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[Illustration: HELPS FOR STUDENTS OF HISTORY
THE WANDERINGS AND HOMES OF MANUSCRIPTS
M. R. JAMES]
HELPS FOR STUDENTS OF HISTORY. No. 17
EDITED BY C. JOHNSON, M.A., AND J. P. WHITNEY, D.D., D.C.L.
THE WANDERINGS AND HOMES OF MANUSCRIPTS
BY
M. R. JAMES, LITT.D., F.B.A.
PROVOST OF ETON SOMETIME PROVOST OF KING'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE
LONDON
SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE
NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
1919
THE WANDERINGS AND HOMES OF MANUSCRIPTS
THE Wanderings and Homes of Manuscripts is the title of this book. To have called it the survival and transmission of ancient literature would have been pretentious, but not wholly untruthful. Manuscripts, we all know, are the chief means by which the records and imaginings of twenty centuries have been preserved. It is my purpose to tell where manuscripts were made, and how and in what centres they have been collected, and, incidentally, to suggest some helps for tracing out their history. Naturally the few pages into which the story has to be packed will not give room for any one episode to be treated exhaustively. Enough if I succeed in rousing curiosity and setting some student to work in a field in which an immense amount still remains to be discovered.
In treating of so large a subject as this--for it is a large one--it is not a bad plan to begin with the particular and get gradually to the general.
SOME SPECIMEN PEDIGREES OF MSS.
I take my stand before the moderate-sized bookcase which contains the collection of MSS. belonging to the College of Eton, and with due care draw from the shelves a few of the books which have reposed there since the room was built in 1729.
The first shelf I lay hands upon contains some ten large folios. Four of them are a single great compilation, beginning with a survey of the history of the world and of the Roman Empire, and merging into the heraldry of the German _noblesse_. It was made, we find, in 1541, and is dedicated to Henry VIII. Large folding pictures on vellum and portraits of all the Roman Emperors adorn the first volume. It is a sumptuous book, supposed to be a present from the Emperor Ferdinand to the King. How did it come here? A printed label tells us that it was given to the college by Henry Temple, Viscount Palmerston, in 1750 (he had previously given it to Sir Richard Ellys on whose death Lady Ellys returned it: so much in parenthesis). Then, more by luck than anything else, I find mention of it in the diary of Thomas Hearne, the Oxford antiquary; his friend Thomas Jett, F.R.S., owned it and told him about it in 1722: he had been offered L100 a volume for it; it was his by purchase from one Mr. Stebbing. It was sold, perhaps to Palmerston, at Jett's auction in 1731. The gap between Henry VIII. and Stebbing remains for the present unfilled. So much for the first draw.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: The Wanderings and Homes of Manuscripts by James
- 2: The father of the more famous Cardinal Pietro Bembo
- 3: Then come Petrus Neveletus and his son
- 4: Are half a dozen histories of MSS
- 5: Before the Latin occupation of Constantinople in 1204
- 6: Equally easy to recognize that of Joannes Serbopoulos
- 7: The pedigree of one of Laud's MSS
- 8: Procured by Grosseteste some time before 1254
- 9: The surnames they go by are Sangallensis
- 10: A leaf of plain text remains at Quedlinburg
- 11: The book of Cuthsuuitha the Abbess
- 12: As troublesome to read as the Beneventane
- 13: Great names like those of Anselm
- 14: The middle of the century sees Petrarch
- 15: Whose books are now mostly in the Vatican
- 16: Christchurch at Canterbury and Bury St
- 17: And they now petitioned that the Corbie MSS
- 18: Other Corbie books are at Montpellier
- 19: Fulda and Lorsch were as remarkable as any
- 20: Such houses as Melk on the Danube
- 21: That John Danyell was Prior of St
- 22: These hostels were equipped with libraries
- 23: Let us glance at the Norwich Cathedral Priory
- 24: Collected by Flacius Illyricus
- 25: Other Lanthony books are at Trinity and Corpus Christi
- 26: In one of its Homilies the same Vercelli MS
- 27: Of an Orosius and Fortunatus at Pembroke College
- 28: Of his giving which are at Balliol are Italian written
- 29: Scriptorum Britannicorum Centuriae
- 30: Augustine's John Twyne Dee Brian Twyne Corpus Christi
- 31: The Phillipps sales account for a good many
- 32: Occasionally books so mutilated have been reconstituted
- 33: But that Bobbio should be added to that
- 34: List of Catalogues of English Book Sales
- 35: Documents in the public record office
