Paleography (Fall 2012): Difference between revisions

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commonplace book: manuscript set up in advance under different commonplace headings; don't call miscellanies commonplace  books
commonplace book: manuscript set up in advance under different commonplace headings; don't call miscellanies commonplace  books


PLRE, Private Libraries in Renaissance England: http://plre.folger.edu/
if not organized under headings, either miscellany or anthology (interchangeable terms, though Marotti tries to distinguish them)
if not organized under headings, either miscellany or anthology (interchangeable terms, though Marotti tries to distinguish them)



Latest revision as of 20:11, 14 December 2012

Introduction to Early Modern Paleography, Folger Institute / Taught by Heather Wolfe / Fall 2012

letters -- silk floss -- most intimate/personal; finer paper bc of folding; italic hand

paper seal -- letters that are more secure; you can see if they've been intercepted by matching paper seal --> dispatch slit

tuck and seal -- least personal

sew letters shut

Glasgow, online edition of Bess of Hardwick -- sewing holes in her letters --> Portrait of C Huygens

paper not as expensive as often thought

John Spillman, license to make white letter paper at end of c16

Elizabethan/Jacobean period -- paper mostly from France through Dutch traders

Peter Beal, Dictionary of Manuscript Terminology

commonplace book: manuscript set up in advance under different commonplace headings; don't call miscellanies commonplace books

PLRE, Private Libraries in Renaissance England: http://plre.folger.edu/ if not organized under headings, either miscellany or anthology (interchangeable terms, though Marotti tries to distinguish them)

Julia Boffey, 15c manuscript -- calls it a "household book"; based on domestic situation

literary commonplace books are very rare; V.a.103 is one

later in 17c, term was being used for non-commonplace books; causes confusion

student commonplace books: Erasmus, Ascham, all recommend keeping one; but perhaps no single surviving Renaissance student commonplace books

heraldic anthologies -- common

album amicorum -- lots in Edgerton manuscripts at British Library

poetic anthology -- queen of the miscellanies

almost all scribes had 2 fonts -- running hand and italic hand

wider formal letters -- engrossing

tilde -- usually for 'm' or 'n'

before 18c, Mr also means "master," not "mister"

"stigma of print" -- James I published 2 volumes of poetry during his reign; counters Saunders' thesis; popular poem on Ann's death is anthologized often (see Folger MS V.a.162, fol. 33v; MS V.a.103, fol.3r); see http://shakespeareauthorship.com/stigma.html

Joshua Eckhart, Manuscript Verse Collectors -- argues poems are organized intentionally

most anthologies seem to be formed chronologically, though

Lancashire Record Office -- household book called "the Hodgepodge"; Alison Shell

manuscripts after 1620 include many satiric epitaphs -- major genre (not that common in 16th century)

matching hands -- no good methodology for comparing hands in Renaissance studies; need a control document

Hand D (Shakespeare); not enough evidence -- only 6 signatures, with many differences between them; unique spellings help; paper and watermarks; Steve May article in HLQ (June 2013)

Cheney's Book of Dates

How Much is That Worth? by Lionel Munby

How Heavy, How Much, and How Long? by Colin R Chapman

Gazetter of British Place Names: http://www.gazetteer.co.uk/

watermarks: pot (France, Normandy), flag split in center (Italian), three circles (Venice), Italian paper thought to be nicer

Identifying watermarks: Heawood; Briquet; Thomas L Gravell Watermark Archive: http://gravell.org

Carter Hailey, checking / measuring watermarks on all First Folios

REED, Records of Early English Drama: http://www.reed.utoronto.ca/