SJLahey , to Medievodons group
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Visiting the Wren Library of Trinity College, Cambridge today, taking in (you guessed it) yet more Statuta Angliæ — including one which features this rather unhappy little fellow. 😕
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  • SJLahey , to Medievodons group
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    Decorated initials: notorious site of interspecies struggle since the 11th century. 😱
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  • SJLahey , to Medievodons group
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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 group
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    Polka-dots in a lovely copy of Platearius from Cambridge University Library.
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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 group
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    Back in Cambridge University Library today, taking in more medieval common .
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    A stripy, ‘S’ from Cambridge University Library. 🌈
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  • SJLahey , to Medievodons group
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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 histodons group
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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 histodons group
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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 group
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    ‘M’ for the Merry Month of May in a Cambridge University Library statute book.
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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 group
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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 group
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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.

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