 ELL2 Thomas F. Mathews The art of Byzantium : between antiquity and Renaissance London: 1998 Level 11 Main Lib Fine Arts A6250 MAT2 Sir Edward Maunde Thompson An introduction to Greek and Latin palaeography Oxford: 1912 Level 11 Main Lib Bibliog B144 1912-T Bruce M. Metzger Manuscripts of the Greek Bible: an introduction to Greek palaeography Oxford: 1981 Level 10 Main Lib Theology qFA120 MET
|
Return to main Special Collections
Exhibition Page Julie Gardham April 2006
|