The St. Albans Psalter: Painting and Prayer in Medieval England

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Description

The St. Albans Psalter is without doubt one of the most important, famous, and puzzling books produced in twelfth-century England. It was once probably created between 1120 and 1140 at St. Albans Abbey, positioned on the website online where Alban, England’s first saint, was once martyred.

The manuscript’s powerfully drawn figures and saturated colors are distinct from those in previous Anglo-Saxon painting and signal the arrival of the Romanesque style of illumination in England. Despite the fact that most twelfth-century prayer books were not illustrated, the St. Albans Psalter includes more than 40 fullpage illuminations and over 200 historiated initials. Decorated with gold and precious colors, the psalter offers a display unparalleled by some other English manuscript to continue to exist from the period.

In 2007 the St. Albans Psalter was once got rid of from its binding and in 2012 the disbound leaves traveled to the J. Paul Getty Museum, where scholars, conservators, and scientists conducted a close examination. New evidence revealed here challenges several prevailing assumptions about this richly illuminated manuscript.

The St. Albans Psalter is published on the occasion of the exhibition Canterbury and St. Albans: Treasures from Church and Cloister on view on the J. Paul Getty Museum from September 20, 2013, to February 2, 2014.


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