The Royal Prayer Book (London, British Library Royal MS 2.A.XX) is a collection of prayers believed to have been copied in the late eighth century or the early ninth century.
It was written in West
Mercia, likely either in or around Worcester.
It is one of four early Anglo-Saxon prayerbooks—the others being the
Book of Cerne, the
Harley Prayer Book
The Harley Prayer Book (British Library, Harley MS 7653) is one of a group of four early Anglo-Saxon prayer books produced in Mercia, likely around Worcester. The others are the Royal Prayer Book, the Book of Cerne, and the Book of Nunnaminster.
...
, and the
Book of Nunnaminster—all of which have some textual interrelationships. The prayers are mainly in
Latin but have some
Old English
Old English (, ), or Anglo-Saxon, is the earliest recorded form of the English language, spoken in England and southern and eastern Scotland in the early Middle Ages. It was brought to Great Britain by Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, Anglo ...
and
Greek elements.
Its general theme "would appear to be Christ as the healer of mankind", and its concern with physical healing is sufficient to suggest that it "might have functioned as a devotional, and practical, tool for a physician".
[ ][
Folio 45v contains what seems to be the first manuscript attestation in any Germanic language of the common noun '' elf''.]
The manuscript also contains detailed Old English glosses from the tenth century in the Mercian dialect of Old English.[
]
References
9th-century Latin books
Christian illuminated manuscripts
Hiberno-Saxon manuscripts
9th-century Christian texts
Christian prayer books
9th-century Latin writers
9th-century English writers
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