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Codex Aureus of Echternach

The Codex Aureus of Echternach (Codex aureus Epternacensis) is an illuminated Gospel Book, created in the approximate period 1030–1050,[1] with a re-used front cover from around the 980s.[2] It is now in the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg.[3]

Folio 78 recto from the Codex Aureus of Echternach, Lazarus and Dives
Text page (Mt 4:22–5:16)

The manuscript contains the Vulgate versions of the four gospels plus prefatory matter including the Eusebian canon tables,[4] and is a major example of Ottonian illumination, though the manuscript, as opposed to the cover, probably falls just outside the end of rule by the Ottonian dynasty. It was produced at the Abbey of Echternach under the direction of Abbot Humbert.

The manuscript has 136 folios which measure 446 mm by 310 mm. It is one of the most lavishly illuminated Ottonian manuscripts. It contains over 60 decorative pages including 16 full page miniatures, 9 full page initials, 5 evangelist portraits, 10 decorated pages of canon tables, and 16 half-page initials. In addition there are 503 smaller initials, and pages painted to resemble textiles. The entire text is written in gold ink.[5]

Text and miniatures Edit

Each gospel is preceded by the following: two pages summarizing the gospel, two pages imitating textiles, four pages of narrative scenes laid out in three registers per page, a full-page evangelist portrait, two pages of decorative text, before a full-page initial, which begins the actual text. As one art historian put it, the planner of the book "was in no hurry to bring his reader to the text".[6] The narrative scenes cover the Life of Christ, including many of his miracles, and preceding Luke his parables, which by this date was becoming unusual.[7] There are one, two or sometimes three scenes in each register, giving a total of 48 framed images with 60 scenes, an unusually large number for a medieval cycle. Unlike the comparable scenes in the Augustine Gospels, the scenes are arranged to cover the life and ministry of Jesus without concern for whether a particular scene is covered in the gospel it precedes.[8]

 
Labourers in the vineyard

The pages before Matthew take the story from the Annunciation to the "Feast in the House of Levi", and those before Mark cover miracles from the Wedding at Cana to the Samaritan thanking Jesus after Cleansing ten lepers (Luke 17:11-19). The scenes before Luke show four of the parables of Jesus, each over a whole page: the Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard, Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen, the Parable of the great banquet and the Rich man and Lazarus. The pages preceding John cover the final period, from the Passion of Jesus to his Ascension and Pentecost.[9]

Most of the miniatures are attributed to two artists, known as the "workshop master" and another presumed to be a pupil. A third, cruder, painter contributed some of the narrative scenes, and perhaps other elements which are harder to attribute. For example, the last three pages of the final narrative scenes preceding John are attributed to the master (so from the Crowning with Thorns onwards), and the first page to the pupil. It is likely that the compositions and underdrawings were all by the master, so the changes of painter are not over-conspicuous.[10] The style has been criticized for excessive interest in decorative effect: it "produced some vigorous and cheerful patterns, as in the St Luke, but it could descend to fussiness, as in the Christ in Majesty, where the strength of the composition has been frittered away by the ornamental vagaries of the Echternach artist. This weakness was even more apparent in the evangelist 'portraits', where the ornamental bands of the Sainte-Chapelle Gospels are degraded into decorative garrulity, and there is so little weight and structure under the draperies that they might be covering mere inanimate cushions."[11]

A run of four pages preceding Matthew Edit

These come after the two textile pages and the four pages of narrative images.

Cover Edit

 
The front cover

The front cover of the manuscript is an Ottonian treasure binding which dates from about 50 years before the manuscript; the metalwork is attributed to the Trier workshop set up by Egbert, Archbishop of Trier. It centres on an ivory plaque showing the Crucifixion of Jesus, which is stylistically different from the other elements, and whose origin has been the subject of much discussion.[13] The plaque has traces of blue paint on the cross and green paint highlighting some parts of the composition.[14]

Surrounding the ivory plaque are panels, now rather battered, with figures in repoussé gold relief, and in a very different style than the plaque. These panels are set in a framework whose larger elements are made up of alternating units of gold filigree set with gems, and cloisonné enamel with stylized plant decorative motifs. Thinner gold bands set with small pearls run along the diagonal axes, further separating the relief images into compartments, and creating an "X" that may stand for "Christ"; an "X" in ash was traced on the floor of a new church in the ritual of its consecration.[14] The general arrangement of the cover may be compared to others of the period – for example, that of the Codex Aureus of St. Emmeram of about 870, which probably forms part of the same tradition descending from the school of Reims in Carolingian art, as shown by the style of the relief figures.[15]

As in other treasure bindings, the gems do not merely create an impression of richness. They offer a foretaste of the bejeweled nature of the Celestial city, and particular types of gem were believed to have actual powerful properties in various "scientific", medical, and magical respects, as set out in the popular lapidary books.[16] Many of the original gems and pearls are now lost, but there are replacements in paste or mother of pearl.[14]

The reliefs show the Four Evangelists with their symbols and background foliage in the compartments at top and bottom, and two figures each in four compartments on the sides. The lowest figures on each side are (left) the young Emperor Otto III with (right) his regent and mother Theophanu (d. 991). At the top of the sides stand the Virgin Mary (left) opposite Saint Peter; these two were the patron saints of Echternach Abbey. The remaining four figures are saints: Echternach's founder Willibrord; Saints Boniface and Ludger, also early missionaries in Germany; and Benedict, founder of the monastery's order.[17] The figures are produced in an elegant, elongated style which contrasts strongly with the forceful and slightly squat figures of the ivory.[18]

It is sometimes thought that the cover was made for the Trier manuscript in Paris known as the Sainte-Chapelle Gospels, illustrated by the Gregory Master, whose style influenced some of the later miniatures in the text now bound with the cover.[19] Despite all the figures shown on the cover having a connection with Echternach, some authors suggest that the original manuscript was not made for that monastery at all; and that Archbishop Egbert presented it to Otto III and Theophanu, perhaps as a peace offering after he initially supported Henry the Quarrelsome as successor to Otto II, rather than his young son Otto III, in 983–984. At a later point the imperial family would then have passed the manuscript on to Echternach.[20] A highly plausible suggestion however[21] has been made by Gunther Wolf, namely that the front cover was commissioned really for Echternach (to Archbishop Egbert, while meeting him at Christmas 988 in Cologne) by Empress Theophanu (and Otto III) out of religious gratitude for her recovering of the illness that struck her at the end of the summer of 988 at Lake Constance; her adoration for Saint Willibrord, as shown by former gifts to Echternach, in that case was an additional motive in the perspective of the 250th anniversary of his death (November 7, 739 AD).[22]

History Edit

 
Detail of the cover, with Theophanu in the lower right

It is thought that this is the manuscript shown to Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor when he visited Echternach with his mother Gisela of Swabia (d. 1043), which so impressed him that he commissioned similar works from the abbey, notably the Golden Gospels of Henry III, which he presented in 1046 to Speyer Cathedral, the burial-place of his dynasty.[23]

The manuscript was at the Abbey of Echternach in today's Luxembourg until the French Revolutionary Wars. During the War of the First Coalition, Luxembourg was conquered and annexed by Revolutionary France, becoming part of the département of the Forêts[24] in 1795. The monastery was seized and sold, and most of the monks fled, carrying the manuscript and other portable treasures with them. It was one of a group of three manuscripts and five incunabula sold to Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg in 1801.[25]

It remained in the collection of the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, which was turned over to a foundation after World War I, until after World War II. It was decided to sell it but the then duke was keen to keep it in Germany, and the German Federal government and the provinces or Länder contributed the funds jointly, with Bavaria in the lead, as its new home was to be the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg, where it remains.[26]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Metz, 55 and preceding pages, followed by Lasko, 98 prefer "between 1053 and 1056" (Lasko), but do not seem to have convinced later scholars.
  2. ^ Lasko, 98 "the cover must date between Otto III's royal coronation of 983 and Theophanu's death in 991", followed by the Germanisches Nationalmuseum, who add "perhaps 985–987".
  3. ^ Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Hs. 156142.
  4. ^ Apart from the short texts on the tablets carried by angels, there are three prefaces by Jerome, and the Letter of Eusebius, all often found prefacing medieval Gospel books. Metz, 64–65
  5. ^ Walther, 128; Metz has full details
  6. ^ Review by William C. Loerke of Metz (see references), College Art Journal, Vol. 18, No. 1 (Autumn, 1958), p. 86, JSTOR
  7. ^ Dodwell, 144; all are illustrated and described in Metz, see list of plates
  8. ^ Metz, 68
  9. ^ Metz, plates and the notes on them; all pages are illustrated.
  10. ^ Walther, 130
  11. ^ Dodwell, 144
  12. ^ Metz, 70
  13. ^ Metz, 60 sees it as contemporary with the rest of the cover, Lasko, 98 as from 1053–56 (like the text in his view); Beckwith, 133–136 attributes it and other pieces to a workshop active "possibly at Tier in the last twenty years of the tenth century".
  14. ^ a b c Metz, 60
  15. ^ Ferber, 14
  16. ^ Metz, 26-30
  17. ^ Lasko, 98; Beckwith, 133; Metz, 59, who astonishingly omits to mention the Evangelists
  18. ^ Ferber, 14; Beckwith, 133-136
  19. ^ BnF MS lat. 8851: Dodwell, 144; Beckwith, 133
  20. ^ Head, 76
  21. ^ Westermann-Angerhausen, 217-218
  22. ^ Wolf, 147-151
  23. ^ Beckwith, 122-123
  24. ^ Literally 'woods', in reference to the Ardennes.
  25. ^ Metz, 11
  26. ^ Metz, 11-12

References Edit

  • Beckwith, John, Early Christian and Byzantine Art, Penguin History of Art (now Yale), 2nd edn. 1979, ISBN 0140560335
  • Dodwell, C.R.; The Pictorial arts of the West, 800–1200, 1993, Yale UP, ISBN 0300064934
  • Ferber, Stanley, "Aspects of the Development of Ottonian Respousse Gold Work", Gesta, Vol. 1/2, (1964), pp. 14–19, JSTOR
  • Head, Thomas. "Art and Artifice in Ottonian Trier." Gesta, Vol. 36, No. 1. (1997), pp 65–82.
  • Lasko, Peter, Ars Sacra, 800-1200, Yale University Press, 1995 (2nd edn.) ISBN 978-0300060485(cover)
  • Metz, Peter (trans. Ilse Schrier and Peter Gorge), The Golden Gospels of Echternach, 1957, Frederick A. Praeger, LOC 57-5327
  • Walther, Ingo F. and Norbert Wolf. Codices Illustres: The world's most famous illuminated manuscripts, 400 to 1600. Köln, TASCHEN, 2005.
  • Westermann-Angerhausen, Hiltrud: Spuren der Theophanu in der Ottonischen Schatzkunst?, in: Euw, Anton von en Schreiner, Peter, Kaiserin Theophanu. Begegnung des Ostens und Westens um die Wende des ersten Jahrtausends. Gedenkschrift des Kölner Schnütgen-Museums zum 1000. Todesjahr der Kaiserin, 1990, Köln. Vol. 2, p. 175–191.
  • Wolf, Gunther: Zur Datierung des Buchedeckels des Codex Aureus Epternacensis, Hémecht (Revue d'histoire luxembourgeoise), 1990, 2, 42

Further reading Edit

  • Oettinger, Karl, "Der Elfenbeinschnitzer des Echternacher Codex Aureus und die Skulptur Unter Heinrich III. (1039-56)", Jahrbuch der Berliner Museen, Vol. 2., (1960), pp. 34–54, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, JSTOR

External links Edit

  • Digitised facsimile on the Germanisches Nationalmuseum website

codex, aureus, echternach, codex, aureus, epternacensis, illuminated, gospel, book, created, approximate, period, 1030, 1050, with, used, front, cover, from, around, 980s, germanisches, nationalmuseum, nuremberg, folio, recto, from, lazarus, divestext, page, m. The Codex Aureus of Echternach Codex aureus Epternacensis is an illuminated Gospel Book created in the approximate period 1030 1050 1 with a re used front cover from around the 980s 2 It is now in the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg 3 Folio 78 recto from the Codex Aureus of Echternach Lazarus and DivesText page Mt 4 22 5 16 The manuscript contains the Vulgate versions of the four gospels plus prefatory matter including the Eusebian canon tables 4 and is a major example of Ottonian illumination though the manuscript as opposed to the cover probably falls just outside the end of rule by the Ottonian dynasty It was produced at the Abbey of Echternach under the direction of Abbot Humbert The manuscript has 136 folios which measure 446 mm by 310 mm It is one of the most lavishly illuminated Ottonian manuscripts It contains over 60 decorative pages including 16 full page miniatures 9 full page initials 5 evangelist portraits 10 decorated pages of canon tables and 16 half page initials In addition there are 503 smaller initials and pages painted to resemble textiles The entire text is written in gold ink 5 Contents 1 Text and miniatures 1 1 A run of four pages preceding Matthew 2 Cover 3 History 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksText and miniatures EditEach gospel is preceded by the following two pages summarizing the gospel two pages imitating textiles four pages of narrative scenes laid out in three registers per page a full page evangelist portrait two pages of decorative text before a full page initial which begins the actual text As one art historian put it the planner of the book was in no hurry to bring his reader to the text 6 The narrative scenes cover the Life of Christ including many of his miracles and preceding Luke his parables which by this date was becoming unusual 7 There are one two or sometimes three scenes in each register giving a total of 48 framed images with 60 scenes an unusually large number for a medieval cycle Unlike the comparable scenes in the Augustine Gospels the scenes are arranged to cover the life and ministry of Jesus without concern for whether a particular scene is covered in the gospel it precedes 8 nbsp Labourers in the vineyardThe pages before Matthew take the story from the Annunciation to the Feast in the House of Levi and those before Mark cover miracles from the Wedding at Cana to the Samaritan thanking Jesus after Cleansing ten lepers Luke 17 11 19 The scenes before Luke show four of the parables of Jesus each over a whole page the Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen the Parable of the great banquet and the Rich man and Lazarus The pages preceding John cover the final period from the Passion of Jesus to his Ascension and Pentecost 9 Most of the miniatures are attributed to two artists known as the workshop master and another presumed to be a pupil A third cruder painter contributed some of the narrative scenes and perhaps other elements which are harder to attribute For example the last three pages of the final narrative scenes preceding John are attributed to the master so from the Crowning with Thorns onwards and the first page to the pupil It is likely that the compositions and underdrawings were all by the master so the changes of painter are not over conspicuous 10 The style has been criticized for excessive interest in decorative effect it produced some vigorous and cheerful patterns as in the St Luke but it could descend to fussiness as in the Christ in Majesty where the strength of the composition has been frittered away by the ornamental vagaries of the Echternach artist This weakness was even more apparent in the evangelist portraits where the ornamental bands of the Sainte Chapelle Gospels are degraded into decorative garrulity and there is so little weight and structure under the draperies that they might be covering mere inanimate cushions 11 A run of four pages preceding Matthew Edit These come after the two textile pages and the four pages of narrative images nbsp Evangelist portrait Matthew folio 20 verso nbsp Angel holding tablet folio 21 recto with text Ye men believe the word of the man Matthew so that He of Whom he speaks the Man Jesus may reward ye 12 nbsp Incipit page Here begins the Gospel of Matthew folio 21 verso nbsp Initial page Liber the first word of the Vulgate textCover Edit nbsp The front coverThe front cover of the manuscript is an Ottonian treasure binding which dates from about 50 years before the manuscript the metalwork is attributed to the Trier workshop set up by Egbert Archbishop of Trier It centres on an ivory plaque showing the Crucifixion of Jesus which is stylistically different from the other elements and whose origin has been the subject of much discussion 13 The plaque has traces of blue paint on the cross and green paint highlighting some parts of the composition 14 Surrounding the ivory plaque are panels now rather battered with figures in repousse gold relief and in a very different style than the plaque These panels are set in a framework whose larger elements are made up of alternating units of gold filigree set with gems and cloisonne enamel with stylized plant decorative motifs Thinner gold bands set with small pearls run along the diagonal axes further separating the relief images into compartments and creating an X that may stand for Christ an X in ash was traced on the floor of a new church in the ritual of its consecration 14 The general arrangement of the cover may be compared to others of the period for example that of the Codex Aureus of St Emmeram of about 870 which probably forms part of the same tradition descending from the school of Reims in Carolingian art as shown by the style of the relief figures 15 As in other treasure bindings the gems do not merely create an impression of richness They offer a foretaste of the bejeweled nature of the Celestial city and particular types of gem were believed to have actual powerful properties in various scientific medical and magical respects as set out in the popular lapidary books 16 Many of the original gems and pearls are now lost but there are replacements in paste or mother of pearl 14 The reliefs show the Four Evangelists with their symbols and background foliage in the compartments at top and bottom and two figures each in four compartments on the sides The lowest figures on each side are left the young Emperor Otto III with right his regent and mother Theophanu d 991 At the top of the sides stand the Virgin Mary left opposite Saint Peter these two were the patron saints of Echternach Abbey The remaining four figures are saints Echternach s founder Willibrord Saints Boniface and Ludger also early missionaries in Germany and Benedict founder of the monastery s order 17 The figures are produced in an elegant elongated style which contrasts strongly with the forceful and slightly squat figures of the ivory 18 It is sometimes thought that the cover was made for the Trier manuscript in Paris known as the Sainte Chapelle Gospels illustrated by the Gregory Master whose style influenced some of the later miniatures in the text now bound with the cover 19 Despite all the figures shown on the cover having a connection with Echternach some authors suggest that the original manuscript was not made for that monastery at all and that Archbishop Egbert presented it to Otto III and Theophanu perhaps as a peace offering after he initially supported Henry the Quarrelsome as successor to Otto II rather than his young son Otto III in 983 984 At a later point the imperial family would then have passed the manuscript on to Echternach 20 A highly plausible suggestion however 21 has been made by Gunther Wolf namely that the front cover was commissioned really for Echternach to Archbishop Egbert while meeting him at Christmas 988 in Cologne by Empress Theophanu and Otto III out of religious gratitude for her recovering of the illness that struck her at the end of the summer of 988 at Lake Constance her adoration for Saint Willibrord as shown by former gifts to Echternach in that case was an additional motive in the perspective of the 250th anniversary of his death November 7 739 AD 22 History Edit nbsp Detail of the cover with Theophanu in the lower rightIt is thought that this is the manuscript shown to Henry III Holy Roman Emperor when he visited Echternach with his mother Gisela of Swabia d 1043 which so impressed him that he commissioned similar works from the abbey notably the Golden Gospels of Henry III which he presented in 1046 to Speyer Cathedral the burial place of his dynasty 23 The manuscript was at the Abbey of Echternach in today s Luxembourg until the French Revolutionary Wars During the War of the First Coalition Luxembourg was conquered and annexed by Revolutionary France becoming part of the departement of the Forets 24 in 1795 The monastery was seized and sold and most of the monks fled carrying the manuscript and other portable treasures with them It was one of a group of three manuscripts and five incunabula sold to Ernest II Duke of Saxe Gotha Altenburg in 1801 25 It remained in the collection of the House of Saxe Coburg and Gotha which was turned over to a foundation after World War I until after World War II It was decided to sell it but the then duke was keen to keep it in Germany and the German Federal government and the provinces or Lander contributed the funds jointly with Bavaria in the lead as its new home was to be the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg where it remains 26 Notes Edit Metz 55 and preceding pages followed by Lasko 98 prefer between 1053 and 1056 Lasko but do not seem to have convinced later scholars Lasko 98 the cover must date between Otto III s royal coronation of 983 and Theophanu s death in 991 followed by the Germanisches Nationalmuseum who add perhaps 985 987 Germanisches Nationalmuseum Hs 156142 Apart from the short texts on the tablets carried by angels there are three prefaces by Jerome and the Letter of Eusebius all often found prefacing medieval Gospel books Metz 64 65 Walther 128 Metz has full details Review by William C Loerke of Metz see references College Art Journal Vol 18 No 1 Autumn 1958 p 86 JSTOR Dodwell 144 all are illustrated and described in Metz see list of plates Metz 68 Metz plates and the notes on them all pages are illustrated Walther 130 Dodwell 144 Metz 70 Metz 60 sees it as contemporary with the rest of the cover Lasko 98 as from 1053 56 like the text in his view Beckwith 133 136 attributes it and other pieces to a workshop active possibly at Tier in the last twenty years of the tenth century a b c Metz 60 Ferber 14 Metz 26 30 Lasko 98 Beckwith 133 Metz 59 who astonishingly omits to mention the Evangelists Ferber 14 Beckwith 133 136 BnF MS lat 8851 Dodwell 144 Beckwith 133 Head 76 Westermann Angerhausen 217 218 Wolf 147 151 Beckwith 122 123 Literally woods in reference to the Ardennes Metz 11 Metz 11 12References Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Codex Aureus of Echternach Beckwith John Early Christian and Byzantine Art Penguin History of Art now Yale 2nd edn 1979 ISBN 0140560335 Dodwell C R The Pictorial arts of the West 800 1200 1993 Yale UP ISBN 0300064934 Ferber Stanley Aspects of the Development of Ottonian Respousse Gold Work Gesta Vol 1 2 1964 pp 14 19 JSTOR Head Thomas Art and Artifice in Ottonian Trier Gesta Vol 36 No 1 1997 pp 65 82 Lasko Peter Ars Sacra 800 1200 Yale University Press 1995 2nd edn ISBN 978 0300060485 cover Metz Peter trans Ilse Schrier and Peter Gorge The Golden Gospels of Echternach 1957 Frederick A Praeger LOC 57 5327 Walther Ingo F and Norbert Wolf Codices Illustres The world s most famous illuminated manuscripts 400 to 1600 Koln TASCHEN 2005 Westermann Angerhausen Hiltrud Spuren der Theophanu in der Ottonischen Schatzkunst in Euw Anton von en Schreiner Peter Kaiserin Theophanu Begegnung des Ostens und Westens um die Wende des ersten Jahrtausends Gedenkschrift des Kolner Schnutgen Museums zum 1000 Todesjahr der Kaiserin 1990 Koln Vol 2 p 175 191 Wolf Gunther Zur Datierung des Buchedeckels des Codex Aureus Epternacensis Hemecht Revue d histoire luxembourgeoise 1990 2 42Further reading EditOettinger Karl Der Elfenbeinschnitzer des Echternacher Codex Aureus und die Skulptur Unter Heinrich III 1039 56 Jahrbuch der Berliner Museen Vol 2 1960 pp 34 54 Staatliche Museen zu Berlin Preussischer Kulturbesitz JSTORExternal links EditDigitised facsimile on the Germanisches Nationalmuseum website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Codex Aureus of Echternach amp oldid 1163547175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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