The Lindisfarne Gospels:
Society, Spirituality, and the Scribe. By Michelle P. Brown. The
British Library Studies in Medieval Culture. Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 2003. Pp. xvi + 479. $85.00 (cloth); $45 (paper).
The Lindisfarne Gospels have long attracted attention because of their
exuberant beauty, their enigmatic past, and their close connection to
St. Cuthbert. Michelle Brown offers a new "commentary volume" to accompany
the latest facsimile, and she hopes "to make as much information available
to as wide an audience as possible" (p. 5). Her chapters certainly provide
in-depth information into the time of its genesis (chapter 1), the history
of the manuscript (chapter 2), the text of the gospels (chapter 3), the
codicology of the manuscript (chapter 4), and its decoration (chapter
5). A brief conclusion (pp. 395–408) rounds off the discussion proper
and is followed by a bibliography and an appendix, which contains an analysis
of the pigments used in the gospels. The book ends with an index of manuscripts
cited and a general index, and it is accompanied by a compact disc
that contains "The Contents of the Lindisfarne Gospels" (i.e., a table
showing the textual arrangement of the Lindisfarne Gospels).
Gernot Wieland
The University of British Columbia |
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