- Antiphonary of Bangor
The Antiphonary of Bangor is an ancient
Latin manuscript, supposed to have been originally written atBangor Abbey in modern dayNorthern Ireland .The
codex , found byMuratori in theAmbrosian Library atMilan , and named by him the "Antiphonary of Bangor" ("Antiphonarium Benchorense"), was brought toMilan fromBobbio Abbey with many other books by CardinalFederigo Borromeo when he founded the Ambrosian Library in1609 . Bobbio, which is situated in a gorge of the Apennines thirty-seven miles north-east ofGenoa , was founded by Saint Columbanus, a disciple ofSaint Comgall , founder of the great monastery at Bangor, in County Down,Northern Ireland . Columbanus died at Bobbio and was buried there in615 . This establishes at once a connection between Bobbio and Bangor, and an examination of the contents of the codex placed it beyond all doubt that it was originally compiled in Bangor and brought thence to Bobbio, although not in the time of Saint Columbanus: there is in the codex ahymn entitled "ymnum sancti Congilli abbatis nostri", and he is referred to in it as "nostri patroni Comgilli sancti". Again there is a list of fifteenabbot s, beginning with Comgall and ending with Cronanus who died in691 ; the date of the compilation, therefore, may be referred to680 -691 .Muratori, however, is careful to state in his preface that the codex, though very old, and in part mutilated, may have been a copy made at Bobbio, by some of the local
monk s there, from the original service book. It is written, as regards the orthography, the form of the letters, and the dotted ornamentation of the capital letters, in "the Scottic style", but this, of course, may have been done by Gaelic monks at Bobbio. The actual bearer of the codex from Bangor is generally supposed and stated to have beenSaint Dungal , who leftIreland early in the9th century , acquired great celebrity on the Continent, and probably retired to Bobbio towards the close of his life. He bequeathed his books to "the blessedColumbanus ", "i.e.", to hismonastery at Bobbio. The antiphonary, however, cannot be identified with any of the books named in the catalogue of the books bequeathed by Dungal, as given by Muratori ("Antiquitatis Italicae Medii Aevi", Milan,1740 , III, 817-824).Here only a summary can be given of the contents of the codex, to which the name of "Antiphonary" will be found to be not very applicable: (1) six
canticle s; (2) twelve metricalhymn s; (3) sixty-ninecollect s for use at thecanonical hours ; (4) special collects; (5) seventyanthem s, or versicles; (6) the Creed; (7) the "Pater Noster". The most famous item in the contents is the venerableEucharist ic hymn "Sancti venite Christi corpus sumite", which is not found in any other ancient text. It was sung at the Communion of theclergy and is headed, "Ymnum quando comonicarent sacerdotes". A text of the hymn from the old manuscripts of Bobbio, with a literal translation, is given in "Essays on the Discipline and Constitution of the Early Irish Church," (p. 166) by Cardinal Moran, who refers to it as that "golden fragment of our ancient Irish Liturgy". The Creed in this codex differs in its wording from all other forms known to exist. It is in substance the original Creed of Nicaea. It does not contain the "ex Patre Filioque procedit", but merely states the "homoousia " of the three Persons of the HolyTrinity .The city of
Bangor, Maine , takes its name from this hymn.External links
* [http://books.google.com/books?vid=OCLC00680405&id=SAINAAAAIAAJ&pg=RA2-PR24&lpg=RA2-PR24&dq=Bangor+antiphonary&as_brr=1#PPP12,M1 The Antiphonary of Bangor: an early Irish manuscript]
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