Alchemical Miscellany: Difference between revisions

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=== Medieval Manuscripts ===
=== Medieval Manuscripts ===
Medieval manuscripts such as this one were handwritten by scribes, usually monks in monasteries. This highly demanding labor required the scribe to copy texts onto a new substrate using narrow ruling lines to ensure the greatest quality. Most manuscripts were produced in monasteries because monks committed much of their life to this monotonous, yet difficult task. Because of this, ''Alchemical Miscellany'' is believed to have been made in this way, compiled by an unknown scribe.
Manuscripts in the medieval period were seen as something beyond the material content they contained, but rather as vehicles for ideas and thought. Reading during this time period was very intensive: texts were studied with immense detail so every piece of knowledge was extracted from them.<ref/ name = wakelin> Michael Johnston, DANIEL WAKELIN. Immaterial Texts in Late Medieval England: Making English Literary Manuscripts, 1400–1500, The Review of English Studies, 2023;, hgad013, https://doi.org/10.1093/res/hgad013 </ref>





Revision as of 18:17, 16 April 2023

Alchemical Miscellany is a medieval manuscript believed to have been published in the early 15th century in England. It is housed in the Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts at the University of Pennsylvania, where it was acquired in 1922. The manuscript is a collection of earlier texts on Alchemy that were combined and written in Latin.


Historical Context

Medieval Manuscripts

Medieval manuscripts such as this one were handwritten by scribes, usually monks in monasteries. This highly demanding labor required the scribe to copy texts onto a new substrate using narrow ruling lines to ensure the greatest quality. Most manuscripts were produced in monasteries because monks committed much of their life to this monotonous, yet difficult task. Because of this, Alchemical Miscellany is believed to have been made in this way, compiled by an unknown scribe.

Manuscripts in the medieval period were seen as something beyond the material content they contained, but rather as vehicles for ideas and thought. Reading during this time period was very intensive: texts were studied with immense detail so every piece of knowledge was extracted from them.<ref/ name = wakelin> Michael Johnston, DANIEL WAKELIN. Immaterial Texts in Late Medieval England: Making English Literary Manuscripts, 1400–1500, The Review of English Studies, 2023;, hgad013, https://doi.org/10.1093/res/hgad013 </ref>


Authorship

Material Analysis

Organization

Page Numbering

Index

Substrate

Paper

Page Repair

Book Use

Marginalia and Asemic Marks

Medieval Scholarship

References