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Benedictional of St. Ęthelwold


The Benedictional of St. Ęthelwold (London, British Library, Additional MS 49598) is a 10th Century illuminated Benedictional . It contains the various pontifical blessings used during mass on the differing days of the ecclesiastical year along with a form for blessing the candles used during the Feast of the Purification. The manuscript was written by the monk Godeman at the request Ęthelwold , Bishop of Winchester.

History

The manuscript was made sometime between 963 and 984, probably during the 970s . Folios 4r and 5v contain a Latin inscription which describes how the manuscript came to be made.

A bishop, the great Ęthelwold, whom the Lord had made patron of Winchester, ordered a certain monk subject to him to write the present book . . . He commanded also to be made in this book many frames well adorned and filled with various figures decorated with many beautiful colours and with gold. This book the Boanerges aforesaid caused to be indited for himself . . . Let all who look upon this book pray always that after the term of the flesh I may abide in heaven Ū Godeman the scribe, as a suppliant, earnestly asks this

Ęthelwold was Bishop of Winchester from 29 November, 963 until his death on 1 August, 984, so the manuscript was produced between those dates. The benediction for the Feast of St. Swithun mentions miracles performed by Swithun, which lead H. A. Wilson to conclude that the benediction could not have been composed before the translation of Swithun's relics on 15 July 971. St. Ętheldreda is given a prominence in the manuscript that would indicate that the manuscript was not made until after 970 when Ęthelwold had refounded the Abbey of Ely, which had been originally founded by Ętheldreda. R Deshman has argued that the drawings added to the Leofric Missal (Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Bodley 579) in about 979 were influenced by the illuminations of the Benedictional of St. Ęthelwold, meaning that the Benedictional was probably produced before 979.

The scribe, Godeman, was a monk at the Old Minster at Winchester and may have belonged to the group of monks from Abingdon that Ęthelwold placed in Winchester Cathedral to replace the Canons that had been there previously. In 973 Ęthelwold placed Godeman in the new foundation at Thorney, either as Ęthelwold's representative with Ęthelwold being the nominal abbot, or as abbot in his own right. After Ęthelwold's death Godeman continued as Abbot of Thorney. The Red Book of Thorney states that Godeman was Ęthelwold's personal chaplain.

It is assumed that the Benedictional remained at Winchester after Ęthelwold's death. However, the binding was reinforced with a 15th century list of relics at Hyde Abbey , which may mean the manuscript was at Hyde Abbey during some part of the Middle Ages. In the 17th century it was in the possession Henry Compton, who was Master of the Hospital of St. Cross, Winchester, and who later became Bishop of Oxford (1674) and then Bishop of London (1675). Bishop Compton died in 1713 and the manuscript passed to is nephew, General Hatton Compton, Lieutenant of the Tower. General Compton gave the manuscript to William Cavendish, 2nd Duke of Devonshire. The Benedictional was purchased by the British Library from the Duke's descendants.

Last updated: 08-05-2005 00:35:22
Last updated: 01-04-2007 01:18:57
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