Introduction
The arrival of Christianity during the fifth century AD began a
process of change in Ireland. Christianity is a religion of the book and
the Irish who became monks learned how to read and write. New bibles
needed to be produced for the new monasteries and churches that were
springing up all over the island of Ireland. The Irish monastries became
famous for producing beautiful handwritten books called Manuscripts. In
many cases these books were illustrated with images and patterns, these
type of books are called Illuminated Manuscripts. Irish monk writingThe Cathach
The Cathach dates from the 6th century AD. It is a copy of the psalms
in Latin Vulgate ( a type of Latin) and is the oldest Irish manuscript.
The title Cathach comes from the word battle in the Irish language and
legend has it that the book was carried into battle. It was
traditionally attributed to the hand of St. Columba himself but this is
no longer believed to be so.
. It is a Psalter or book of Psalms and is written by one scribe in the
“Early Majascule” script. Decoration in the manuscript is limited to the
Initial Letter at the start of each psalm. The Initial letter is drawn
or scripted a very large size and the letters that follow gradually
become smaller until they reach normal size again. This technique of
calligraphy is called ” Diminuendo”. Some of the script is written in
red ink and red dots are used to decorate some of the Initial Letters. Initial
Letters from the Cathach . The “d” is decorated with a fish-tail and a
double spiral. The capital “I” is made into an elaborate scroll.Detail
of Script from the Cathach; Courtesy of the Royal Irish Academy. In
this detail you can see the use of red ink in the script and to decorate
the Initial Letter ” D”, ( Please click image to make larger) You can
also see the use of diminuendo ( the letters gradually getting smaller)
Courtesy of the Royal Irish AcademyInitial
letter ” g”. In this you can see the Initial letters shows a fish or
dolphin bearing a cross, a motif familiar in Coptic Egypt. This
indicates that these early scribes had contact with lands as far away as
Egypt. Image -courtesy if the Royal Irish Academy. You
can see the use of Diminuendo – the initial ” G” is very large. The
letters that come after it gradually decrease in size until the script
returns to normal size. Image -courtesy of the Royal Irish Academy.The Book of Durrow
The Book of Durrow dates from the 7th Century AD. It is the oldest
illustrated manuscript in Ireland. It is a gospel book containing the
four Gospels ( Matthew, Mark, Luke, John) together with the Canon Tables
and some prefatory pages. The manuscript is written in Latin Vulgate. Calligraphy; The calligraphy in the book of Durrow develops
the techniques of using large initial capital letters and the
“Diminuendo” which was began a century earlier in the Cathach
manuscript. In the page shown below- the beginning of the gospel of St
Mark, you will see there are different ways in which the scribe used
capital letters. Firstly the very large “N” which starts off the Gospel
of St Mark text dominates the page and is decorated using spirals and
interlace in colored inks of yellow, red and brown. Like in the Cathach,
dots are also used to decoate the letter,but now the whole letter is
outlined with dots. In the first three lines of text the scribe uses
large letters to mark the start of the text of the new gospel. On the
body of the text, large Initial Capital letters are used to mark the
start of the sentence. The Diminuendo is used in these parts to make the
large capitals integrate with the normal body size script. There is a
much greater use of the Diminuendo than in the Cathach. Book of Durrow. Initial of MarkDetail of Initial of Mark; Book of DurrowIllustration ;The Book of Durrow far exceeds the Cathach in
its use of full page illustrations. Each gospel begins with two full
page illustrations; a large evangelist symbol on one page and another
full page illustration of abstract decoration called a carpet page. One
of the carpet pages called “ The Biting Animals” shows the first example
of interlace animals in Irish manuscripts. This page demonstates an
influence from Saxon or Germanic Art from either Britain or the
continent. Whereas in the Cathach, traces of early Christian Coptic
influence could be found in the decoration of letters, a century later
when the Book of Durrow was being produced, the scribes were
demonstrably being influenced by their pagan neighbours.
The illustrations in the Book of Durrow show how the celtic use of
curvilinear la Tene forms could be merged with art from other cultures
to produce a new art style – Early Chrisitan Art (also called Insular
Art). The 7th Century Book of Durrow gives us our first glimpse of this
new style of fusion between pagan and christian art. Carpet Page; The Biting Animals Detail
of Biting Animals. Here you can see a row of dog-like or four legged
animals; each animal is biting the hind quarters of the animal in front.
The legs of each animal become a narrow band that interweaves itself
around the body of the animal. Detail
of Biting Animals. In this detail the long bodies of snake-like or leg
less creatures are intertwined with each other and are biting their own
tails.
It is believed that all the illustrations in the Book of Durrow were
made by one hand. The same style of illustration runs throughout the
book. Interlace decoration is confined to rectangular borders. There is a
use of space in the design of the illustrated pages. A great deal of
empty or blank vellum contrasts with the busy decorative borders. The
artist here makes a blank rectangle inside the decorative borders. In
this blank rectangle, the artist places a central design or symbol. This
page style is repeated throughout the book.
The artist also used the same style of colour throughout the book. In
the decorative borders; the colours used are red, yellow and green on a
black background. This makes these colours stand out brightly against
the darkness of the black.There is also a strong use of brown or black
to outline the four symbols of the evangelists, making them stand out in
sharp contrast against the pale colour of the vellum. The four Evangelist Pages in the Book of Durrow Lion- Symbol of St John, Book of Durrow Detail
of Lion from the Book of Durrow. It is believed by Art Historians that
the lion is influenced by art from the Picts in Scotland. In this detail
you can see the use of dots in the face of the Lion and in the
interlace pattern.Symbol
of a Man : St Matthew; Book of Durrow. This is the only human figure in
the entire book and is one of the earliest Irish Christian
representations of a person. The figure is wearing a cloak that covers
the entire body except for the head and the feet ( both of which point
the same way). The cloak is decorated as if it there was no body
underneath it. The decoration is considered similar to metalwork of this
time – Millefiori is a technique where different colours of glass are
layed side by side to form a pattern. In this case a millefiori of red
yellow and black are created on the cloak of St Matthew.