Books before print – manuscripts – were modified continuously throughout the medieval period. Focusing on the ninth and twelfth centuries, this volume explores such material changes as well as the varying circumstances under which handwritten books were produced, used and collected. An important theme is the relationship between the physical book and its users. Can we reflect on reading practices through an examination of the layout of a text? To what extent can we use the contents of libraries to understand the culture of the book? The volume explores such issues by focusing on a broad palette of texts and through a detailed analysis of manuscripts from all corners of Europe
In manuscript cultures of the Middle Ages, every textual object was hand-crafted by human agents who...
Of the many thousands of works in the General Rare Book Collection of the Queen Elizabeth II Library...
This text takes the form of a conversation between Danné Ojeda and Mathieu Lommen with a preliminary...
Books before print – manuscripts – were modified continuously throughout the medieval period. Focusi...
Books before print – manuscripts – were modified continuously throughout the medieval period. Focusi...
Recent work in Middle English literature addresses the emerging relationship between formal analysis...
The University of St. Andrews Library Open Access Fund supported this Open Access publication. The L...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
This article argues that in the fifteenth century, many manuscripts were physically recycled, and th...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
How did tenth-century readers describe the experience of reading—or merely holding—books? The relate...
This volume explores various approaches to study vernacular books and reading practices across Europ...
This thesis examines the sustainability of fifteenth-century manuscripts. It analyses the durability...
Handwritten books were an important medium for preserving and transmitting knowledge in the centurie...
In manuscript cultures of the Middle Ages, every textual object was hand-crafted by human agents who...
Of the many thousands of works in the General Rare Book Collection of the Queen Elizabeth II Library...
This text takes the form of a conversation between Danné Ojeda and Mathieu Lommen with a preliminary...
Books before print – manuscripts – were modified continuously throughout the medieval period. Focusi...
Books before print – manuscripts – were modified continuously throughout the medieval period. Focusi...
Recent work in Middle English literature addresses the emerging relationship between formal analysis...
The University of St. Andrews Library Open Access Fund supported this Open Access publication. The L...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
This article argues that in the fifteenth century, many manuscripts were physically recycled, and th...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
How did tenth-century readers describe the experience of reading—or merely holding—books? The relate...
This volume explores various approaches to study vernacular books and reading practices across Europ...
This thesis examines the sustainability of fifteenth-century manuscripts. It analyses the durability...
Handwritten books were an important medium for preserving and transmitting knowledge in the centurie...
In manuscript cultures of the Middle Ages, every textual object was hand-crafted by human agents who...
Of the many thousands of works in the General Rare Book Collection of the Queen Elizabeth II Library...
This text takes the form of a conversation between Danné Ojeda and Mathieu Lommen with a preliminary...