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Codex Argenteus - The Silver Bible

 
 

The greatest gem among the manuscript treasures of the Uppsala University Library is the Codex Argenteus, the "Silver Bible". This world-famous manuscript is written in silver and gold letters on purple vellum in Ravenna about 520. It contains fragments of the Four Gospels in the fourth-century Gothic version of Bishop Ulfilas (Wulfila). Of the original 336 leaves there remain only 188. With the exception of one leaf, discovered in 1970 in the cathedral of Speyer in Germany, they are all preserved in Uppsala.

The manuscript was discovered in the middle of the 16th century in the library of the Benedictine monastery of Werden in the Ruhr, near Essen in Germany. Later on it became the property of the Emperor Rudolph II, and when, in July 1648, the last year of the Thirty Years' War, the Swedes occupied Prague, it fell into their hands together with the other treasures of the Imperial Castle of Hradcany. It was subsequently deposited in the library of Queen Christina in Stockholm, but on the abdication of the Queen in 1654 it was acquired by one of her librarians, the Dutch scholar Isaac Vossius. He took the manuscript with him to Holland, where, in 1662, the Swedish Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie bought the codex from Vossius and, in 1669, presented it to the University of Uppsala. He had previously had it bound in a chased silver binding, made in Stockholm from designs by the painter David Klöcker Ehrenstrahl.

Text: Lars Munkhammar, 1998-08-12

The Codex Argenteus Online
Digital version of the facsimile edition of the Codex Argenteus from 1927.


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Binding of the Silver Bible


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