The manuscript Lewis E 22 at the Free Library of Philadelphia has an uncommonly complete provenance. Written in the late twelfth century at Santa María de Benevívere in the Tierra de Campos of Palencia, Spain, an ex libris inscription on the last lines of the final folio records its origin, with an enigmatic addition by a later hand with the name “Didacus.” Following the exclaustration of Benevívere in the nineteenth century, the manuscript passed through a series of collections in England and Canada before it arrived in the United States with John Frederick Lewis, including those of William Braggeand George Dunn. Furnishing new evidence for its provenance and contextualizing its creation at Benevívere, this paper offers a new interpretatio...
This article establishes a precise date and context for British Library, Cotton MS. Domitian A. VIII...
William Scheves (c. 1440–1497), Archbishop of St Andrews, marked his books with a distinctive owners...
‘All Estates and signiories wich haue had and doe beare rule ouer men, haue either byn and are Comon...
This essay works backwards and forwards from a few known points in the history of an early 13th-cent...
This article examines Newberry MS 5017, the Book of Magical Charms, a manuscript miscellany dated no...
Stains on manuscripts are signs indicative of their past lives left by time and usage. Reading these...
As the recent bloom of literary scholarship around manuscripts shows, the longstanding desire to cor...
The eleventh- or twelfth-century parchment codex 170/347 is one of the rarities archived in the UCLA...
The Historia de los Reyes Moros de Granada, written by the chronicler Hernando de Baeza in the first...
A Psalter from the third quarter of the fifteenth century is preserved in the collections of St Patr...
The Tudor period saw a revolution in antiquarian histories of Britain. Their networks of transmissio...
This essay traces the journey of a breviary from the cathedral of Le Mans to the University of Nevad...
The Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts can be used not only to track the provenance of individual ma...
The antiquarian Joseph Holland (d. 1605) owned a large, but damaged, Chaucerian manuscript from the ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
This article establishes a precise date and context for British Library, Cotton MS. Domitian A. VIII...
William Scheves (c. 1440–1497), Archbishop of St Andrews, marked his books with a distinctive owners...
‘All Estates and signiories wich haue had and doe beare rule ouer men, haue either byn and are Comon...
This essay works backwards and forwards from a few known points in the history of an early 13th-cent...
This article examines Newberry MS 5017, the Book of Magical Charms, a manuscript miscellany dated no...
Stains on manuscripts are signs indicative of their past lives left by time and usage. Reading these...
As the recent bloom of literary scholarship around manuscripts shows, the longstanding desire to cor...
The eleventh- or twelfth-century parchment codex 170/347 is one of the rarities archived in the UCLA...
The Historia de los Reyes Moros de Granada, written by the chronicler Hernando de Baeza in the first...
A Psalter from the third quarter of the fifteenth century is preserved in the collections of St Patr...
The Tudor period saw a revolution in antiquarian histories of Britain. Their networks of transmissio...
This essay traces the journey of a breviary from the cathedral of Le Mans to the University of Nevad...
The Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts can be used not only to track the provenance of individual ma...
The antiquarian Joseph Holland (d. 1605) owned a large, but damaged, Chaucerian manuscript from the ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
This article establishes a precise date and context for British Library, Cotton MS. Domitian A. VIII...
William Scheves (c. 1440–1497), Archbishop of St Andrews, marked his books with a distinctive owners...
‘All Estates and signiories wich haue had and doe beare rule ouer men, haue either byn and are Comon...