The
Barberini Gospels contains one illuminated
canon table, four
Evangelist portraits, and fifteen decorated
initials. The book follows a fairly standard format in which each separate Gospel book opens with an
evangelist portrait of the author and a large decorated initial, or
incipit, at the beginning of the text. Another large decorated initial, often referred to as the “monogram of Christ,” punctuates the beginning of Matthew's account of
the Incarnation; more initials are inserted in a similar fashion at key points in the other Gospel texts. Key to the treatment of the origin of the
Barberini Gospels is the striking contrast between two very distinct traditions and painting styles. On the one hand are the elaborate and intricately decorated initials one comes to expect in
insular manuscripts of this period. The technical expertise of these embellishments is at the same level as those of better-known manuscripts such as the
Book of Kells or the
Lichfield Gospels. On the other hand, there are many elements employed in the decoration of this Gospel book which do not seem to belong here, either because they more closely resemble motifs found in non-insular or
Continental art or because they are too early, foreshadowing trends of a later, even
Romanesque period. ==See also==