Book of Kells (Ireland, early 9th century)
Dating from about the same time as the British Library Harley
codex mentioned in the text,
this detail from a page of Canon Tables is as much a forerunner of French beak-head
stone decoration (beasts biting a roll)
as of column-swallowers. The columns separate the canon-tables, and they have
square capitals
decorated with typically obsessive knotwork. The beast-head (one of a symmetrical
pair) is an extension of the column
rather than a capital - but the relationship with column-swallowers is obvious.
Whether it was an early parallel development or an influence - given the remoteness
of Ireland in the Viking-torn seas
of the ninth century - is impossible to say.