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Medieval and Illuminated manuscripts collection

Overview

Scope and Contents

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

Papyrus Fragment

Bible chapters

Leaf from the Book of Hours

Passage from the Book of Ecclesiastes, the Bible

“Sentences” of Peter Lombard

Buddhist scriptures, Chinese block printing

Book of Isaiah, Chapters 41-42, the Bible

Prayer, Book of Hours

Page from an Antiphonary (liturgical songbook)

Leaf from Justinianus, Codex de Tortis by Baptista de Tortis, Venice

“Miracle on the Sea of Galilee,” from Breviarum Romanum Cum Calendario (Roman Breviary with Calendar)

Leaf from an anthology of poetry, Persia

Unidentified

Leaf from Sidonia the Sorceress, printed by William Morris at the Kelmscott Press

Agnus Dei, sheet music, Gregorian chant, probably Spanish

Leaf from The Golden Legend by Jacobus de Voragine

Illuminated leaf with poem by William Wordsworth

Two leaves from unidentified copy of Liber Chronicarum (Nuremberg chronicle)



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Medieval and Illuminated manuscripts collection, 30 B.C.-1893 C.E. | Purdue University Libraries, Archives and Special Collections

By Shauna Borger

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Collection Overview

Title: Medieval and Illuminated manuscripts collection, 30 B.C.-1893 C.E.Add to your cart.

Extent: 18.0 Items. More info below.

Date Acquired: 01/14/2010

Subjects: Poetry

Forms of Material: Manuscripts (document genre)

Languages: English, Chinese, Arabic, Latin, German, French

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The Medieval and Illuminated Manuscripts collection (30 B.C.E.-1893 C.E..; 0.5 cubic feet) includes 15 manuscript pages of Medieval and illuminated manuscripts. The following items can be found in the collection: three chapters from the Book of Timothy in the New Testament of the Bible, a passage from the Book of Ecclesiastes from the Old Testament, prayers and stories from the Book of Hours, Buddhist scriptures in Chinese block printing, poetry from Persia, and song and chant books. Each leaf from the collection was separated from its original monograph and acquired as an individual leaf. Information about the original monograph is included in the inventory of the collection. One item remains unidentified. The collection materials include paper or vellum.

<b>History of illuminated manuscripts</b>

During the Middle Ages, monasteries were the chief centers of book production. Specially trained monks spent tedious hours copying texts by hand and illuminating or decorating pages.

Two main materials used in making manuscript pages were parchment (the prepared skin of a sheep or goat) and vellum (fine parchment prepared from the skin of a calf). Vellum was the preferred, but more expensive, material. First, the manuscript-makers smoothed the surfaces of these materials with a pumice stone. Then, they folded the parchment or vellum leaves once across the middle and what is called a quaternion. After enough quaternions had been gathered to form a book, they were sent to the scribe, who performed the task of copying an original text.

The scribe’s work took place at a desk in a room called a scriptorium. The entire room was under the general supervision of the monastery but it also had unique, stringent rules of its own. Scriptores, as the writers were called, could not sued artificial light for fear of damaging the manuscripts. To prevent idleness and any type of disturbance, no one except higher officials of the monastery could enter the room while the scribes were working. The scribe himself could not alter the text in any way, even if the original he was copying was inaccurate. The armories, or special officer in charge of the scriptorium, demanded absolute silence, and required the scribes to signal if they needed something. If a scribe needed a book, he would extend his hands and make a gesture of turning over leaves. If he wanted a pagan work, he would scratch his ears in the manner of a dog.

Work in the scriptorium involved special preparation of the parchment or vellum pages, in addition to the actual writing of the text. A scribe, or perhaps a monk specially trained in the ruling of manuscript pages, pricked holes at proper intervals down each side of the page with an awl and then drew lines from hole to hole with a hard metal stylus. If the book required it, he left space for decoration along the margins or elsewhere. After the scribe had ruled the leaves and procured a pen and ink, he was ready to write. If a patron desired only one copy of a book, a scribe usually placed the original in front of himself and copied it. If, however, a patron wanted a number of copies of a book, several scribes wrote while another monk read the original text to them. Scribes usually spent six hours a day copying books.

After scriptores had copied the words of the text, they gave the pages to monks who illuminated, or illustrated, the pages with figural scenes, geometric patterns, etc. The illuminator almost always made a preparatory drawing accompanied by written notes indicating the colors he should apply. The colors used were primarily gold, red, and blue, with green, purple, yellow, white and black being used less often. The illuminator executed drawings in pen and ink, or in opaque or transparent water-colors. If the illuminations were red, they were called “rubrications,” and the artist was a rubricator. The illustrations on manuscript pages could be full or half-page illuminations, marginal images accompanying the text, or elaborate initials introducing the first word of a sentence or page.

When the illuminator had completed his work, he gave it to the binder, who sewed the pages together and added a cover which might have a leather surface and metal clasps. Ivory, silver, or gold covered the finest books in Medieval Times.

The painstaking process of producing manuscripts was considered a labor of love and piety, entered upon with prayer and blessed by the abbot of the monastery. The abbot would often tell the scribes that every letter transcribed would pay for one sin.

With the advent of the printing press, the art of creating illuminated manuscripts largely disappeared, since these ornate and beautiful volumes were expensive and time consuming to produce when compared with printed material. But during the 15th and 16th centuries, illuminations were added to printed books.

Source(s):

Society of American Archivists Glossary of Archival Records and Terminology

Materials within collection file

Subject/Index Terms

Poetry

Administrative Information

Repository: Purdue University Libraries, Archives and Special Collections

Alternate Extent Statement: 0.5 cubic feet (1 flat box)

Access Restrictions: Collection is open to the public.

Acquisition Source: unknown

Preferred Citation: MSP 49, Medieval and Illuminated manuscripts collection, Archives and Special Collections, Purdue University Libraries


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Item:

[Item 1: Papyrus Fragment, 30 B.C.E.],
[Item 2: Bible chapters, 1230 C.E.],
[Item 3: Leaf from the Book of Hours, 1350 C.E],
[Item 4: Passage from the Book of Ecclesiastes, the Bible, 1360 C.E.],
[Item 5: “Sentences” of Peter Lombard, 1301-1400],
[Item 6: Buddhist scriptures, Chinese block printing, 1440 C.E.],
[Item 7: Book of Isaiah, Chapters 41-42, the Bible, 1401-1500],
[Item 8: Prayer, Book of Hours, 1490 C.E.],
[Item 9: Page from an Antiphonary (liturgical songbook), 1401-1500],
[Item 10: Leaf from Justinianus, Codex de Tortis by Baptista de Tortis, Venice, 1496 C.E.],
[Item 11: “Miracle on the Sea of Galilee,” from Breviarum Romanum Cum Calendario (Roman Breviary with Calendar), 1464 C.E.],
[Item 12: Leaf from an anthology of poetry, Persia, 1625 C.E.],
[Item 13: Unidentified],
[Item 14: Leaf from Sidonia the Sorceress, printed by William Morris at the Kelmscott Press, 1893 C.E.],
[Item 15: Agnus Dei, sheet music, Gregorian chant, probably Spanish, 1707-1800 C.E.],
[Item 16: Leaf from The Golden Legend by Jacobus de Voragine, 1527 C.E.],
[Item 17: Illuminated leaf with poem by William Wordsworth],
[Item 18: Two leaves from unidentified copy of Liber Chronicarum (Nuremberg chronicle), 1493 C.E.],
[All]

Item 1: Papyrus Fragment, 30 B.C.E.Add to your cart.
An original piece of papyrus, a primitive writing material made from a reed growing along the Nile River in Egypt. The writing is Hieratic, a cursive form of hieroglyphic or picture writing. This papyrus fragment is from the Ptolemaic period, which was from 323 B.C. to 30 B.C.E. It is a portion of a roll formerly owned by Reverend W. Frankland Hood and later by William Randolph Hearst. Purchased from Dawson’s Book Shop in Los Angeles.
Item 2: Bible chapters, 1230 C.E.Add to your cart.
Chapters from the First and Second Books of Timothy, the New Testament, French
Item 3: Leaf from the Book of Hours, 1350 C.EAdd to your cart.
“Reflections on the Story of Mary Magdalene,” Book of Hours, English. An original page from a Gothic Book of Hours. The text contains reflections of a religious scholar on the story of Mary Magdalene as told by the Evangelist Luke. Large floriated initials begin separate paragraphs of the text. The initials are written in red or blue and set within gold leaf frames, with floral designs.
Item 4: Passage from the Book of Ecclesiastes, the Bible, 1360 C.E.Add to your cart.
Large leaf from a Bible produced in English by monks of the famous Winchester School of Illumination. The Latin text, which derives from the Book of Ecclesiastes of the Old Testament, is arranged in two columns and written in brown ink. The initial “O” is painted in gold leaf and set within a blue and brown framed panel. A bird stands inside the initial and floral ornament fills the rest of the panel. The two long, leafy vines extending from the initial is characteristic of the spreading plant ornaments found in many Gothic initials.
Item 5: “Sentences” of Peter Lombard, 1301-1400Add to your cart.
Leaf on vellum from a 14th century manuscript of the “Sentences” of Peter Lombard. Peter Lombard compiled his “Sentences” from the works of the Fathers of the Church about 200 years before this manuscript was written. It is on tissue-thin uterine vellum in a liturgical black letter hand, with penwork decorations in red and blue.
Item 6: Buddhist scriptures, Chinese block printing, 1440 C.E.Add to your cart.
Leaf from Buddhist scriptures printed from wooden blocks in 1440 C.E., the year of Columbus’ birth and prior to printing in Europe.
Item 7: Book of Isaiah, Chapters 41-42, the Bible, 1401-1500Add to your cart.
Vellum leaf containing German text from the end of Chapter 41 and the beginning of Chapter 42 of the Book of Isaiah of the Old Testament. The rubric “C XLII” in the upper part of the right column of the text is an abbreviation for chapter 42, which begins immediately below. The first initial of this chapter is an “E,” painted in blue and embellished with delicate brown, spiraling tendrils. The ensuing text, in black ink, is written in Gothic script.
Item 8: Prayer, Book of Hours, 1490 C.E.Add to your cart.
Vellum leaf containing the Italian text of a personal prayer for divine guidance. The invocation is written in Latin in black ink, and is followed by a brief title inscribed in red ink. A series of gold and blue crosses with floriated frames separate different lines of the prayer. A cross is substituted for the letter “M” in “Omega” in line 7. In the bottom left corner there is the initial “I,” painted in gold leaf against a red and blue background that is embellished with delicate scrollwork. Three peacock feathers also grace the initial.
Item 9: Page from an Antiphonary (liturgical songbook), 1401-1500Add to your cart.
Small Antiphonal leaf on vellum, with French Gothic script writing in black and red. Usually Antiphonaries were huge volumes placed on lecterns so that the whole choir might sing from them. This leaf, however, is from one of the much rarer smaller volumes made for individual use. The musical notation consists of square notes on a four-line stave, accompanied by Latin words. The song which appears on the page is a hymn for All Saint’s Day. The initials are delicately wrought in color and further decorated with white tracery against a brushed gold background. In some cases flowers and fruits, emblematic of various Christian virtues, are entwined about the initials.
Item 10: Leaf from Justinianus, Codex de Tortis by Baptista de Tortis, Venice, 1496 C.E.Add to your cart.
Leaf of incunabula from Justinianus, Codex de Tortis, printed in black and red, with the initials in blue supplied by hand. Printed at Venice in 1496 by Baptista de Tortis, one of the most skillful printers of the 15th century.
Item 11: “Miracle on the Sea of Galilee,” from Breviarum Romanum Cum Calendario (Roman Breviary with Calendar), 1464 C.E.Add to your cart.
Manuscript page in German from a small Breviary (book used for personal devotions) on vellum with Latin text written in gothic characters, two columns to a page, it contains elaborate initial letters and penwork in reds, blues, and mauves. Created at Lucca, a Cistercian Abbey in the Diocese of Minden, by the scribe Bartholomew in 1464. The passage shown comes from the Gospel of Matthew, and describes Christ’s calming of the Sea of Galilee.
Item 12: Leaf from an anthology of poetry, Persia, 1625 C.E.Add to your cart.
Item 13: UnidentifiedAdd to your cart.
Item 14: Leaf from Sidonia the Sorceress, printed by William Morris at the Kelmscott Press, 1893 C.E.Add to your cart.
Leaf printed at the Kelmscott Press, one of the most noted English private presses.
Item 15: Agnus Dei, sheet music, Gregorian chant, probably Spanish, 1707-1800 C.E.Add to your cart.
Large page of sheet music on vellum containing a segment of the lectionary of the mass. The page was large so that when it was placed on a lectern all members of the choir could read it from where they were singing.
Item 16: Leaf from The Golden Legend by Jacobus de Voragine, 1527 C.E.Add to your cart.
Printed by Wynkyn de Worde at London. This is the 8th English edition.
Item 17: Illuminated leaf with poem by William WordsworthAdd to your cart.
Date unknown
Item 18: Two leaves from unidentified copy of Liber Chronicarum (Nuremberg chronicle), 1493 C.E.Add to your cart.
Printed by Anton Koberger, transferred from Humanities, Social Science, and Education library, Purdue Libraries


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