Gero Codex

The Gero Codex or Gero-Codex is an Ottonian illuminated manuscript probably produced at Lorsch Abbey in Germany between 950 and 970. It is one of the first and most splendid of the Eburnant group of early Ottonian manuscripts.[1]

Christ in Majesty with Evangelists surrounding

It contains miniatures of the four evangelists, the monk-scribe Anno handing it to Gero (probably of Cologne) and Gero handing it to Saint Peter.[2]

The manuscripts illuminations bear similarities with those of the ninth-century Lorsch Gospels, particularly the Christ in Majesty which is copied from a Carolingian model. It is closely related to the contemporaneous Petershausen Sacramentary, which borrows from the Gero Codex's Christ in Majesty and Ecclesia (personification of the church), and the Hornbach Sacramentary, which was probably produced at the same scriptorium.[3]

It is now held in the Landesbibliothek von Hesse in Darmstadt (Cod.1948).

gollark: The constituency thing is weird and broken *too*, in my opinion.
gollark: If it's meant to protect some group or other, it should probably do a better job, since as things stand now the electoral college appears to just wildly distort things in favour of some random states.
gollark: (re: economic systems)
gollark: I don't think a centrally planned system would work *better*.
gollark: I roughly agree with that. Though competence is hard to measure, so people tend to fall back to bad metrics for it.

References

  1. Dodwell, p. 134
  2. Dodwell, p. 134
  3. Dodwell, p. 134

Bibliography

  • Dodwell, Charles Reginald (1993). The Pictorial Arts of the West, 800-1200. Yale University Press. pp. 134–. ISBN 978-0-300-06493-3.
  • (in German) Michael Gosmann, Peter Michael Kleine, Kathrin Ueberholz: Der Gero-Codex kehrt zurück. Das gemalte Buch von Wedinghausen. Dokumentationsband über die Ausstellung des Gero-Codex im Kloster Wedinghausen vom 24. Oktober 2009 bis 17. Januar 2010. Stadtarchiv, Arnsberg 2010, ISBN 978-3-928394-26-0
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.