Misplaced Pages

Cetinje Octoechos

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Cetinje Octoechos ( Serbian : Цетињски октоих or Cetinjski oktoih ) is a Serbian Orthodox liturgical book printed in 1494 in Cetinje , the capital of the Principality of Zeta (present-day Montenegro ). It is the first incunabulum written in the Serbian recension of Church Slavonic , as well as the first book printed in Cyrillic in Southeast Europe . The octoechos was produced under the direction of Hieromonk Makarije at the Crnojević printing house , which was founded in 1493 by Đurađ Crnojević , the ruler of Zeta. Printed in two instalments, its first volume contains the hymns to be sung to the first four tones of the Octoechos system of musical modes, and the hymns for the remaining four tones are included in the second volume. The two volumes are called Octoechos of the First Tone ( Oktoih prvoglasnik ) and Octoechos of the Fifth Tone ( Oktoih petoglasnik ), respectively.

#475524

4-567: Octoechos of the First Tone ( Oktoih prvoglasnik ) was finished on 4 January 1494. There are 108 copies of this book which survived. It contains 270 leaves sized 29 x 21.6 cm. It is characterized by high quality and clean two-coloured printing, red and black, with finely formed letters. It is decorated with headpieces and initials printed from woodcuts in the spirit of the Renaissance with traces of old manuscript traditions. In

8-450: A relatively small space. This Serbia -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Montenegro -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Headpiece (book illustration) Headpiece (also spelled head-piece ), is a decoration printed in the blank space at the beginning of a chapter or other division of a book, usually an ornamental panel, printer's ornament or

12-490: A small illustration done by a professional illustrator . The use of decorative headpieces in manuscripts was inherited by the medieval West from late Antique and Byzantine book production, and enjoyed particular popularity during the Renaissance . Headpieces, sometimes incorporating a rubric or heading, as well as Zoomorphic and anthropomorphic motifs were used widely in manuscripts and in editions of

16-668: The quality of its print and decoration it is considered to be at the same level as Venetian production at that time. The National Library of Montenegro "Đurđe Crnojević" in Cetinje published 600 facsimiles of Octoechos of the First Tone in 1987. Octoechos of the Fifth Tone ( Oktoih petoglasnik ) represents the first illustrated South Slavic incunabulum. It is preserved in fragments, the longest one containing 37 leaves. It has six woodcut illustrations, made by an artist who managed to put rather complex compositions with many characters on

#475524