Description

Book Synopsis

A collection of seventeen essays on the manuscript art of early medieval Ireland and England.



Trade Review

‘Most users of these books will have read several of these essays before, but having them in one place is more than a convenience: it allows us to note continuities both within Jennifer O’Reilly’s work (thus making for a more fruitful engagement with her researches) and also to recognize continuities in the artefacts themselves. Moreover, we have not simply been given reproductions of the earlier papers ... but the works have been reset and all the appropriate illustrations have been reproduced in colour — more than 150 in total — close to where they are discussed allowing us to see exactly what is meant in the various iconographical analyses. These sharp, clear colour images, along with two indices, make these books works of scholarship in their own right. We are indebted to the editors for their work for us, as well as for having given us such an appropriate monument to a great scholar’ - Thomas O’Loughlin, Irish Theological Quarterly 2020, Vol 85 (3).

‘Everyone looked at the Book of Kells differently when they heard Jennifer O’Reilly talk about it. Her scholarship changed the landscape of the subject’ - Bernard Meehan, Peritia, 31 (2022).



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Preface

Introduction

The Codex Amiatinus

1. The library of Scripture: views from Vivarium and Wearmouth-Jarrow

(New offerings, ancient treasures. Studies in medieval art for George Henderson, ed. P. Binski and W. Noel (Alan Sutton, Stroud 2001) 3–39)

2. Celtic art and the Gospel

(Search 24 (2001) 34–42)

3. The art of authority

(After Rome, ed. T. Charles-Edwards (Oxford University Press, 2003) 141–189)

4. "All that Peter stands for": the romanitas of the Codex Amiatinus reconsidered

(Anglo-Saxon/Irish relations before the Vikings, ed. J. Graham-Campbell and M. Ryan, Proceedings of the British Academy, vol. 157 (Oxford, 2009) 367–95. © British Academy 2009)

5. The Book of Kells, folio 114: a mystery revealed yet concealed

(The age of migrating ideas: early medieval art in Britain and Ireland, ed. J. Higgitt and R.M. Spearman (Alan Sutton and National Museums of Scotland, Stroud 1993) 106–114)

The Book of Kells

6. The Book of Kells and two Breton gospel books

(Irlande et Bretagne. Actes du colloque de Rennes 1993, ed. C. Laurent and H. Davis (Terre de Brume Editions, Rennes 1994)

7. Exegesis and the Book of Kells: the Lucan genealogy

(The Book of Kells, ed. F. O’Mahony (Scolar Press; Aldershot 1994) 344–97. Reprinted in Scriptural interpretation in the Fathers, ed. T. Finn and V. Twomey (Four Courts Press, Dublin 1995) 315–55)

8. Entry on the Book of Kells, folios 29 and 34

(Histoire de l’écriture, ed. A.M. Christin (Flammarion, Paris 1997; English version 2002. © Flammarion, S.A., Paris, 2001, 2002 and 2012)

9. Two pages from the Book of Kells

(Visual practices across the University, ed. J. Elkins, (Munich 2007) 164–69)

10. The Book of Kells, folio 114

(Treasures of Irish Christianity: people and places, images and texts, ed. S. Ryan and B. Leahy (Dublin: Veritas, 2012) 49–52)

11. The body of Christ in the Book of Kells

(Proceedings of the International Symposium of Theology: The Ecclesiology of Communion (Dublin: Veritas, 2013), 52–62)

The Anglo-Saxon and Later English Traditions

12. An Anglo-Saxon portable altar: inscription and iconography

((with Elisabeth Okasha), Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 47 (1984) 32–51)

13. St John as a figure of the contemplative life: text and image in the art of the Anglo-Saxon Benedictine reform

(St Dunstan: his life, times and cult, ed. N.L. Ramsay, M.J. Sparks and T. Tatton-Brown (Boydell and Brewer, Woodbridge 1992) 165–85)

14. The rough-hewn cross in Anglo-Saxon art

(Ireland and insular art A.D. 500–1200, Conference Proceedings, ed. M. Ryan (Royal Irish Academy, Dublin 1987; reprinted 2002) 153–58)

15. Text and Image in the Anglo-Saxon Benedictine Reform

(Benedetto l’Eredità Artistica, ed. R. Casanelli and E. López-Tello García (Jaca Books, Milan 2007) 95–110)

16. Signs of the Cross

(The History of British Art 600–1600, ed. T. Ayers, (Tate Britain and the Yale Center for British Art 2008) 176–99. © Tate 2008, reproduced by permission of the Tate Trustees)

17. The medieval iconography of the two trees in Eden

(A walk in the garden: biblical, iconographical and literary images of Eden, ed. P. Morris and D. Sawyer, Journal for the Study of the Old Testament, supplement series 136, (Sheffield Academic Press 1992) 167–204, used by permission of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.)

Index

Early Medieval Text and Image Volume 2

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 10 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Jennifer O'Reilly, Carol A Farr, Elizabeth Mullins

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      View other formats and editions of Early Medieval Text and Image Volume 2 by Jennifer O'Reilly

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 6/30/2021 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781032091808, 978-1032091808
      ISBN10: 1032091800

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A collection of seventeen essays on the manuscript art of early medieval Ireland and England.



      Trade Review

      ‘Most users of these books will have read several of these essays before, but having them in one place is more than a convenience: it allows us to note continuities both within Jennifer O’Reilly’s work (thus making for a more fruitful engagement with her researches) and also to recognize continuities in the artefacts themselves. Moreover, we have not simply been given reproductions of the earlier papers ... but the works have been reset and all the appropriate illustrations have been reproduced in colour — more than 150 in total — close to where they are discussed allowing us to see exactly what is meant in the various iconographical analyses. These sharp, clear colour images, along with two indices, make these books works of scholarship in their own right. We are indebted to the editors for their work for us, as well as for having given us such an appropriate monument to a great scholar’ - Thomas O’Loughlin, Irish Theological Quarterly 2020, Vol 85 (3).

      ‘Everyone looked at the Book of Kells differently when they heard Jennifer O’Reilly talk about it. Her scholarship changed the landscape of the subject’ - Bernard Meehan, Peritia, 31 (2022).



      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations

      Preface

      Introduction

      The Codex Amiatinus

      1. The library of Scripture: views from Vivarium and Wearmouth-Jarrow

      (New offerings, ancient treasures. Studies in medieval art for George Henderson, ed. P. Binski and W. Noel (Alan Sutton, Stroud 2001) 3–39)

      2. Celtic art and the Gospel

      (Search 24 (2001) 34–42)

      3. The art of authority

      (After Rome, ed. T. Charles-Edwards (Oxford University Press, 2003) 141–189)

      4. "All that Peter stands for": the romanitas of the Codex Amiatinus reconsidered

      (Anglo-Saxon/Irish relations before the Vikings, ed. J. Graham-Campbell and M. Ryan, Proceedings of the British Academy, vol. 157 (Oxford, 2009) 367–95. © British Academy 2009)

      5. The Book of Kells, folio 114: a mystery revealed yet concealed

      (The age of migrating ideas: early medieval art in Britain and Ireland, ed. J. Higgitt and R.M. Spearman (Alan Sutton and National Museums of Scotland, Stroud 1993) 106–114)

      The Book of Kells

      6. The Book of Kells and two Breton gospel books

      (Irlande et Bretagne. Actes du colloque de Rennes 1993, ed. C. Laurent and H. Davis (Terre de Brume Editions, Rennes 1994)

      7. Exegesis and the Book of Kells: the Lucan genealogy

      (The Book of Kells, ed. F. O’Mahony (Scolar Press; Aldershot 1994) 344–97. Reprinted in Scriptural interpretation in the Fathers, ed. T. Finn and V. Twomey (Four Courts Press, Dublin 1995) 315–55)

      8. Entry on the Book of Kells, folios 29 and 34

      (Histoire de l’écriture, ed. A.M. Christin (Flammarion, Paris 1997; English version 2002. © Flammarion, S.A., Paris, 2001, 2002 and 2012)

      9. Two pages from the Book of Kells

      (Visual practices across the University, ed. J. Elkins, (Munich 2007) 164–69)

      10. The Book of Kells, folio 114

      (Treasures of Irish Christianity: people and places, images and texts, ed. S. Ryan and B. Leahy (Dublin: Veritas, 2012) 49–52)

      11. The body of Christ in the Book of Kells

      (Proceedings of the International Symposium of Theology: The Ecclesiology of Communion (Dublin: Veritas, 2013), 52–62)

      The Anglo-Saxon and Later English Traditions

      12. An Anglo-Saxon portable altar: inscription and iconography

      ((with Elisabeth Okasha), Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 47 (1984) 32–51)

      13. St John as a figure of the contemplative life: text and image in the art of the Anglo-Saxon Benedictine reform

      (St Dunstan: his life, times and cult, ed. N.L. Ramsay, M.J. Sparks and T. Tatton-Brown (Boydell and Brewer, Woodbridge 1992) 165–85)

      14. The rough-hewn cross in Anglo-Saxon art

      (Ireland and insular art A.D. 500–1200, Conference Proceedings, ed. M. Ryan (Royal Irish Academy, Dublin 1987; reprinted 2002) 153–58)

      15. Text and Image in the Anglo-Saxon Benedictine Reform

      (Benedetto l’Eredità Artistica, ed. R. Casanelli and E. López-Tello García (Jaca Books, Milan 2007) 95–110)

      16. Signs of the Cross

      (The History of British Art 600–1600, ed. T. Ayers, (Tate Britain and the Yale Center for British Art 2008) 176–99. © Tate 2008, reproduced by permission of the Tate Trustees)

      17. The medieval iconography of the two trees in Eden

      (A walk in the garden: biblical, iconographical and literary images of Eden, ed. P. Morris and D. Sawyer, Journal for the Study of the Old Testament, supplement series 136, (Sheffield Academic Press 1992) 167–204, used by permission of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.)

      Index

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