Description

Book Synopsis
First printed edition, with facsimile and studies, of a significant manuscript from medieval England. The Thorney liber vitae (BL, MS Add. 40,000, fols 1-12v) consists of many hundreds of names written in the front of a tenth-century gospel book. This liber vitae is one of only three such compilations surviving frommedieval England, the others being the Durham liber vitae (BL, MS Cotton Domitian A vii) and the New Minster liber vitae (BL, MS Stowe 944). Begun at Thorney abbey (Cambridgeshire) in the late eleventh century and continued into the late twelfth, it purports to be a record of the names of confraters of the abbey, that is of those people who, through their friendship and gifts to the abbey, were included in the daily prayers of the monks of the community. The present volume is the first complete edition of this important text, and includes a complete facsimile of the pages. It also contains studies of the manuscript context, of the names included and, where possible, the identities and relationship to the abbey of those named, many of whom are also entered in the priory cartulary known as the Red Book of Thorney. The introduction provides a wide-ranging historical context for the production of the liber vitae. Lynda Rollason is Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Archaeology at Durham University. With contributions from Richard Gameson, John Insley and Katharine Keats-Rohan.

Trade Review
The Thorney 'Liber Vitae' provides a model for how future researchers might wish to edit, analyze, and present similar manuscript sources. . . . [A]ny would-be editor, paleographer, and codicologist would do well to browse its pages. * SPECULUM *
An invaluable research tool, one which will find a welcome place in all serious research libraries. * HISTORY *
This volume contains much material of high quality: the excellent facsimile pages, the clear printed text, the thoughtful accompanying essays. It is a work that will surely be used by many scholars working in the fields of Old English and Middle English, not only in onomastics but also in language and in history, and not only by scholars currently working but also by those in generations to come. In brief, this volume is an enormous contribution to scholarship. * THE MEDIEVAL REVIEW *

Table of Contents
Historical Introduction The Manuscript Context: The Thorney Gospels The Personal Names of the Liber Vitae of Thorney Abbey: An Introduction to the Onomasticon Introduction to the Prosopographical Study of the Thorney Liber Vitae The Edition The Thorney Liber Vitae: Planning, Production, and Palaeography The Onomasticon The Prosopography The Goldsmith's Entry (4r1) (a): The Language of the Goldsmith's Entry The Goldsmith's Entry (4r1) (b): Palaeographical Commentary on the Goldsmith's Entry The Goldsmith's Entry (4r1) (c): Palaeographical Commentary on the Goldsmith's Entry The Entry for Turstan of Stamford the Moneyer (10v57) The Language of Folios 9v1, 10r1b-10r1d The Thorney Relic-List, Folio 11v Abbreviated References Index 1: Linguistic Index: Manuscript Forms and Lemmata Index 2: Lemmata, the Linguistic and Prosopographical Commentaries and the Introductory Essays

The Thorney Liber Vitae (London, British Library,

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A Hardback by Lynda Rollason

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    View other formats and editions of The Thorney Liber Vitae (London, British Library, by Lynda Rollason

    Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
    Publication Date: 18/06/2015
    ISBN13: 9781783270101, 978-1783270101
    ISBN10: 1783270101

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    First printed edition, with facsimile and studies, of a significant manuscript from medieval England. The Thorney liber vitae (BL, MS Add. 40,000, fols 1-12v) consists of many hundreds of names written in the front of a tenth-century gospel book. This liber vitae is one of only three such compilations surviving frommedieval England, the others being the Durham liber vitae (BL, MS Cotton Domitian A vii) and the New Minster liber vitae (BL, MS Stowe 944). Begun at Thorney abbey (Cambridgeshire) in the late eleventh century and continued into the late twelfth, it purports to be a record of the names of confraters of the abbey, that is of those people who, through their friendship and gifts to the abbey, were included in the daily prayers of the monks of the community. The present volume is the first complete edition of this important text, and includes a complete facsimile of the pages. It also contains studies of the manuscript context, of the names included and, where possible, the identities and relationship to the abbey of those named, many of whom are also entered in the priory cartulary known as the Red Book of Thorney. The introduction provides a wide-ranging historical context for the production of the liber vitae. Lynda Rollason is Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Archaeology at Durham University. With contributions from Richard Gameson, John Insley and Katharine Keats-Rohan.

    Trade Review
    The Thorney 'Liber Vitae' provides a model for how future researchers might wish to edit, analyze, and present similar manuscript sources. . . . [A]ny would-be editor, paleographer, and codicologist would do well to browse its pages. * SPECULUM *
    An invaluable research tool, one which will find a welcome place in all serious research libraries. * HISTORY *
    This volume contains much material of high quality: the excellent facsimile pages, the clear printed text, the thoughtful accompanying essays. It is a work that will surely be used by many scholars working in the fields of Old English and Middle English, not only in onomastics but also in language and in history, and not only by scholars currently working but also by those in generations to come. In brief, this volume is an enormous contribution to scholarship. * THE MEDIEVAL REVIEW *

    Table of Contents
    Historical Introduction The Manuscript Context: The Thorney Gospels The Personal Names of the Liber Vitae of Thorney Abbey: An Introduction to the Onomasticon Introduction to the Prosopographical Study of the Thorney Liber Vitae The Edition The Thorney Liber Vitae: Planning, Production, and Palaeography The Onomasticon The Prosopography The Goldsmith's Entry (4r1) (a): The Language of the Goldsmith's Entry The Goldsmith's Entry (4r1) (b): Palaeographical Commentary on the Goldsmith's Entry The Goldsmith's Entry (4r1) (c): Palaeographical Commentary on the Goldsmith's Entry The Entry for Turstan of Stamford the Moneyer (10v57) The Language of Folios 9v1, 10r1b-10r1d The Thorney Relic-List, Folio 11v Abbreviated References Index 1: Linguistic Index: Manuscript Forms and Lemmata Index 2: Lemmata, the Linguistic and Prosopographical Commentaries and the Introductory Essays

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