Join eight show-and-tell sessions with unique artefacts in the reading room of the Leiden University Library
Medieval manuscripts were collected and read for the texts they contained, especially those surviving from classical antiquity. But the book can tell us so much more than solely the text it contains! Studying the materiality of books can provide important information about how, when, where and even why they were made. It can also show how books were used and valued during the many centuries of their existence.
Dr Irene O’Daly (Book and Digital Media Studies, Leiden University) teaches her students about the contents and materiality of medieval manuscript books. During her courses, she frequently brings her students to the University Library, where she shows and discusses interesting items selected from its rich collections.
Leiden University Libraries, a partner of the Art of Reading in the Middle Ages project, invited Dr O’Daly to participate in a video series, introducing a wider audience to the fascinating world of the medieval manuscript book. This collaboration resulted in eight short videos, recorded in the Library’s Special Collections Reading Room. O’Daly presents the materiality of the codex from different angles, such as script, lay-out, traces of scribes and users. Every book she shows is made available as a digital facsimile by Leiden University Libraries on Europeana. We invite you to watch the videos first, and afterwards enjoy browsing and viewing the manuscripts yourself, for as long as you like, with ample opportunity to zoom in on details of your choice.
Houd er rekening mee dat deze pagina media-inhoud bevat die is ingesloten door YouTube. Het bekijken van deze media is onderworpen aan hun voorwaarden en privacyverklaringen. Raadpleeg hun privacyverklaringen voor meer informatie over hoe uw gegevens worden gebruikt.
van diensten en inhoud van derden
Als u niet alle ingesloten media wilt laden, kunt u .
Houd er rekening mee dat deze pagina media-inhoud bevat die is ingesloten door YouTube. Het bekijken van deze media is onderworpen aan hun voorwaarden en privacyverklaringen. Raadpleeg hun privacyverklaringen voor meer informatie over hoe uw gegevens worden gebruikt.
van diensten en inhoud van derden
Als u niet alle ingesloten media wilt laden, kunt u .
3: Discontinuous reading
Although manuscripts could be read from cover to cover, medieval readers also read selectively. Clever navigational tools such as indices and running titles, were introduced for readers to find specific parts of the text. We find these in schoolbooks, but also in devotional works and in other genres.
Houd er rekening mee dat deze pagina media-inhoud bevat die is ingesloten door YouTube. Het bekijken van deze media is onderworpen aan hun voorwaarden en privacyverklaringen. Raadpleeg hun privacyverklaringen voor meer informatie over hoe uw gegevens worden gebruikt.
van diensten en inhoud van derden
Als u niet alle ingesloten media wilt laden, kunt u .
4: Traces of scribes
Most medieval scribes did their job without revealing their identity. But several of them, upon reaching the end of the copied text and with a sigh of relief in their heart, signed and dated their work in a colophon. We can piece together further information about scribes by looking at errors made during the writing process and how they were corrected by the scribe or a colleague.
Houd er rekening mee dat deze pagina media-inhoud bevat die is ingesloten door YouTube. Het bekijken van deze media is onderworpen aan hun voorwaarden en privacyverklaringen. Raadpleeg hun privacyverklaringen voor meer informatie over hoe uw gegevens worden gebruikt.
van diensten en inhoud van derden
Als u niet alle ingesloten media wilt laden, kunt u .
5: Traces of users
A medieval manuscript book is like an archaeological object with many layers. These layers can reveal not only traces of the scribe but also traces of the users the book encountered during the many centuries of its existence. These traces can include various annotations, explaining or commenting on the text, but also doodles with or without significant relation to the text.
Houd er rekening mee dat deze pagina media-inhoud bevat die is ingesloten door YouTube. Het bekijken van deze media is onderworpen aan hun voorwaarden en privacyverklaringen. Raadpleeg hun privacyverklaringen voor meer informatie over hoe uw gegevens worden gebruikt.
van diensten en inhoud van derden
Als u niet alle ingesloten media wilt laden, kunt u .
6: Bindings
The binding is the ‘outside’ of a book, protecting the words on the inside. There are impressive medieval bindings with blind-tooled leather over wooden boards, but also simple bindings that just consist of a flexible parchment cover. Many medieval manuscripts were rebound, either in the Middle Ages, or later. Frequently, medieval and post-medieval books contain traces of ‘predecessors’: fragments of manuscripts that were repurposed, when their texts were deemed worthless. For example, parchment leaves could be cut up to strengthen a new binding.
Houd er rekening mee dat deze pagina media-inhoud bevat die is ingesloten door YouTube. Het bekijken van deze media is onderworpen aan hun voorwaarden en privacyverklaringen. Raadpleeg hun privacyverklaringen voor meer informatie over hoe uw gegevens worden gebruikt.
van diensten en inhoud van derden
Als u niet alle ingesloten media wilt laden, kunt u .
7: Composite volumes
The present state of a medieval manuscript can differ considerably from its original state, when it left the scriptorium or workshop. A binding can even contain one or more other manuscripts that were created separately. Such a composite volume may contain texts on related subject matters, but that is not necessarily always the case.
Houd er rekening mee dat deze pagina media-inhoud bevat die is ingesloten door YouTube. Het bekijken van deze media is onderworpen aan hun voorwaarden en privacyverklaringen. Raadpleeg hun privacyverklaringen voor meer informatie over hoe uw gegevens worden gebruikt.
van diensten en inhoud van derden
Als u niet alle ingesloten media wilt laden, kunt u .
8: Dimensions and forms
The appearance of a book can inform us about the way it was used. For instance, the dimensions of a Gradual are huge because it was used by choir singers during liturgical services in the church, where it was placed on a lectern. A tiny Processional, by contrast, could be held in one hand by a user while walking and singing in a procession.
Houd er rekening mee dat deze pagina media-inhoud bevat die is ingesloten door YouTube. Het bekijken van deze media is onderworpen aan hun voorwaarden en privacyverklaringen. Raadpleeg hun privacyverklaringen voor meer informatie over hoe uw gegevens worden gebruikt.
van diensten en inhoud van derden
Als u niet alle ingesloten media wilt laden, kunt u .
This blog is part of the Art of Reading in the Middle Ages project which explores how medieval reading culture evolved and became a fundamental aspect of European culture.