Description

Book Synopsis
This is a fascinating study of the making of the Harley Psalter, an illustrated manuscript which was produced at Christ Church, Canterbury, over a period of about 100 years, from c. 1020 to c. 1130. The Harley Psalter was closely based on the Utrecht Psalter, the most celebrated of all Carolingian illuminated manuscripts. Through meticulous observation of the Harley Psalter, William Noel analyses how the artists and scribes worked with each other and with their manuscript exemplars in making their illustrated text. The author demonstrates that this work is best understood not as a copy of the Utrecht Psalter, but rather as one of a series of Anglo-Saxon manuscript experiments that incorporated its imagery. This is a crucial work for understanding the development of art, script and book making during what has been termed the 'golden age' of Anglo-Saxon art.

Table of Contents
List of illustrations; Acknowledgements; Note on the Psalm texts; Introduction; 1. Quires ruled by the artists; 2. Quires ruled by the scribes; 3. The origin and dates of the Harley Psalter; 4. Four perspectives on the making of the Harley Psalter; 5. Reading the Utrecht and Harley Psalters c. 1000– c. 1150; Conclusion; Appendix I: The Harley Psalter: a tabulated description; Appendix II: The Utrecht and Harley Psalters: parallel collations; Select bibliography; Indices.

The Harley Psalter 4 Cambridge Studies in Palaeography and Codicology Series Number 4

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    A Paperback by William Noel

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      View other formats and editions of The Harley Psalter 4 Cambridge Studies in Palaeography and Codicology Series Number 4 by William Noel

      Publisher: Cambridge University Press
      Publication Date: 1/11/2009 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780521096768, 978-0521096768
      ISBN10: 0521096766

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This is a fascinating study of the making of the Harley Psalter, an illustrated manuscript which was produced at Christ Church, Canterbury, over a period of about 100 years, from c. 1020 to c. 1130. The Harley Psalter was closely based on the Utrecht Psalter, the most celebrated of all Carolingian illuminated manuscripts. Through meticulous observation of the Harley Psalter, William Noel analyses how the artists and scribes worked with each other and with their manuscript exemplars in making their illustrated text. The author demonstrates that this work is best understood not as a copy of the Utrecht Psalter, but rather as one of a series of Anglo-Saxon manuscript experiments that incorporated its imagery. This is a crucial work for understanding the development of art, script and book making during what has been termed the 'golden age' of Anglo-Saxon art.

      Table of Contents
      List of illustrations; Acknowledgements; Note on the Psalm texts; Introduction; 1. Quires ruled by the artists; 2. Quires ruled by the scribes; 3. The origin and dates of the Harley Psalter; 4. Four perspectives on the making of the Harley Psalter; 5. Reading the Utrecht and Harley Psalters c. 1000– c. 1150; Conclusion; Appendix I: The Harley Psalter: a tabulated description; Appendix II: The Utrecht and Harley Psalters: parallel collations; Select bibliography; Indices.

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