Bound fast with letters : medieval writers, readers, and texts

cover image

Where to find it

Information & Library Science Library

Call Number
Z105 .R68 2013
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Bound Fast with Letters brings together in one volume many of the significant contributions that Richard H. Rouse and Mary A. Rouse have made over the past forty years to the study of medieval manuscripts through the prism of textual transmission and manuscript production. The eighteen essays collected here address medieval authors, craftsmen, book producers, and patrons of manuscripts from different epochs in the Middle Ages, extending from late antiquity to the early Renaissance, and ranging from North Africa to northern England. Their investigations reveal valuable information about the history of texts and their transmission, and their careful scrutiny of texts and of the physical manuscripts that convey them illuminate the societies that created, read, and preserved these objects.

The book begins in Part I with articles on writers from the patristic era through the twelfth century who experimented with, and mastered, various physical forms of presenting ideas in writing. Part II contains essays on patronage and patrons, including Richard de Fournival, Jean de Brienne, Watriquet de Couvin, Pope Clement V, the Counts of Saint-Pol, and Christine de Pizan. Part III, on manuscript producers, discusses the questions, for whom? and by whom? were manuscripts made. The four essays in this section each reflect on a different part of the process of book-making. Throughout, Bound Fast with Letters focuses on the close ties between the physical remains of literate culture--from the wax tablets of the patristic era to the vernacular literature of the wealthy laity of the late Middle Ages--and their social and economic context.

Contents

  • Foreword p. ix Robert Somerville
  • Acknowledgments p. xiii
  • List of Abbreviations p. xv
  • Introduction p. 1
  • I Writing it Down: Practicalities and Imagery, 500-1220
  • 1 The Vocabulary of Wax Tablets p. 13
  • 2 Donatist Aids to Bible Study: North African Literary Production in the Fifth Century p. 24 Charles McNelis
  • 3 Two Carolingian Bifolia: Haimo of Auxerre and Carolingian Liturgical Texts p. 60
  • 4 From Flax to Parchment: A Monastic Sermon from Twelfth-Century Durham p. 77
  • 5 The Schools and the Waldensians: A New Work by Durand of Huesca p. 89
  • II Patrons and the Use of Books, 1250-1400
  • 6 Manuscripts Belonging to Richard de Fournival p. 115
  • 7 Early Manuscripts of Jean de Meun's Translation of Vegetius p. 139
  • 8 Publishing WatriquetÆs Dits p. 164
  • 9 Context and Reception: A Crusading Collection for Charles IV of France p. 215
  • 10 The Goldsmith and the Peacocks: Jean de le Mote in the Household of Simon de Lille, 1340 p. 280
  • 11 French Literature and the Counts of Saint-Pol, ca. 1178-1377 p. 308
  • 12 Prudence, Mother of Virtues: The Chapelet des vertus and Christine de Pizan p. 357
  • III Commercial Book-Makers, French and Italian, 1290-1410
  • 13 Wandering Scribes and Traveling Artists: Raulinus of Fremington and His Bolognese Bible p. 423
  • 14 Thomas of Wymondswold and the Making of a Glossed Decretum p. 459
  • 15 Jean Marlais and Bonne, His Wife: Last Wills from the Medieval Paris Book Trade p. 472
  • 16 Pierre le Portier and the Makers of the Antiphonals of St-Jacques p. 494
  • 17 St. Antoninus of Florence on Manuscript Production p. 512
  • IV Epilogue
  • 18 Archives in the Service of Manuscript Study: The Well-Known Nicolas Flamel p. 525
  • Index of Manuscripts and Documents Cited p. 543
  • General Index p. 557

Other details