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SJLahey , to medievodons
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Rub-a-dub-dub! Bath-time in a 15th-century copy of Régime du corps, a personal guide to home composed by the physician Aldobrandino of Siena in 1256.
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SJLahey , to medievodons
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Polka-dots in a lovely copy of Platearius from Cambridge University Library.
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SJLahey , to medievodons
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“‘God created … every winged bird according to its kind’, by which Genesis 1:21 mainly meant & , because what other could you possibly want?” — this 13th century artist, apparently.
One for @ct_bergstrom


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SJLahey , to medievodons
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you’re overcome by the sheer horror of c.16 of the 1st Statute of Westminster (3 Edw 1) 😳.
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SJLahey , to medievodons
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Back in Cambridge University Library today, taking in more medieval common .
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SJLahey , to medievodons
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A stripy, ‘S’ from Cambridge University Library. 🌈
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SJLahey , to medievodons
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On Thursday, I had the honour of introducing a Girton College student to Cambridge University Library and giving her a crash-course in handling . Here’s a highlight from one of them.
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SJLahey , to medievodons
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A in one of the of Pembroke College, Cambridge (now held at Cambridge University Library).
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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A golden initial like a tiny in one of Cambridge University Library’s medieval English statute books. 🌞
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SJLahey OP ,
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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At Girton College, Cambridge, ’s has the sweetest little puppy-dog eyes you ever did see… 🥹
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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Lovely portrait of a woman tucked away in a Statuta Angliæ manuscript from Cambridge University Library.
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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‘M’ for the Merry Month of May in a Cambridge University Library statute book.
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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Are any of you at London Firsts tonight? If so, let’s meet up! (I’m here in the queue…) @bookhistodons

SJLahey , to medievodons
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in 6 May 1236: Death of Roger of Wendover, Benedictine monk & 1st of a series of important chroniclers at St Albans. His best-known chronicle, Flores historiarum, survives in 2 —including the 1 shown in the 📷—& an edition in Matthew Paris’ (c.1200–1259) Chronica majora.
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SJLahey , to medievodons
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For , selections from the Sankt Florian Psalter—St Florian being the patron saint of . (I love the ‘jewelled’ line-fillers in this codex).
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A medieval manuscript leaf: folio 57 recto in Warsaw, National Library, Rps 8002 III. 2 columns of text in Polish, each of 26 lines, in black ink. Every 2nd or 3rd line opens with a slightly enlarged initial in gold leaf and colours: blue, red, and green. Whenever the text does not reach the end of a line, the empty space has been filled with an (aptly-named) ‘line-filler’, a decorative shape intended to complete the line. Usually line-fillers are formed of simple, abstract, pen-work. The examples on this page are more elaborate. Some are dense blocks of coloured ink, with intricate geometric patterns meticulously picked-out by leaving some areas uncoloured. Others consist of bars of burnished gold leaf adorned with repeating patterns of interlocking geometric windows, each filled-in with translucent pigments in emerald green or rose pink. The gold catches the light, making the golden initials and line-fillers appear to appear to spring up off the page.
Detail from a medieval manuscript leaf: folio 51 verso in Warsaw, National Library, Rps 8002 III. 2 columns of medieval Polish, each with 17 lines of text in black ink. Every second or third line opens with a slightly enlarged decorated initial in gold and colours, mostly blue, red, and green. Whenever the text does not reach the end of a line, the empty space has been completed with a decorative ‘line-filler’. Most line-fillers are fairly simple, created of abstract pen-work, but most of the examples here are truly luxurious: bars of burnished gold leaf adorned with repeating patterns made of tiny, interlocking geometric forms. Each form is filled-in with translucent pigment in rich, vivid hues—deep cobalt blue, ruby red, jade green—and then highlighted with white, to create a 3-dimensional effect. The technique creates the illusion of line-fillers made from enamelled jewels, floating above the parchment.

AmazingMeagen , to medievodons
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The season of hosted classes started at this week.

& Documents for



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sapiens , to random
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THE ART OF READING IN THE MIDDLE AGES
https://www.medieval-reads.eu/

"The project ‘The Art of Reading in the Middle Ages’ will show the importance of medieval reading culture as a European movement by bringing together (digitised) manuscripts produced between c. 500 and c. 1550 from across Europe, unlocking their educational potential by curational and editorial enrichment, using innovative ways for displaying and handling digital objects in an educational context."

ClaireFromClare ,
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@sapiens This was a wonderful project! You've prompted me to revisit the which I applauded when very new on Mastodon: https://h-net.social/@ClaireFromClare/109495946015311257
1/3

SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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Today I’m back ‘home’ in Cambridge University Library—where mythical hazards lurk in the ! 😱🐉
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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I have found my True Love, and it is this miniature, Mohawked, axe-wielding maniac and their, uh… [hound? horse? rabid hedgehog? (whatever it is, I’m here for it)] scribbled by some medieval or early modern kid in a Cambridge University Library legal manuscript. ! 🪓🤺

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SJLahey , to bookhistodons
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in &
Happy birthday to…
• Leonard Eugene Boyle, OP, OC (13 Nov 1923–1999), 🇮🇪 & 🇨🇦 medievalist & palaeographer, & 1st Irish & North American Prefect of the Vatican Library in Rome (1984–1997).
• Martin Bodmer (13 Nov 1899–1971), Swiss bibliophile, scholar, book collector.

And happy belated birthday to Wilfrid Voynich (12 Nov [O.S. 31 Oct] 1865–1930), Polish revolutionary, antiquarian, bibliophile of Voynich manuscript fame.
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