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The music of The Kells has been inspired
by the illumination of the Gospels in the Book of Kells.
The Book of Kells is the most
spectacular of a group of manuscripts created in Ireland and northern
Britain between the seventh and tenth centuries, a period when Irish
monasticism was in the vanguard of Christian culture. Its earliest history
remains controversial but it was in the keeping of the monastery of
Kells, Co. Meath, for most of the Middle Ages - hence its name - and
has been in the library of Trinity College Dublin, since the mid-seventeenth
century. It is a masterpiece of medieval art - a brilliantly decorated
copy of the four Gospels with full-page illustrations of Christ, the
Virgin and Child and the Evangelists, and a wealth of smaller decorative
painting that does not always relate to the sacred text. The strange
imagination displayed in the pages, the impeccable technique and the
very fine state of its preservation make it an object of endless fascination.
This edition includes the most important of the fully decorated pages
plus a series of enlargements showing the almost unbelievable minuteness
of the detail - spiral and interlace patterns, human and animal ornament
- a combination of high seriousness and humor. Accompanying the illustrations
is a new, up-to-date text by Bernard Meehan, the current Keeper of Manuscripts
at Trinity College Dublin. It provides a scholarly analysis of these
exuberant inventions, the artists, the text and the writing, and a full
account of the historical background to the miraculous world of the
Book of Kells.
-From The Book of Kells,
©1994 Thames and Hudson Ltd, London
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