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Reading And Shaping Medieval Cartularies Multiscribe Manuscripts And Their Patterns Of Growth A Study Of The Earliest Cartularies Of Glasgow Cathedral And Lindores Abbey Joanna Tucker

  • SKU: BELL-50721436
Reading And Shaping Medieval Cartularies Multiscribe Manuscripts And Their Patterns Of Growth A Study Of The Earliest Cartularies Of Glasgow Cathedral And Lindores Abbey Joanna Tucker
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Reading And Shaping Medieval Cartularies Multiscribe Manuscripts And Their Patterns Of Growth A Study Of The Earliest Cartularies Of Glasgow Cathedral And Lindores Abbey Joanna Tucker instant download after payment.

Publisher: The Boydell Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 77.41 MB
Pages: 332
Author: Joanna Tucker
ISBN: 9781783274789, 1783274786
Language: English
Year: 2020

Product desciption

Reading And Shaping Medieval Cartularies Multiscribe Manuscripts And Their Patterns Of Growth A Study Of The Earliest Cartularies Of Glasgow Cathedral And Lindores Abbey Joanna Tucker by Joanna Tucker 9781783274789, 1783274786 instant download after payment.

Medieval cartularies are one of the most significant sources for a historian of the Middle Ages. Once viewed as simply repositories of charters, cartularies are now regarded as carefully curated collections of texts whose contents and arrangement reflect the immediate concerns and archival environment of the communities that created them. One feature of the cartulary in particular that has not been studied so fully is its materiality: the fact that it is a manuscript. Consequently, it has not been recognised that many cartularies are multi-scribe manuscripts which "grew" for many decades after their initial creation, both physically and textually.

This book offers a new methodology which engages with multi-scribe contributions in two cartulary manuscripts: the oldest cartularies of Glasgow Cathedral and Lindores Abbey. It integrates the physical and textual features of the manuscripts in order to analyse how and why they grew in stages across time. Applying this methodology reveals two communities that took an active approach to reading and shaping their cartularies, treating these manuscripts as a shared space. This raises fundamental questions about the definition of cartularies and how they functioned, their relationship to archives of single-sheet documents, and as sources for institutional identity. It therefore takes a fresh look at the "genre" of medieval cartularies through the eyes of the manuscripts themselves, and what this can reveal about their medieval scribes and readers.

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