The psalter contains the
Book of Psalms together with letters of
St. Jerome, hymns and
canticles. The main scribe was also the artist of the miniatures. It was written in
Latin on
vellum, using a southern English
Uncial script with
Rustic Capital rubrics. There were additions made by a
scribe named
Eadui Basan in an English
Carolingian minuscule. The English gloss was written in a
Southumbrian pointed
minuscule. The
codex is 235 by 180 mm 9.25 by 7.1 in. The text is written in an area of about 175 by 135 mm or 6.9 by 5.3 in. There are 160 folios. There are several major initials which are
historiated,
zoomorphic, or decorated. Major initials are found at the beginning of
Psalms 1,
51 and
101. This tripartite division is typical of
Insular Psalters. In addition, the psalms beginning each of the liturgical divisions of the Psalter are given major initials. The beginning letters of the other Psalms have smaller "minor" initials which are decorated or zoomorphic and are done in what is called the "antenna" style. The only surviving full-page miniature shows
King David with his court musicians, and is now folio 30 verso. It is possible that this miniature was originally the
frontispiece or opening miniature of the psalter, and that a decorated
incipit page at the start of the Psalms is missing, as well as a
carpet page at the end.
Sir Robert Cotton pasted a cutting from the
Breviary of
Margaret of York on folio 160 verso. He also inserted a miniature from a 13th-century liturgical psalter as folio 1. ==History==