![1820NE01A.jpg](https://gazette-eu-west2.azureedge.net/media/4595/1820ne01a.jpg?width=750&height=500&mode=max&updated=08%2f03%2f2017+16%3a48%3a02)
They form part of the finest English illuminated manuscript still in private hands. Forming a Vita Christi, or life of Christ and the Virgin, of c.1190-1200, the sequence was reorganised and supplemented in the late 15th century with a further 57 large or full-page miniatures of that period to produce a rosary and devotional work.
This was done for a Norfolk family and the later miniatures are of East Anglian origin, but the original, late Romanesque miniatures may once have been part of a Psalter, perhaps made in York or elsewhere in northern England.
With more than 50 such glorious miniatures, it must have been a commission of regal opulence.
At Sotheby's on December 4, the separately catalogued and much-publicised Ottheinrich Bible, an illuminated German New Testament of 1430, failed to match a £2m-3m estimate, but the English manuscript provided considerable compensation.
Formerly in the great Dyson Perrins collection, sold in the same rooms in 1959, this time it was acquired for £1.5m by the leading German specialist dealer Dr Jorn Günther.