Bible
manuscripts: 1400 years of scribes and scripture
Scott McKendrick and Kathleen Doyle
British Library, 2007, Hardback, 160p., chiefly ill. (col.), £20.00,
ISBN 9780712349222
The only thing to say about this one is, “Wow!” A scholarly
coffee table book with a vengeance. A compilation of startling beauty
put together by two genuine experts with a highly informative, if brief,
commentary. If, like me, you are an enthusiast for calligraphy and illumination;
or, also like me, an enthusiast for the history of the Bible, then this
is the book for you.
The main part of the book is 140 pages of full colour reproductions
of excerpts from Bible manuscripts in The British Library collection,
ranging from around
150 A.D. (the Egerton Gospel, one of the two earliest surviving Christian
books) to 1540 (The Psalter of Henry VIII, by which time a hand-written
illuminated
book was simply a status symbol). In between are all sorts of things - the
famous, a page of Codex Siniaticus, - the exotic, a Medieval Bible picture
book that you wouldn’t give to the kids to look at, - the interesting,
the gospel believed to have been used by the Saxon kings for their coronation
oath. It is also awash with quirky facts that give an insight into the thinking
of medieval Christians. My favourite page shows a picture of the Garden of
Eden where Satan displays the most amazing grin of devilish glee behind their
backs as Eve offers Adam the forbidden fruit – in this picture definitely
an apple!
It is not a Christian book. It is a book that Christians will be interested
in. It does not share our preconceptions, for instance Luke is described
as the ‘supposed author of Acts’ and the seraphim as ‘traditionally
surrounding the throne in perpetual adoration’. These are not descriptions
that would occur to us. Intended as a popular introduction to a rather esoteric
subject it is not altogether an easy read. The advantage of it is that you
can read it a bit at a time without losing anything. The brief comments with
each picture build up into a very clear picture of the history of the transmission
of the Bible and the related history of religious illumination. Once you
have read it you need to go back and start again to get the full benefit
of what
it has to tell you.
If you are likely to be offended by what our Puritan and Methodist revival
forebears would probably have termed idolatrous images, then don’t
bother with it! Otherwise I recommend it as an informative insight into
an aspect
of the story of the transmission of our Bible you are unlikely to find
anywhere else.
Contributed by: Richard M. Waller, BD, MCLIP, ALBC,
Vice-President of the Librarians' Christian Fellowship who works
for the public library
service in the
Metropolitan Borough of Wigan.