Old Russian neumes Sticherarion, in Church Slavonic, illuminated musical manuscript on paper [Russia, mid-17th century].An illuminated Russian Sticherarion, in a contemporary binding. 195 x 150mm. 141 leaves, apparently complete, traces of gathering signatures survive, modern pencil foliation followed here, 16-18 lines written in black ink in Cyrillic half uncial, staffless diastematic (heightened) Old Russian neumes, headings, initials, pomety and marginal flourish at opening of text in red, one full-page miniature of the Annunciation pasted onto f.1v (marginal stains throughout, margins of f.2 repaired). Contemporary gilt- and blind-stamped binding of calf over boards, brass clasps (spine a little scuffed). Provenance : (1) Ignatiy, son of the priest Nikita, of the village of Veden'ya: ownership inscription on ff.76v-77. The 1990 Sotheby's catalogue states that the watermark is datable to the mid-17th century and is close to Heawood, Watermarks, mainly of the 17th and 18th centuries , 1957, no 2001. (2) Paul M. Fekula (1905-1982): his MS 626, published in The Paul M. Fekula Collection , 1988 and Slavic Manuscripts from the Fekula Collection , 1983, no XVII. His sale at Sotheby's, Russian Manuscripts from the Fourteenth to the Nineteenth Century From the Paul M. Fekula Collection , 29 November 1990, lot 78. (3) Schøyen Collection, MS 1797.Text and music : The text comprises stichera , or hymns proper to the various feasts inserted at specific points in the regular services. They are for: the Nativity of the Mother of God; the Elevation of the Holy Cross; the Presentation of the Mother of God; the Royal Hours on Christmas Eve and the Office of the Nativity; Epiphany; the Presentation of Christ in the Temple; the Annunciation; Palm Sunday; the Ascension; Pentecost; the Transfiguration; and the Dormition of the Mother of God. The small semi-uncial hand with neumes and pomety (marks to indicate pitch, said to have been introduced by Ivan Shaidur in c.1600 as a means to simplify the reading of the neumes) is that usually employed in musical manuscripts and is istinorechny , i.e. it corresponds to the normal pronunciation of Church Slavonic, instead of the archaic singing tradition.