![]() In the 10th century, about 250 years after the production of the book, Aldred, a priest of the monastery at Chester-le-Street, added an Old English translation between the lines of the Latin text. His bishop, Eadfrith, swiftly commissioned the most famous scholar of the age, Bede, to help shape the cult to a new purpose. Around 705 an anonymous monk of Lindisfarne wrote the Life of St Cuthbert. Lindisfarne has a reputation as the probable place of genesis according to the Lindisfarne Gospels. The book was made as part of the preparations to translate Cuthbert's relics to a shrine in 698. Cuthbert was an ascetic member of a monastic community in Lindisfarne, before his death in 687. The Lindisfarne gospel book is associated with the Cult of St. By the time of Aidan's death in 651, the Christian faith was becoming well-established in the area. King Oswald of Northumbria sent Aidan from Iona to preach to and baptise the pagan Anglo-Saxons, following the conversion to Christianity of the Northumbrian monarchy in 627. In around 635 AD, the Irish missionary Aidan founded the Lindisfarne monastery on "a small outcrop of the land" on Lindisfarne. Lindisfarne, also known as "Holy Island", is located off the coast of Northumberland in northern England (Chilvers 2004). Historical context Evangelist portrait of Mark Cotton's library came to the British Museum in the 18th century and went to the British Library in London when this was separated from the British Museum. The Gospels may have been taken from Durham Cathedral during the Dissolution of the Monasteries ordered by Henry VIII and were acquired in the early 17th century by Sir Robert Cotton from Robert Bowyer, Clerk of the Parliaments. This is the oldest extant translation of the Gospels into the English language. The text is written in insular script, and is the best documented and most complete insular manuscript of the period.Īn Old English translation of the Gospels was made in the 10th century: a word-for-word gloss of the Latin Vulgate text, inserted between the lines by Aldred, Provost of Chester-le-Street. During the Viking raids on Lindisfarne this jewelled cover was lost and a replacement was made in 1852. The Gospels are richly illustrated in the insular style and were originally encased in a fine leather treasure binding covered with jewels and metals made by Billfrith the Anchorite in the 8th century. It is also possible that he produced them prior to 698, in order to commemorate the elevation of Cuthbert's relics in that year, which is also thought to have been the occasion for which the St Cuthbert Gospel (also in the British Library) was produced. However, some parts of the manuscript were left unfinished so it is likely that Eadfrith was still working on it at his time of death. Current scholarship indicates a date around 715, and it is believed they were produced in honour of St. ![]() The Lindisfarne Gospels are presumed to be the work of a monk named Eadfrith, who became Bishop of Lindisfarne in 698 and died in 721. The manuscript is one of the finest works in the unique style of Hiberno-Saxon or Insular art, combining Mediterranean, Anglo-Saxon and Celtic elements. The Lindisfarne Gospels (London, British Library Cotton MS Nero D.IV) is an illuminated manuscript gospel book probably produced around the years 715–720 in the monastery at Lindisfarne, off the coast of Northumberland, which is now in the British Library in London. ![]() Folio 27r from the Lindisfarne Gospels contains the incipit from the Gospel of Matthew. ![]()
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