Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms: Art, Word, War
Fabulous exhibition at the British Library looking at the Anglo-Saxons.
I studied this
period at school and university and anything you could want to be there was as
well as lots of new discoveries. I moved from object to object remembering
things I had long thought I’d forgotten. The show was nicely organised
chronologically around the main kingdoms as they came to prominence the around
broader themes of language and literature, the church and conquests. It was a
nice touch to end with the Domesday Book treating it not as a tool for Norman
conquest but as a reflection of the excellent land records which had been kept
by the Anglo-Saxons. My old “Were the Norman’s innovators?” essay plan came
flooding back!
There were so
many highlight’s it’s hard to pick a few but here goes! How about Cuthbert’s
bible, the earliest European bound book, which looked as fresh as if it had
been made yesterday as it had been in Cuthbert’s coffin. Alternatively the
Codex Amiatinus, on loan from Florence, which had been taken to the continent
by a bishop who then died. For years it was thought to be Italian but recent
research has shown that the iconography matched other works produced in
Monkwearmouth. Incidentally it’s also over a foot deep! How about the earliest
letter written in English or the only written manuscript of Beowulf?
My favourite
object, despite the Alfred Jewel from the Ashmolean being there, was actually
the first one in the show. It was a ceramic lid to a cremation pot of a man
sitting on a chair with his hands over his ears. I’d never seen or heard of
this before and it was such as touching piece. It looked a bit like an Egyptian
scribe or the pictures of the evangelists in the bibles you were about to see
but why did he have his hand over his ears!
I will say though
that if you’re now an Anglo-Saxon geek you might find it a bit too much! Even I
had a moment where I thought I couldn’t face another illuminated bible even it
had belonged to King Aelthred.
Closes on 19
February 2019
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