LONDON.- A rare and beautiful Psalter a volume of psalms produced in thirteenth-century London has been acquired by the
British Library. The Mostyn Psalter-Hours was acquired for the nation with a grant of £390,000 from the National Heritage Memorial Fund (NHMF) and funding from other generous supporters.
The book includes a calendar, decorated with twenty miniatures of the labours of the months and the signs of the Zodiac, and a Psalter with eight of the original ten large historiated initials, the Hours of the Virgin, and the Office of the Dead.
The manuscript can be identified securely as having been produced in London, and is one of relatively few surviving examples of luxury books known to have been made in the capital during the medieval period. Its calendar features a sequence of London saints including the seventh-century bishops of London, Melitus and Erkenwald and the feast of the translation of Edward the Confessor in Westminster in 1269.
The manuscripts original patron is unknown, but its high quality illumination where text sits alongside highly decorative letters and illustrations - indicates that it was made for an important individual possibly a bishop, as an image of a bishop appears in the illustration for Psalm 101, which is where a donor portrait might be expected.
The Mostyn Psalter-Hours is an outstanding example of English illumination of the highest quality and represents a crucial piece of evidence for the history of English painting, said Kathleen Doyle, Lead Curator, Illuminated Manuscripts at the British Library. Because the manuscript is localised to London, it is a critical focus around which to group other manuscripts of Psalter texts and others in a Westminster/London context, and to compare with books made in other centres. The addition of the Mostyn Psalter to the British Librarys collections will facilitate identification of London-based scribes and artists in other manuscripts. Similarly, the representation of the possible patron within the book will also help shed light on the process of creating such luxury books.
The purchase price of the manuscript was £775,000 and was supported by a contribution of £390,000 from the National Heritage Memorial Fund, along with support from the Art Fund, Sir Siegmund Warburgs Voluntary Settlement, the late Bernard Breslauer, the Friends of the British Library, and the Friends of the National Libraries.
John Glen, Minister for Arts, Heritage and Tourism said: This important thirteenth-century manuscript was produced in London so it is fitting that it will now go on display at the British Library. I am pleased that this rare work has been saved for the nation through a generous donation from the National Heritage Memorial Fund and that the manuscript will be digitised and available for all to enjoy.
Sir Peter Luff, Chair of NHMF, said: The Mostyn Psalter-Hours is quite simply exquisite. What makes it particularly special is that we are able to trace its production back to thirteenth-century London and with just a few luxury books produced in the capital during this period still remaining, its a rare survival. The National Heritage Memorial Fund was set-up to save the UKs most precious heritage at risk and so we felt it imperative this treasure should be safeguarded for future generations to study and enjoy.
We are hugely grateful to the NHMF and for the generous support of all the other funders, for making this important acquisition possible, said Scot McKendrick, Head of Western Heritage Collections. The British Library holds the worlds largest collection of medieval English Psalters and current and future generations of scholars will be able to study the Mostyn Psalter-Hours alongside other notable examples from the period.
The manuscript has been digitised and is available to view on the Librarys Digitised Manuscripts website. It will also be placed on display in the Librarys Sir John Ritblat Treasures gallery (which is open seven days a week), after which it will be available to scholars in the Librarys Manuscripts Reading Room.