British Medieval Manuscript with Hybrid Creature

£ 1,000.00

A finely decorated leaf from a Latin Bible of the Old and New Testament, carefully calligraphed and ornamented in Britain at the beginning of the 13th Century. The leaf is composed of two columns of 44 lines, ruled in dark ink. The text is a fine example of the popular Medieval and Renaissance gothic book-hand script, known as lettre bâtarde. The leaf is executed in red, white, green and blue tempera, gold and liquid gold. The recto features a pigmented intra-columns decoration, comprising scrolls and geometric motives, ending at the bottom of the page with the depiction of a hybrid man-bird creature.

Date: Circa early 13th century AD
Condition: Extremely fine.

SOLD

Product Code: MS-05
Category: Tags: , , ,

Hybrid creatures were extremely popular in Medieval Times, usually found on the margins of the written text.  In Medieval culture and iconography, hybrids held an aesthetic and a didactic purpose: the Medieval person would have believed that sin, monstrosity and damnation, represented by the monstrous hybrid creature, lurked to the margins of the manuscript, while salvation and grace would have been found inside the written text.

To learn more about Medieval manuscripts, please visit our relevant blog post: A Brief History of Manuscripts.

Dimensions L 19.3 x W 14 cm
Region

Western Europe

Material

Vellum

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