This
missal contains the liturgy for the Mass according to the
Sarum Rite (or Sarum Use) and is known as a Sarum Missal. This was the most popular version of the Mass used in England before the
Reformation. This copy of the missal is from the earliest known printed edition of a Sarum Missal. It is printed throughout in two colours, red and black, and is the first book to carry Caxton's
printer's device. The missal is printed in ink on paper, with a leather binding, and it measures 34 by 24 cm. The missal contains 243 of its original 266 leaves and includes two full-page
woodcuts coloured by hand; one depicts the
Crucifixion of Jesus and the other
God the Father enthroned. It was re-bound in the 19th century, but some fragments of the original 15th century binding survive. Later markings have been added to the book by hand. These include a translation of the marriage service in English alongside the original
Latin version,
obituaries relating to the deaths of members of the Legh family, and prayers to St Thomas. In places the missal has been "censored" by hand, including the crossing out of the name of
St Thomas Becket and of prayers for the
Pope. ==History==