Vergilius Romanus
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/15/RomanVirgilFolio014rVergilPortrait.jpg/220px-RomanVirgilFolio014rVergilPortrait.jpg)
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/67/VergiliusRomanusFolio100v.gif/220px-VergiliusRomanusFolio100v.gif)
TheVergilius Romanus(Vatican City,Biblioteca Apostolica,Cod. Vat. lat. 3867), also known as theRoman Vergil,is a 5th-centuryillustrated manuscriptof the works ofVirgil.It contains theAeneid,theGeorgics,and some of theEclogues.It is one of the oldest and most important Vergilianmanuscripts.It is 332 by 323 mm with 309vellumfolios. It was written inrustic capitalswith 18 lines per page.
Decoration
[edit]The Vergilius Romanus is one of the few surviving illustrated classical manuscripts. As such, its importance to art history is hard to overstate. The manuscript has 19 surviving illustrations, painted by at least two artists, both of whom are anonymous. The style of both artists represents the beginning of a break with classical style. The human form becomes abstracted and flattened and the naturalistic depiction of space is abandoned.
The first artist painted a single miniature on folio 1 recto, an illustration for the First Eclogue. In it a cowherd, Tityrus, plays a flute while sitting under a tree. The heads of three cows look out from behind the tree. Meanwhile a standing goatherd, Meliboeus, leads a goat by its horns under a tree. More goats look out from behind that tree. This miniature shows some remnants of classical style. The cows and goats looking out from behind the trees are an attempt, albeit an unsuccessful one, at creating the appearance of space. The garments of the two men are draped naturally and the heads are shown in three quarter view. The miniature, unlike any miniature in this manuscript, is unframed which shows a connection to the tradition of papyrus roll illustration.
The second artist demonstrates a more radical break from the classical tradition in the remaining miniatures. All of these miniatures are framed in red and gold. The artist seems to have no real understanding of the portrayal of the human body, and is incapable of handling a contorted pose, such as is seen onfolio 100 verso,where a reclining figure is portrayed in an utterly unconvincing manner. Faces are no longer portrayed in three quarter position but are either frontal or full profile. The clothing no longer drapes naturally but is instead reduced to rhythmic curving lines. The page is often divided into separate compartments (See, for example,Folio 108r). When a landscape is depicted there is no attempt to depict a three-dimensional space. There is no ground line and items are spread evenly over the field. Care is taken so that items do not overlap each other. The effect is remarkably similar to some Roman floormosaics,which may have served as inspiration (see folios 44 verso and45 recto.The second artist was a fine artist. However, his interests were in patterns and lines rather than in the naturalistic portrayal of space and the human form.
The manuscript contains threeauthor portraits(Folios 3v,9r,and14 r). These portraits show a reliance on the early papyrus scroll tradition of manuscript portraits. They are inserted into the text column within a frame. The portraits show Vergil sitting on a chair between a lectern and a locked chest. The portrait on folio 3v has the lectern on Vergil's right on the chest on his left, which is reversed in the other two portraits.
Provenance
[edit]The Vergilius Romanus was produced in an undeterminedprovince.Based on the style of some aspects of the illumination Martin Henig has suggested that it was produced inBritain.[1]If this is true it would make it the oldest surviving British codex. It was at theAbbey of St Denisuntil the 15th century but it is not known how it came to be at St Denis or in the Vatican.
The Vergilius Romanus is not to be confused with theVergilius Vaticanus(Vatican City, Biblioteca Apostolica, Cod. Vat. lat. 3225) or theVergilius Augusteus,other ancient Vergilian manuscripts in theBiblioteca Apostolica.
Gallery
[edit]-
Folio 6 recto
-
Folio 9 recto. Second author portrait
-
Folio 11 recto
-
Folio 16 recto
-
Folio 44 verso
-
Folio 74 verso
-
Folio 78 recto
-
Folio 101 recto
-
Folio 163 recto
-
Folio 188 verso
-
Folio 234 verso
-
Folio 235 verso
References
[edit]- ^Ashbee, Paul (1998)."Centuries of Roman survival in the West".British Archaeology.32.Retrieved6 September2011.
Further reading
[edit]![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
- Rosenthal, Erwin.The Illuminations of the Vergilius Romanus (Cod. Vat. Lat. 3867). A Stylistic and Iconographic Analysis.Zürich 1972
- Walther, Ingo F. and Norbert Wolf.Codices Illustres: The world's most famous illuminated manuscripts, 400 to 1600.Köln,Taschen,2005.
- Weitzmann, Kurt.Late Antique and Early Christian Book Illumination.New York: George Braziller, 1977. p. 11 and pgs. 52-59.
- Weitzmann, Kurt,ed.,Age of spirituality: late antique and early Christian art, third to seventh century,no. 204 & 225, 1979,Metropolitan Museum of Art,New York,ISBN9780870991790;full text available online from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries
- Wright, David H.The Roman Vergil and the Origins of Medieval Book Design.Toronto, University of Toronto Press 2001,part-online via google books
- Treasure 3 Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana,displayed viaThe European Library