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Scribes and Scholars at Salisbury Cathedral c.1075-c.1125 Teresa Webber (Trinity College, Cambridge)

Scribes and Scholars at Salisbury Cathedral c.1075-c.1125 By Teresa Webber (Trinity College, Cambridge)

Scribes and Scholars at Salisbury Cathedral c.1075-c.1125 by Teresa Webber (Trinity College, Cambridge)


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Summary

A study of the manuscripts of Salisbury Cathedral and their writers in the period 1075-1125, tracing the interests and activities of the canons of the cathedral from the evidence of their books.

Scribes and Scholars at Salisbury Cathedral c.1075-c.1125 Summary

Scribes and Scholars at Salisbury Cathedral c.1075-c.1125 by Teresa Webber (Trinity College, Cambridge)

This is a study of the books of Salisbury Cathedral and their scribes in the late eleventh and early twelfth centuries. These manuscripts form the largest collection to have survived from any English centre in the period following the Norman Conquest, and they bear witness to the energetic scribal and scholarly activities of a community of intelligent and able men. Teresa Webber traces the interests and activities of the canons of Salisbury Cathedral from the evidence of their books. She reveals to us a lively Anglo-Norman centre of scholarship and religious devotion. Her study combines detailed palaeographic research with a keen understanding of medieval cultural and intellectual life. It is a distinguished contribution to medieval studies.

Scribes and Scholars at Salisbury Cathedral c.1075-c.1125 Reviews

'important study ... Webber's study is an admirable exercise in approaching people of whose individual lives we know relatively little through the very rich survivals of their books.' Martin Kauffmann, Printing Historical Society Bulletin 36, Spring 1994
'it can be profitably read by anyone who uses critical texts of works written before the advent of printing ... the notes ... have been thoroughly updated and expanded' Paul F. Stuehrenberg, Yale Divinity School, Religious Studies Review, Volume 20, Number 1/January 1994
'There is a good deal of intricate and fascinating detective work here, with wide-ranging ramifications ... it contains much of use, and is a major contribution to appreciation of the intellectual life of twelfth-century England.' R.N. Swanson, University of Birmingham, Heythrop Journal
Webber's book is wellresearched and presented. The interests of the canons...come through very clearly. * The Library *
Good scholarship on medieval manuscripts is in short supply these days, and this book is to be lauded for its patient and disciplined analysis of scribal hands, its helpful accounts of the wanderings of manuscripts, its delicate reconstruction of Latin textual traditions, and its generally lucid and elegant style of presentation. Ecclesiastical historians and literary scholars alike will greatly profit from it. * Analytical and Enumerative Bibliography 8:2 *

Table of Contents

List of Plates ; Conventions and Abbreviations ; Introduction ; 1. Book Production at Salisbury in the Late Eleventh and Early Twelfth Centuries ; 2. The Content and Composition of the Collection ; 3. Salisbury and the Transmission of Latin Literature ; 4. Intellectual Interests ; 5. The Religious Life ; 6. Conclusion ; Appendix I. Group I Manuscripts: Texts and Scribes ; Appendix II. Group II Manuscipts: Texts and Scribes ; Appendix III. The Scala Virtutum ; Bibliography ; Index

Additional information

NPB9780198203087
9780198203087
019820308X
Scribes and Scholars at Salisbury Cathedral c.1075-c.1125 by Teresa Webber (Trinity College, Cambridge)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
1992-10-08
232
Winner of Shortlisted for the Longman/History Today Book of the Year Prize 1992.
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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