SPLENDID CONTEMPORARY ENGLISH SILK AND SILVER THREAD-EMBROIDERED SATIN BINDING ON 1648 KING JAMES BIBLE AND 1652 BOOK OF PSALMS
BIBLE. The Holy Bible, Containing the Old and New Testaments. London: William Bentley, 1648. BOUND WITH: The Psalms of David. Edinburgh: Gedeon Lithgow, 1652. Small, thick octavo, contemporary full English embroidered white satin, satin pastedown endpapers, all edges gilt. Housed in a custom chemise and clamshell box.
Mid-17th-century King James Bible, bound with contemporary Psalms of David, in a beautiful period English embroidered binding, worked in silk and silver thread, featuring portraits of St. Martha, patroness of good house-keeping and St. Catherine, patron saint of girls.
First published in 1611 and indisputably the most influential of English Bible translations, the impact of the King James Version on piety, language and literature is incalculable. Bound with the Bible is the Psalms of David in meter, first published circa 1547. The contemporary English embroidered binding is unusual in its iconography, with portraits of both St. Martha (front board) and St. Catherine (back board), surrounded by wide strapwork frames comprised of silver gilt laid threads on a white satin ground, decorated with small rosettes in each corner and in each compartment of the spine. A strand of silver gilt thread edges the covers. “St. Martha, as patroness of feminine discretion and good house-keeping,… is usually shown with a ladle or skimmer in her hand… St. Catherine, dedicated to preaching Christianity, was determined to see the Emperor Maximin II and open his eyes to his cruelty… She delivered such a learned speech that the emperor decided to gather the most famous philosophers to refute her teaching. Catherine accepted the challenge and by her eloquence and intelligence, converted the philosophers to her faith… Sometimes she holds a book [as here], in reference to her great learning” (Ferguson, 176, 133, 110-11). Wing 2224; 2448B. Darlow & Moule 471. Herbert 607. Early owner signatures.
Text fine, moderate edge-wear to beautiful embroidered binding, minor rubbing to portraits. A wonderful specimen of 17th-century book arts, in excellent condition.