Description
Book SynopsisThis book is the first to address medieval book history for graduate students of medieval English literature. Ralph Hanna presents a history of the English medieval book through a series of examples centred on carefully chosen texts and their physical and cultural surrounds.
Trade ReviewReviews'Scholarship in this work is superb. Quotations, translations, bibliography are spot on. Professor Hanna’s lifetime of intelligent work in the field glows at all points of discussion.'
MS referee
'This is a first-rate book from a scholar at the forefront of palaeographical and bibliographical study; it will have a wide readership. It will be an excellent partner for the recent Owen-Crocker volume 'Working with Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts.'
Series Editors
'This handsome volume teaches far more than the facts of book history, manuscript culture, and Middle English Literature. It is a model of how to sleuth, how to think critically, how to enter into a detective mindset 'in which every implicit assumption of knowledge [is] teased out, queried and productively qualified.'
Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und LiteraturenTable of Contents
- Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- On the reproductions
- 1. Texts and their books: the case of 'Beowulf'
- 2. Medieval authors and texts: the Middle English 'Benjamin'
- Appendix: The manuscripts of 'Benjamin'
- 3. The history of a book: Bodleian Library, MS Rawlinson C.285
- 4. Shared exemplars: British Library, MS Cotton Galba E.ix and its relations
- 5. Scribal oeuvres: ‘Chaucer’s Scribe’ and his 'Canterbury Tales'
- 6. A book contract and its ‘set text’: John Forbor’s Psalter
- Appendix: The Slaithwaite indenture: a transcription, translation and notes
- 7. Provenances: some medieval libraries
- Appendix: Selections from medieval booklists
- John Erghome (OESA of York)
- Thomas of Woodstock, duke of Gloucester
- The lord Welles
- Index of manuscripts cited
- Index of scholars cited