User:JacobR02/Inhabited initial

An inhabited initial is an initial, an enlarged letter at the beginning of a chapter, paragraph or other section of text that contains an illustration of human or animal figures within the letter. Figures in inhabited initials may be related to the contexts of the text, but do not need to be. They may be purely decorative. They do not depict narratives, unlike the similar historiated initial, which depicts an identifiable scene or story . '''These illustrated initials were first seen in the Insular art of the early 8th century, and were later characteristic of Romanesque illuminated manuscripts of the late 11th and 12 centuries. Both are common in luxury illuminated manuscripts. The earliest known example is in the Saint Petersburg Bede, an Insular manuscript of 731-46, and the Vespasian Psalter has another .'''

'''The size and degree of decoration of an inhabited initial may further give clues to both its importance and location. Letters that began a new or particularly noteworthy section might receive more flourish and space. In luxury manuscripts an entire page might be devoted to an initial ; both the size and ostentatiousness of a manuscript reflect both on the status of the manuscript and on its owner .'''