Friday 24 August 2012

Practically famous...

Just found that I feature (albeit very briefly) on the British Library blog on their website. Very exciting!

In June some representatives from the British Library came up to Durham to run a workshop with around 7 students and some other academics from the medieval manuscript field. I presented a paper on the Grimbald Gospels and the contemporary educational reforms which provide part of the backdrop to the manuscript's history.

This is the Grimbald Gospels:




And this is the short piece which I presented:


BL Session: The Grimbald Gospels

The Grimbald Gospels is an 11th century Gospel Book, written in the mid-century, by the talented scribe Eadui Basan. The production of the Gospels can be assigned to Christ Church, Canterbury on stylistic grounds and the appearance of Eadui’s hand.

The decoration consists of an unusual use of silver and gold suggesting an influence from Saint Bertin (the foundations of Canterbury and Saint Bertin were in close proximity to each other). Beginning each of the four Gospel texts is an evangelist portrait and a decorative initial page with matching borders. However, the decoration for Mark is missing. These figures and initials are boldly silhouetted on austerely blank vellum grounds which mark a departure from the otherwise often elaborate surrounding of evangelist portraits. The pages for Matthew and Luke contain narrower and more sombre Winchester borders with acanthus patterns. The pages preceding St John have frames recalling the Winchester type but their figural composition is most unusual and not of Winchester origin.

Despite being made in the eleventh century, we can relate this Gospel Book to kingship of the ninth and tenth centuries. The manuscript contains a letter from Fulco, the Archbishop of Reims, to King Alfred (871-899), King of the West Saxons, alluding to the desperation that Alfred had shown in begging the Archbishop to help revitalise English book production and learning. In response, the Archbishop had sent over his protégé, Grimbald, and clearly felt that he was doing the king a great favour. Asser’s Life of Alfred glosses over the Alfred’s desperate plea for help from Fulco, described by Fulco in his letter, and simply states that Alfred’s envoys identified and recruited Grimbald as part of the king’s push for greater standards of education in England. Nonetheless, it supports the letter in describing the recruitment of Grimbald.

The Grimbald Gospels is so-called because it contains the earliest copy of Fulco’s letter. This letter was a later insertion into the manuscript, added on a supplementary quire. This quire was written by a squire from the New Minster, Winchester, a foundation in which Grimbald was celebrated in this period. This explains why scholars have associated the Gospels with Winchester – the manuscript must have been there sometime after its production for this quire to be added.

The manuscript itself was the product of an ecclesiastical scriptorium but the added letter attests to the key role played by the royal court in the initial revitalisation of English book production at the end of the ninth century. Aside from Fulco’s letter, we have other evidence of King Alfred’s push for a revival of learning and education in England. Asser’s Life of the King describes some of his activities and also alludes to his piety and his enthusiasm for education that the king showed in his early life. One of the most useful primary sources for information on the King’s push for the raising of educational standards is in his preface to his translation of Gregory the Great’s Pastoral Care in which Alfred laments the decline of educational standards and monasticism in England, describes the destruction caused by the Viking in invasions, and puts forward his thoughts on how education could be improved. He also specifically mentions Grimbald, who he calls “his mass priest”, as one of the men who helped him to learn the Latin which enabled him to translate Gregory’s Pastoral Care.

Beginning with this push by King Alfred’s for raising educational standards, evident in the letter copied into the Grimbald Gospels, England would see a succession of English kings, notably Alfred’s grandson, King Athelstan, and his grandson, King Edgar, who would drive educational and monastic reform. Under King Athelstan we have numerous examples of him importing and dealing in books for both political and pious reasons. For example, his gift of Bede’s Life of St Cuthbert to the community of Chester-le-Street can be seen as projecting a new image of kingship; one that portrayed the king as learned and scholarly, but also pious and humble, in an attempt to consolidate his control over Northumbria, an area over which he had only recently gained control. Then under King Edgar we see the rise of the great Benedictine reformers of Dunstan, Aethelwold and Oswald and a continued close association with royalty, and educational and monastic reform.

Though this Gospel Book provides us with evidence of Grimbald, and supports other evidence for King Alfred’s reforms, we actually know very little about the king’s policies in this period. We know of Alfred’s educational program because the foundation at Winchester culted Grimbald and inserted a letter about him into the manuscript. On the whole, royal records do not survive from this period so it is difficult to ascertain how extensive Alfred’s educational programme really was.

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