Digital Medievalist: Scéla

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Happy Cotton Library Day

Professor Nokes, over at Unlocked Wordhoard, has announced Happy Cotton Library Day, in celebration of those manuscripts that didn't burn in the fire of 1731, and solicited our responses regarding our favorite Cotton MS. It's a hard question, actually. There are a lot of really important, and really famous ms. in the British Library's Cotton collection. You can see a complete list here, and a list of the "stars" here, a list which includes the unique-but-burned-in-the-fire ms. of Vitellius A.xv Nowell Codex, containing Beowulf and Judith, or the mss. of the major Aelfrich texts, and the only copy of the Gawain Poet's works. I'd have to say I can't really decide between Nero A.x, which contains Pearl, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, as well as the less well known works of the same poet, Patience, and Purity/Cleanness, and Nero D.iv Lindisfarne Gospels.

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Friday, October 17, 2008

Reichenau MS. Fragements Digitized

The Benedictine monastery of Reichenau was founded in 724, and by the Carolingian era, was one of the most important scriptoria in Europe, with particularly strong ties to Ireland.

Baden State Library in Karlsruhe has released high-quality digital images of 224 fragments (some small pieces, other several folios) from the Reichenau library. The site is here. Notice that "fragment" is used very loosely; when you are navigating through the images, be aware that most of the fragments contain a number of images, of ms. pieces and entire folios.

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