September 15, 2020 – MS 21

IMG_5740.jpg
IMG_5741.jpg
IMG_5742.jpg
IMG_5743.jpg
IMG_5744.jpg
IMG_5745.jpg
IMG_5746.jpg
IMG_5747.jpg
IMG_5748.jpg

Dublin Core

Title

September 15, 2020 – MS 21

Subject

Tufts University. Tisch Library. Special Collections

Description

The first question most people ask about Special Collections: "What is the oldest book Tufts has?" It is Manuscript 21, a Latin Bible copied in Paris some time between 1220-1240 CE. The text is written on vellum, made from calf skins. It features 80 historiated initials (scenes related to the text) by artists of the Du Prat atelier; 61 foliate initials, and innumerable minor penwork initials. Opportunity for comparative research: there is another Du Prat Bible nearby, at the Boston Public Library.

The photos from MS 21 show Jerome, translator of this Latin text, depicted as a scribe; Moses placing a tablet in an ark; Elimelech, Naomi, and two children; David, traditionally regarded as author of the Psalms, playing a harp; Daniel in the lions' den; and foliate and penwork initials.

Creator

Christopher Barbour

Source

Instagram: @Tischlibrary

Publisher

Tufts University. Tisch Library.

Date

September 15, 2020

Contributor

Anna Minasyan

Format

Image/jpg

Language

eng

Type

Image

Coverage

2020
13th Century

Citation

Christopher Barbour, “September 15, 2020 – MS 21,” Tufts Libraries Omeka, accessed November 23, 2024, https://omeka.library.tufts.edu/items/show/5281.