News | May 1, 2023

Sixth Century Augustine Gospels to be Used in King Charles III's Coronation

Parker Library

The Augustine Gospels

The sixth-century Gospels of Augustine of Canterbury are the oldest surviving illustrated Latin Gospels in the world and the oldest non-archaeological artefact of any kind to have survived in England, continuously owned and in use for 1,400 years. The Gospels were shown to HM the King (then Prince of Wales) when he visited the Parker Library in Corpus Christi College Cambridge in March 2001. He immediately recognised their importance and has requested that they be carried in his Coronation procession on May 6 at Westminster Abbey.

The Gospels have been in the care of the Parker Library for the last 450 years. The only times the Governing Body has given special permission for them to leave the College have been for the enthronements of the last seven Archbishops of Canterbury and for two papal visits (John Paul II in 1982 and Benedict XVI in 2010).The presence of the Augustine Gospels at the King's Coronation affirms their status as the most precious and important medieval manuscript to survive in England. Their fundamental significance to the nation was recently recognised when the Gospels were inscribed in 2023 on the UNESCO UK Memory of the World Register.

Professor Christopher Kelly, The Master of the college, said: "The Parker Library is at the heart of Corpus Christi College and reflects the centuries of teaching and research that has been our core mission since 1352. I am delighted that the King recognised the outstanding significance of the Augustine Gospels, one of the great treasures of Britain. Corpus Christi College – the only college in Oxford or Cambridge to have been founded by townspeople – is proud to hold in safekeeping for the nation a manuscript that has been in continuous use for teaching, preaching and research for over 1,400 years.”

Augustine Gospels studied by Dr Philippa Hoskin and Professor George van Kooten
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Parker Library

 Augustine Gospels studied by Dr Philippa Hoskin and Professor George van Kooten

The Augustine Gospels
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Parker Library

The Augustine Gospels

King Charles III's visit to the Parker Library as Prince of Wales
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Parker Library

King Charles III's visit to the Parker Library as Prince of Wales

The Parker Library
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Parker Library

The Parker Library

Like many medieval manuscripts, the Gospels were written in Latin on vellum (prepared from animal skin) by Italian monks in the late sixth century. In 601, they were sent from Rome by Pope Gregory the Great to help Augustine, who had been dispatched from his monastery five years earlier to convert the pagan English to Christianity.

Augustine landed in Thanet, Kent in 597, subsequently settled in Canterbury and with the permission of King Ethelbert of Kent, began preaching to the local populace. Within a few years Augustine was successful in his mission when Ethelbert became the first English king to convert to Christianity. Augustine himself became the first Archbishop of Canterbury.

Dr Philippa Hoskin, Director of the Parker Library and Donnelley Fellow Librarian said: “This book is a key formative moment in British history. Books were fundamental to the success of Augustine’s mission. Without this volume we would lack a tangible connection to the point in British history where the influence of the Roman Church began through the teaching of the Gospels.”

Unlike more lavishly illuminated Gospels, this volume appears to have been primarily intended as a teaching aide, as evidenced by the size of the book itself (quite portable), the generous height of the text (readable whilst being held) and the presence of the illustrations, of which only two survive. These are the frontispiece for the Gospel of Luke and a further page of twelve framed vignettes depicting scenes from the Passion of Christ.

These illustrations have been studied by Professor George van Kooten, Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge. He notes that “It’s very easy to follow Christ through the succession of scenes from the Gospels, from his arrival at Jerusalem to the carrying of the cross to the crucifixion.”

The Augustine Gospels will be carried in the Coronation Procession by the Master of Corpus Christi College, Professor Christopher Kelly. The Master will be wearing full academic dress. Later in the service, prior to the Anointing, the Master will stand holding the Gospels for the reading of the New Testament lesson.

Established in 1352, Corpus Christi College is the sixth oldest College in the University of Cambridge. It does not have a founder. Corpus is the only college in either Oxford or Cambridge to have been founded collectively by townspeople.