Title
Liber misticus
Generic classification
Manuscripts and illuminationsObject
ManuscriptCentury
Early 11th c.Cultural context / style
VisigothicDimensions
11,3 x 7,3 inProvenance
Monastery of Santo Domingo de Silos (Santo Domingo de Silos, Burgos, Spain)Current location
The British Museum (London, United Kingdom)Inventory Number in Current Collection
Add MS 30845Object history
The origin of the library of the monastery of San Sebastián de Silos, later called Santo Domingo de Silos, can be found in the reconstruction carried out by the Castilian Count Fernán González in the middle of the 10th century. In the year 954 the count donated numerous lands and possessions to the monastery, as well as some books relevant to the cult (Senra, 2002). However, the peak of the monastery took place with the abbot Domingo Manso, who had been a monk of San Millán de la Cogolla. In 1041 Fernando I put him in charge of San Sebastián de Silos and under his mandate the monastic complex grew considerably. The library increased thanks to the donations received and to the productions of the scriptorium itself (Castro, 2020), reaching its peak at the end of the 11th and beginning of the 12th century (Sánchez Mariana, 1984; Boylan, 1992).
Precisely, this Liber misticus was one of the volumes produced in the 11th century (Férotin, 1912; Vivancos, 2007). The Silense library suffered great losses throughout its history, such as this copy. Rodrigo Echevarría, the last abbot of the monastery before the exclaustration of 1835, was in charge of jealously preserving the manuscripts that were still treasured in Silos. According to Besse (1897), he was a man of "uncommon prudence and firmness, combined with an extensive knowledge, a great knowledge of the world and noble and distinguished manners". There is no doubt that his decision to protect the manuscripts helped to keep them from being dispersed at first. However, their fate changed when he was appointed bishop of Segovia in 1857. Echevarría had to leave the monastery, and from then on the codices fell into disrepair.
Anastasio Rodrigo y Yusto, archbishop of Burgos, was impressed when he visited the Monastery of Santo Domingo de Silos. Its dilapidated state led him to appeal to the former monks of the abbey. It was at that moment that Sebastián Fernández, one of the exclaustrated monks and vicar of the church of San Martín (Madrid), intervened. Although he was responsible for protecting the manuscripts in the capital, he failed to appreciate their true value, which led him to contact a marquis in Madrid "plus ou moins authentique" who worked with Aunt Jesusa, a woman well known for selling antiquities (Besse, 1897; Ruiz and Gonzalez de Linares, 1978). Thus it was that in 1877 she sold 69 manuscripts for 16,000 pesetas, a figure that undoubtedly pleased the parish priest.
The Liber misticus was among these codices sold in Madrid. It was acquired by Antoine Bachelin-Deflorenne, an antiquarian specializing in the sale of antique and rare books. Although his main store was located in Paris, at 10 Boulevard des Capucines, he had branches in London and Madrid. That was how he learned that Sebastian Fernandez was selling the Silensian manuscripts. The Liber misticus was offered for sale in Paris on June 1, 1878 at the Hotel des Commissaires-Priseurs (Paris) and was bought on the 15th by Bernard Quritch for the British Museum (Whitehill, 1976; Fernández de la Cuesta, 1985). In the Catalogue of Additions to the Manuscripts in the British Museum in the Years 1876-1881 it is mentioned as follows:
Offices and Masses of the Mozarabic Liturgy for Saints' days from S. Quiricus [Cyriacus, 20 May] to S. Bartholomew [24 Aug.]. Latin. Imperfect Musical notes to the antiphona, etc., have been added by a later hand. Vellum; ff. 161. In Visigothic characters; with grotesque coloured figure-initials.
Finally, in 1973 the Liber misticus was added to the British Library (London), where it is still preserved today.
Description
There is no consensus about the exact dating of the manuscript: some authors date it between the 10th-11th century (Férotin, 1912), others consider that it must have been made in the 11th century (Díaz, 1983), while the British Library has dated it to the beginning of the 11th century. Although the Liber misticus was conserved in the Monastery of Santo Domingo de Silos, there are doubts about whether it was copied there, proposing San Millán de la Cogolla (La Rioja) as a possible origin due to the influence of La Rioja (Boynton, 2002). However, Díaz (1983) affirmed that the central part of the codex came from the Monastery of Santo Domingo de Silos. The Liber misticus consists of 161 folios divided into two columns of 27-31 lines each. It contains chants, readings and prayers.
Locations
XIth c. - ca. 1857
Mid XIXth c. - 1877
parish priest
Sebastián Fernández, Madrid (Spain)
ca. 1877 - ca. 1878
dealer/antiquarian
"Aunt Jesusa", Madrid (Spain) *
ca. 1878
dealer/antiquarian
Antoine Bachelin-Deflorenne, Paris (France) *
ca. 1878
dealer/antiquarian
Bernard Quaritch, London (United Kingdom) *
1878 - ca. 1973
study center
The British Library, London (United Kingdom)
ca. 1973 - present
Bibliography
- BACHELIN-DEFLORENNE, Antoine (1878): Catalogue de libres rares parmi lesquels on remarque la Bible Mazarine premier livre imprimé par Gutenberg et des manuscrits du XIe au XVIIIe siècle rédigé par M. Bachelin-Deflorenne, Librairie Bachelin-Deflorenne, París.
- BESSE, Jean-Martial (1897): "Histoire d'un dépot litteraire. L'abbaye de Silos", nº 14, Revue bénédictine.
- BOYLAN, Ann (1992): "The Library at Santo Domingo de Silos and Its Catalogues (XIth–XVIIIth Centuries)", nº 3, Revue Mabillon.
- BOYLAN, Ann (2002): "The Silos Beatus and the Silos Scriptorium", en Church, State, Vellum, and Stone: Essays on Medieval Spain in Honor of John Williams, Brill, Leiden.
- BOYNTON, Susan (2002): "A lost mozarabic liturgical manuscript rediscovered: New York, Hispanic Society of America, B2916, Olim Toledo, Biblioteca capitular, 33.2", nº 57, Traditio, p. 191.
- BRITISH MUSEUM (ed.) (1882): Catalogue of Additions to the Manuscripts in the British Museum in the Years 1876-1881, The Trustees of the British Museum, Londres, p. 120.
- CASTRO CORREA, Ainoa (2020): "The Scribes of the Silos Apocalypse (London, British Library, Add. MS 11695) and the Scriptorium of Silos in the Late Eleventh Century", vol. 95, nº 2, Speculum. A journal of Medieval Studies.
- DOMÍNGUEZ BORDONA, Jesús (1935): "Una carta sobre la venta de libros en Silos", vol. 11, nº 33, Archivo español de arte y arqueología.
- FÉROTIN, Marius (1897): Histoire de l'Abbaye de Silos, Léroux, París.
- FÉROTIN, Marius (1912): Le Liber Mozarabicus Sacramentorum et les manuscrits mozarabes, vol. 6, en Monumenta Ecclesiae Liturgica, Librairie de Firmin-Didot et Cie., París, pp. 820-842.
- HAGGH, Barbara (2007): "The Historia for St. Dominic of Silos in British Library Add. ms. 30850", en Hispania Vetus: Musical-Liturgical Manuscripts from Visigothic Origins to the Franco/Roman Transition (9th-12th Centuries), editado por Susana Zapke, Fundación BBVA, Bilbao.
- RUIZ Y GONZÁLEZ DE LINARES, Ernesto (1978): "Burgos ante el Milenario de la Lengua Castellana escrita", nº 190, Boletín de la Institución Fernán González.
- SÁNCHEZ MARIANA, Manuel (1984): "Los códices del Monasterio de Silos", vol. 63, nº 203, Boletín de la Institución Fernán González.
- SENRA GABRIEL Y GALÁN, José Luis (2002): "Monasterio de Santo Domingo de Silos", en Enciclopedia del románico en Castilla y León, Fundación Santa María la Real, Aguilar de Campoo.
- VIVANCOS, Miguel (2007): "Liber misticus. British Library, London, Add. ms. 30845", en Hispania Vetus. Musical-liturgical manuscripts: from Visigothic Origins to the Franco-Roman Transition (9th-12th Centuries), editado por Susana Zapke, BBVA, Bilbao, pp. 306-307.
- WALKER, Rose (2020): "Expresando el cambio litúrgico en la Iberia de los siglos XI y XII a través de la festividad de los Santos Inocentes", vol. 50, nº 2, Anuario de Estudios Medievales.
- WHITEHILL, Walter Muir (1976): "The manuscripts of Santo Domingo de Silos", en Homenaje a fray Justo Pérez de Urbel I, Abadía de Silos, Burgos.
- WHITEHILL, Walter Muir y PÉREZ DE URBEL, Justo (1929): "Los manuscritos del Real Monasterio de Santo Domingo de Silos", nº 95, Boletín de la Real Academia de la Historia.
Record manager
Isabel Escalera FernándezCitation:
Isabel Escalera Fernández, "Liber misticus" in Nostra et Mundi. Cultural Heritage from Castile and Leon around the world, Fundación Castilla y León, 2025. https://inventario.nostraetmundi.com/en/work/401