The Medieval Masterpiece, the Book of Kells, Is Now Digitized & Put Online

If you know noth­ing else about medieval Euro­pean illu­mi­nat­ed man­u­scripts, you sure­ly know the Book of Kells. “One of Ireland’s great­est cul­tur­al trea­sures” com­ments Medievalists.net, “it is set apart from oth­er man­u­scripts of the same peri­od by the qual­i­ty of its art­work and the sheer num­ber of illus­tra­tions that run through­out the 680 pages of the book.” The work not only attracts schol­ars, but almost a mil­lion vis­i­tors to Dublin every year. “You sim­ply can’t trav­el to the cap­i­tal of Ire­land,” writes Book Riot’s Eri­ka Har­litz-Kern, “with­out the Book of Kells being men­tioned. And right­ful­ly so.”

The ancient mas­ter­piece is a stun­ning exam­ple of Hiber­no-Sax­on style, thought to have been com­posed on the Scot­tish island of Iona in 806, then trans­ferred to the monastery of Kells in Coun­ty Meath after a Viking raid (a sto­ry told in the mar­velous ani­mat­ed film The Secret of Kells). Con­sist­ing main­ly of copies of the four gospels, as well as index­es called “canon tables,” the man­u­script is believed to have been made pri­mar­i­ly for dis­play, not read­ing aloud, which is why “the images are elab­o­rate and detailed while the text is care­less­ly copied with entire words miss­ing or long pas­sages being repeat­ed.”

Its exquis­ite illu­mi­na­tions mark it as a cer­e­mo­ni­al object, and its “intri­ca­cies,” argue Trin­i­ty Col­lege Dublin pro­fes­sors Rachel Moss and Fáinche Ryan, “lead the mind along path­ways of the imag­i­na­tion…. You haven’t been to Ire­land unless you’ve seen the Book of Kells.” This may be so, but thank­ful­ly, in our dig­i­tal age, you need not go to Dublin to see this fab­u­lous his­tor­i­cal arti­fact, or a dig­i­ti­za­tion of it at least, entire­ly view­able at the online col­lec­tions of the Trin­i­ty Col­lege Library. (When you click on the pre­vi­ous link, make sure you scroll down the page.) The pages, orig­i­nal­ly cap­tured in 1990, “have recent­ly been res­canned,” Trin­i­ty Col­lege Library writes, using state of the art imag­ing tech­nol­o­gy. These new dig­i­tal images offer the most accu­rate high res­o­lu­tion images to date, pro­vid­ing an expe­ri­ence sec­ond only to view­ing the book in per­son.”

What makes the Book of Kells so spe­cial, repro­duced “in such var­ied places as Irish nation­al coinage and tat­toos?” ask Pro­fes­sors Moss and Ryan. “There is no one answer to these ques­tions.” In their free online course on the man­u­script, these two schol­ars of art his­to­ry and the­ol­o­gy, respec­tive­ly, do not attempt to “pro­vide defin­i­tive answers to the many ques­tions that sur­round it.” Instead, they illu­mi­nate its his­to­ry and many mean­ings to dif­fer­ent com­mu­ni­ties of peo­ple, includ­ing, of course, the peo­ple of Ire­land. “For Irish peo­ple,” they explain in the course trail­er above, “it rep­re­sents a sense of pride, a tan­gi­ble link to a pos­i­tive time in Ireland’s past, reflect­ed through its unique art.”

But while the Book of Kells is still a mod­ern “sym­bol of Irish­ness,” it was made with mate­ri­als and tech­niques that fell out of use sev­er­al hun­dred years ago, and that were once spread far and wide across Europe, the Mid­dle East, and North Africa. In the video above, Trin­i­ty Col­lege Library con­ser­va­tor John Gillis shows us how the man­u­script was made using meth­ods that date back to the “devel­op­ment of the codex, or the book form.” This includes the use of parch­ment, in this case calf skin, a mate­r­i­al that remem­bers the anatom­i­cal fea­tures of the ani­mals from which it came, with mark­ings where tails, spines, and legs used to be.

The Book of Kells has weath­ered the cen­turies fair­ly well, thanks to care­ful preser­va­tion, but it’s also had per­haps five rebind­ings in its life­time. “In its orig­i­nal form,” notes Har­litz-Kern, the man­u­script “was both thick­er and larg­er. Thir­ty folios of the orig­i­nal man­u­script have been lost through the cen­turies and the edges of the exist­ing man­u­script were severe­ly trimmed dur­ing a rebind­ing in the nine­teenth cen­tu­ry.” It remains, nonethe­less, one of the most impres­sive arti­facts to come from the age of the illu­mi­nat­ed man­u­script, “described by some,” says Moss and Ryan, “as the most famous man­u­script in the world.” Find out why by see­ing it (vir­tu­al­ly) for your­self and learn­ing about it from the experts above.

For any­one inter­est­ed in get­ting a copy of The Book of Kells in a nice print for­mat, see The Book of Kells: Repro­duc­tions from the man­u­script in Trin­i­ty Col­lege, Dublin.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Behold the Beau­ti­ful Pages from a Medieval Monk’s Sketch­book: A Win­dow Into How Illu­mi­nat­ed Man­u­scripts Were Made (1494)

800 Illu­mi­nat­ed Medieval Man­u­scripts Are Now Online: Browse & Down­load Them Cour­tesy of the British Library and Bib­lio­thèque Nationale de France

How Illu­mi­nat­ed Medieval Man­u­scripts Were Made: A Step-by-Step Look at this Beau­ti­ful, Cen­turies-Old Craft

Josh Jones is a writer and musi­cian based in Durham, NC. Fol­low him at @jdmagness


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Comments (17)
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  • June Coghlan says:

    The Lly­ola Insti­tute at Trin­i­ty Col­lege teach a mar­vel­lous mod­ule on the ‘Book of Kells’ as part of a degree. I did it as a short course so that I could teach sec­ond lev­el stu­dents about it and bring stu­dents into the library at Trin­i­ty Col­lege Dublin to view the man­u­script.

  • Charles Poynton says:

    *Loy­ola*

  • wagner says:

    i want see the book of kells
    where can I find the cor­rect link

  • Scott in the Hill Country says:

    It was an embed­ded link near the begin­ning of the arti­cle.

    https://digitalcollections.tcd.ie/home/index.php?DRIS_ID=MS58_003v

  • Lia says:

    When I vis­it the page, I get an infor­ma­tion pop­up with this copy­right notice:

    “Copy­right 2012 The Board of Trin­i­ty Col­lege Dublin. Images are avail­able for sin­gle-use aca­d­e­m­ic appli­ca­tion only. Pub­li­ca­tion, trans­mis­sion or dis­play is pro­hib­it­ed with­out for­mal writ­ten approval of Trin­i­ty Col­lege Library, Dublin.”

    How on earth can they claim copy­right if all they did was digi­tise it? Only a sig­nif­i­cant restora­tion job allows you to do that.

  • Arlene Davis says:

    What I’d like to know is where I can find a copy in Eng­lish. My Latin isn’t quite THAT good yet, and I real­ly want to read it. Thanks!

  • Greg Croke says:

    Their copy­right would only be over the digi­ti­sa­tion and the digi­tised images, not the Book of Kells itself.

  • Al Shaw says:

    In para­graph five you state that the Book is writ­ten on parch­ment.

    Do you mean vel­lum?

  • Michael Gliona says:

    There is no link. You only get Trin­i­ty Col­lege and a search on the Trin­i­ty site only yields links to arti­cles.

  • Nigel Strudwick says:

    You indi­cate this is new. May I point out that a ver­sion of the Book of Kells was online in about 1994 and was one of the ear­li­est web sites show­ing how such thing could be made avail­able?

  • C Fitzpatrick says:

    *…The pages, orig­i­nal­ly cap­tured in 1990, “have recent­ly been res­canned,” Trin­i­ty Col­lege Library writes, using state of the art imag­ing tech­nol­o­gy. These new dig­i­tal images offer the most accu­rate high res­o­lu­tion images to date…*

  • Michael Gliona says:

    Nope. They aren’t online. This arti­cle is incor­rect.

  • Linn Whittendale says:

    Please send link for Book of Kells. Bless­ings

  • Marcee Chipman says:

    I want to sign up for the class on the book of Kells, but I can­not find it list­ed in the course offer­ings. Actu­al­ly three of my friends and I want to do this togeth­er. How do we sign up?

  • Dennis Hoppin says:

    Pls include on Mail­ing List

  • Linda Wicksell says:

    What is the cost?

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