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Old English libraries

Chapter 53: § IV
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About This Book

A concise survey of medieval book culture describes how manuscripts were made, illuminated, bound, catalogued, and circulated as instruments of learning. It outlines regional script styles and decorative practices, with attention to Irish-influenced round and pointed hands and intricate interlaced ornament found in Gospel books. The text considers practical media and working copies used for study, the organization and lending of monastic and collegiate collections, and methods of preservation and repair. One chapter, contributed by a collaborator, concentrates on the libraries associated with Oxford, while ample citations and notes point readers to further authorities.




PLATE XXXIV
FRESCO OF THE SEVEN LIBERAL ARTS
BY T. GADDI
CHURCH OF S. M. NOVELLA, FLORENCE

representation of the various classes of books. Generally speaking, the monastic collection comprised proportionately more theology and less canon and civil law than the academic library. In the subjects of the trivium and the quadrivium, and in philosophy, a college was more strongly equipped than a monastery; on the other hand, a monastery frequently had a larger proportion of classical literature, and always more “light” or romance literature.

Early university studies were in two parts, the trivium—grammar, rhetoric, and logic, and the quadrivium—music, astronomy, geometry, and arithmetic. These were the seven liberal arts. A fresco in a chapel in the Church of S. Maria Novella at Florence illustrates these arts. On the right of the cartoon is the figure of grammar; beneath is Priscian. For the study of this subject John Garland recommended Priscian and Donatus. Priscian was a leading text-book on the subject, and it was supported by a short manual compiled from Donatus. At Oxford extracts from these authors were thrown into the form of logical quaestiones to afford subjects of argument at the disputations held once a week before the masters of grammar.[542] To these books should be added a dictionary, with some peculiar and quaint etymologies, by Papias the Lombard; grammatical works by John Garland; Bishop Hugutio’s etymological dictionary (c. 1192); a dreary hexameter poem by Alexander Gallus, the Breton Friar (d. 1240)—“the olde Doctrinall, with his diffuse and unperfite brevitie”; Eberhard’s similar poem (c. 1212), called Graecismus, because it includes a chapter on derivations from the Greek; and a very large book, the Catholicon (c. 1286), partly a grammar and partly a dictionary, with copious quotations from Latin classics, which had been compiled with some skill and care by John Balbi, a Genoese Black Friar. Papias and Hugutio were sharply condemned by Friar Bacon, but they remained in use long after his time, and Balbi owed much to both of them. Many copies of the Catholicon seem to have been made, although the transcription of so large a book was costly: even before it was printed (1460), copies for reference were sometimes chained up in English churches, and after it was printed this practice became more general, at any rate in France. By the fourteenth century Priscian was almost superseded by Alexander and Eberhard, whose versified grammars came into common use; a jingle, whether it be—

“ ‘Ne facias’ dicas ‘oroque ne facias.’
Humane, dure, large, firmeque, benigne,
Ignaveque, probe, vel avare sive severe,
Inde nove, plene, vel abunde sive proterve,
Dicis in er vel in e, quamvis sint illa secundae,”

in the fourteenth century, or

“Feminine is Linter, boat
Learn these neuters nine by rote,”

in the twentieth century, seems to help the harassed student along the linguistic path. The reading of Virgil and Statius and some other writers put flesh upon these grammatical dry bones. But as the masters of grammar at Oxford were expected to be guardians of morals as well, they were expressly forbidden to read and expound to their pupils Ovid’s Ars amandi, the Elegies of Pamphilus, and other indecent books.[543]

Next to the figure of Grammar is Rhetoric, with Cicero seated beneath. Cicero, with Aristotle, Quintilian and Boëthius were the chief exponents of rhetoric; with Virgil, Ovid, Statius, and sometimes such a book as Guido delle Colonne’s epic of Troy, as examples of literary style. John Garland (fl. 1230) recommended Cicero’s De Inventione (Rhetorica), De Oratore, the Ad Herennium ascribed to Cicero, Quintilian’s Institutes and the Declamationes ascribed to him. The third figure is Logic, coupled with the figure of Aristotle. The Categories and Porphyry’s Isagoge were the books of greatest service in the study of this subject; with Boëthius’ translations and expositions of Aristotle and Porphyry. All the foregoing and Cicero’s Topica are selected by John Garland. Later the Summulae logicales of Peter the Spaniard (fl. 1276), William of Heytesbury’s Sophismata (c. 1340), the Summa logices of the great English schoolman, William of Ockham (d. c. 1349), and the Quaestiones of William Brito (d. 1356) were the chief manuals of dialectic.

The first figure in the representation of the quadrivium is Music, with Tubal Cain beneath. In this subject, for which few books were necessary, Boëthius was the guide. With Astronomy is associated Ptolemy. The Cosmographia and Almagest of Ptolemy, and the works of some Arabian authors, with books of tables, were the student’s manuals. In our cartoon Geometry has Euclid for companion. Arithmetic is associated with Pythagoras in the picture: for this subject Boëthius was the text-book.[544]

Besides the seven liberal arts, natural, metaphysical, and moral philosophy, or the three philosophies, were added in the thirteenth century. For these studies Aristotle and his commentators were the chief guides. The medical authorities of the middle ages have been catalogued for us by Chaucer in his description of a doctor of “phisyk”—

“Wel knew he the olde Esculapius
And Deiscorides, and eek Rufus,
Old Ypocras, Haly and Galien;
Serapion, Razis and Avicen;
Averrois, Damascien and Constantyn;
Bernard, and Gatesden, and Gilbertyn.”

Of these names eight are included in Duke Humfrey’s gifts to Oxford in 1439 and 1443; and ten of them are represented in the catalogue of Peterhouse Library in 1418. Besides the writers mentioned by Chaucer, works on fevers by Isaac the Arab, the Antidotarium of Nicholas, and the Isagoge of Johannicius were in general use.

Next to theology—in which class the chief books were the same as in the claustral library, although liturgical books are more rarely found—the largest section of an academic collection was that of civil and canon law. It comprised the various digests, the works of Cinus of Pistoia and Azo; texts of decrees, decretals, Liber Sextus Decretalium, Liber Clementinae, with many commentaries, the Constitutions of Ottobon and Otho, the book compiled by Henry of Susa, Cardinal Bishop of Ostia, called Summa Ostiensis, the Rosarium of Archdeacon Guido de Baysio, and Durand’s Speculum Judiciale. The last three books are frequently met with, and were highly esteemed by medieval jurists.[545]

In a previous chapter we have noted the somewhat fresher character of the library given to Oxford University by the Duke of Gloucester. We have two later records which may be referred to now to indicate the change wrought by the Renascence. A catalogue of William Grocyn’s books was drawn up soon after his death in 1519. This collection proves its owner to have been conservative in his tastes, as the medieval favourites are well represented. Of Greek books there are only Aristotle, Plutarch in a Latin translation, and a Greek and Latin Testament—a curiously small collection in view of his interest in Greek, and in view of the fact that many of the chief Greek authors had been printed before his death. It seems likely that his Greek books had been dispersed. But the change is apparent in the excellent series of Latin classics, which included Tacitus and Lucretius, and in the number of books by Italian writers, Petrarch, Boccaccio, Ficino, Filelfo, Lorenzo della Valle, Æneas Sylvius, and Perotti.

Still more significant of the change are the references to the course of study in the statutes of Corpus Christi College, Oxford (1517). The approved prose writers are Cicero—an apology is offered for the use of barbarous words not known to Cicero—Sallust, Valerius Maximus, Suetonius, Pliny, Livy, and Quintilian. Virgil, Ovid, Lucan, Juvenal, Terence and Plautus are approved as poets. Suitable books to study during the vacations are the works of Lorenzo della Valle, Aulus Gellius, and Poliziano. In Greek the writings—most of them quite new to the age—of Isocrates, Lucian, Philostratus, Aristophanes, Theocritus, Euripides, Sophocles, Pindar, Hesiod, Demosthenes, Thucydides, Aristotle, and Plutarch are recommended. Such a list bears few resemblances to the academic library we have attempted to describe.[546]

§ IV

In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries romances began to creep into all libraries, save the academic, in which they are rarely found. As soon as romance literature took a firm hold upon public favour the monks added some of it to their collections. Probably romances were first bought to be copied and sold to augment the monastic income; and more perhaps were sold than preserved. Ascham avers that “in our fathers tyme nothing was red, but bookes of fayned cheualrie, wherein a man by redinge, shuld be led to none other ende, but onely to manslaughter and baudrye.... These bokes (as I haue heard say) were made the moste parte in Abbayes and Monasteries, a very lickely and fit fruite of suche an ydle and blynde kinde of lyuyne.”[547] Thomas Nashe, in his story of The Unfortunate Traveller, describes romances as “the fantasticall dreams of those exiled Abbie lubbers,” that is, the monks.[548] These writers were but echoing such charges as that in Piers Plowman, which declares that a friar was much better acquainted with the Rimes of Robin Hood and Randal Erle of Chester than with his Paternoster. A number of romances are indeed found in monastic catalogues. The library at Glastonbury included four romances (1248); that at Christ Church, Canterbury, contained a few in late thirteenth century. Guy de Beauchamp bequeathed romances to Bordesley Abbey (1315). In the first year of the fifteenth century Peterborough had some romances. At the end of the same century St. Augustine’s Abbey, Canterbury, had in its library of over eighteen hundred books only a few romances; while in Leicester Abbey, among a library of about three hundred and fifty books, we find only the Troy book, Drian and Madok, Beves of Hamtoun, all in French, Gesta Alexandri Magni, and one or two others. Edward III bought a book of romance from a nun of Amesbury in 1331—a work of such interest that he kept it in his room. There are plenty of other instances. But in no case have we found an excessive number of romances in monastic libraries, and the charges—if they can worthily be called charges—so often made against monks on this score fall to the ground.[549]

The romances oftenest appearing in monastic catalogues and other records are the following: The Story of Troy, especially Joseph of Exeter’s Latin version, the great Arthurian cycle, the beautiful story of Amis and Amiloun, renowned all over Europe, Joseph of Arimathea, Charlemagne, Alexander, which was of the best of romances, Guy of Warwick, which was very popular, and the semi-historical Richard Cœur de Lion. But many others were in circulation. In Cursor mundi a number of the popular stories of the day are mentioned—

“Men lykyn jestis for to here,
And romans rede in divers maneree,
Of Alexandre the conquerour,
Of Julius Cæsar[550] the emperour,
Of Greece and Troy the strong stryf,
Ther many a man lost his lyfe;
Of Brut,[551] that baron bold of hond,
The first conquerour of Englond,
Of King Artour that was so ryche;
Was non in hys tyme so ilyche [alike, equal]:
Of wonders that among his knyghts felle,
And auntyrs [adventures] dedyn as men her telle
As Gaweyn, and othir full abylle,
Which that kept the round tabyll,
How King Charles and Rowland fawght,
With Sarazins, nold thei be cawght;
Of Tristram and Ysoude the swete,
How thei with love first gan mete,
Of Kyng John, and of Isenbras,
Of Ydoine and Amadas.”[552]

Again, many “speak of men who read romances—

Of Bevys,[553] Gy, and Gwayane,
Of Kyng Rychard, and Owayne,
Of Tristram and Percyvayle,
Of Rowland Ris,[554] and Aglavaule,
Of Archeroun, and of Octavian,
Of Charles, and of Cassibelan.
Of Keveloke,[555] Horne, and of Wade
In romances that ben of hem bimade,
That gestours dos of hem gestes,
At maungeres, and at great festes,
Her dedis ben in remembrance,
In many fair romance.”

Popular romances of this kind had a great influence upon the lives of the people. The long lists of medieval theology and sophistry usually laid before us, and the great majority of the writings which have survived, sometimes lead us to believe the culture of the Middle Ages to have been of a more serious cast than it really was. The oral circulation of romance literature must have been enormous. The spun-out, dreary poems which now make such difficult reading are infinitely more entertaining when read aloud: the voice gives life and character to a humdrum narrative, and the gestour would know how to make the best of incidents which he knew from experience to be specially interesting to an audience. Such yarns would be most attractive to “lewd” or illiterate men—

“For lewdë men y undyrtoke
On Englyssh tunge to make thys boke:
For many ben of swyche manere
That talys and rymys wyl blethly[556] here,
Ye gamys and festys, and at the ale.”[557]




PLATE XXXV
ANCIENT VELLUM BOOK-MARKER WITH REVOLVING DISC
FROM A DOUBLE-COLUMN CANTERBURY BIBLE; THE DISC CAN BE USED TO MARK COLUMN AND LINE. MS. 49 C.C. COLL. CAMB.

The need of multiplying manuscripts of these poems would not be greatly felt. The reciter would be obliged to learn them off by heart; he need not, and often did not, possess written versions of the poems he recited. And even literate men, as Bishop Grosseteste, preferred to listen to these gestours, rather than to read the narrative themselves. Therefore, any estimate we may form of the number of manuscripts of romances in existence at any time in the fourteenth century, for example, would give not the smallest idea of the extent to which these tales were known.

§ V

The medieval collector of books sometimes, and the monastic librarian nearly always, took care that his library was strong in hagiology and history. He felt the need of books which would tell him of the past history of his church and of the lives of her greatest teachers. When collected these books were an incentive to the more cultivated of the monks to begin the history of his country or his house, or to write or re-write the lives of saints. The fruit is preserved for us in a long line of monkish historians and hagiographers. As a rule the histories they wrote were of little value; but when they had brought the tale down to their own times they continued it with the help of records to their hand, narrated events within their own memory, and maintained the narrative in the form of annals. The method of annalising was simple. At the end of the incomplete manuscript a loose or easily detachable sheet was kept, whereon events of importance to the nation and the monastery and locality of the annalist were written in pencil from time to time during the year. At the end of the year the historian welded these jottings into a narrative. When this was done another leaf for notes was placed after the manuscript. The value of the work so accomplished is incalculable. Without these records it would now be impossible for us to realise what the Middle Ages were like. This service, added to the enormously greater service which monachism did for us in preserving ancient literature, will always breed kind thoughts of a system so repugnant to our modern view of human endeavour.

§ VI

What was the extent of circulation of books during the manuscript age? For the period before the Conquest we can only offer the merest conjecture, which does not help us materially. The rarity of the extant manuscripts of this age is no guide to the extent of their production. During the raids of the northmen the destruction and loss must have been very great indeed. After the Conquest the indifference and contempt with which the conquerors regarded everything Saxon must have been responsible for the destruction of nearly every manuscript written in the vernacular. But, on the other hand, we find suggestions of a greater production than is commonly credited to this period. Religious fervour to make books was not wanting, as some of our most beautiful relics—works exhibiting much painstaking and skilful and even loving labour, calligraphy, and decoration aflame with high endeavour—belong to the Hiberno-Saxon period and the days of Ethelwold. Nor after Alfred’s day was regard lacking for vernacular literature itself rather than for the glory of a faith: how else are we to explain the precious fragments of Anglo-Saxon manuscript which have been preserved for us, especially the Exeter book and the Vercelli book? That the production was considerable is suggested by the records we have. Think of the Irish manuscripts now scattered on the continent; of the library of York; of Bede’s workshop and the northern libraries; and of those in the south, at Canterbury, Malmesbury, and elsewhere. But the use of such manuscripts as were in existence was restricted to monks, wealthy ecclesiastics, and a few of the wealthy laity.

After the Conquest the state of affairs was the same. The period of the greatest literary activity in the monasteries now began, and large claustral libraries were soon formed. The monks then had plenty of books; wealthy clergy also had small collections. An ecclesiastic or a layman who had done a monastery some service, or whose favour it was politic to cultivate, could borrow books from the monastic library, under certain strict conditions. Some people availed themselves of this privilege; but not at any time during the manuscript period to a great extent.[558]

Outside this small circle the people were almost bookless: nearly the whole of the literary wealth of the Middle Ages belonged to the monks and the church. Books were extremely costly. The medieval book-buyer paid more for his book on an average than does the modern collector of first editions and editions de luxe, who pays in addition several guineas a volume for handsome bindings. The prices we have tabulated will fully bear out this statement. But even more striking evidence of the high value set upon books is the care taken in selling or bequeathing them. To-day a line or two in a wealthy man’s will disposes of all his books. He commonly throws them in with the “residue,” unmentioned. In the manuscript age a testator distributed his little hoard book by book. Often he not only bequeaths a volume to a friend, but determines its fate after his friend’s death. For example, a daughter is to have a copy of the Golden Legend, “and to occupye to hir




RECORD OF SALE OF BOOK CAPTURED AT POITIERS (see p. 247)

owne use and at hir owne liberte durynge hir lyfe, and after hir decesse to remayne to the prioress and the convent of Halywelle for evermore, they to pray for the said John Burton and Johne his wife and alle crystene soyles (1460).”[559] A manuscript now in Worcester Cathedral Library bears an inscription telling us that, likewise, one Thomas Jolyffe left it to Dr. Isack, a monk of Worcester, for his lifetime, and after his death to Worcester Priory. A manuscript now in the British Museum was bought in 1473 at Oxford by Clement of Canterbury, monk and scholar, from a bookseller named Hunt for twenty shillings, in the presence of Will. Westgate, monk.[560] In a manuscript of the Sentences is a note telling us that it was the property of Roger, archdeacon of Lincoln: he bought it from Geoffrey the chaplain, the brother of Henry, vicar of North Elkington, the witnesses being master Robert de Luda, clerk, Richard the almoner, the said Henry the vicar, his clerk, and others.[561] An instance of a different kind will suffice. When, after a good deal of rioting at Oxford, many of the more studious masters and scholars went to Stamford, the king threatened that if they did not return to Oxford they would lose their goods, and especially their books. The warning was disregarded, but the threatened forfeiture of their books was evidently thought to be a strong measure.[562]

In his poems Chaucer endows two poor clerks with small libraries. His first portrait of an Oxford clerk is delightful—

“For him was lever have at his beddes heed [rather]
Twenty bokes, clad in blak or reed,
Of Aristotle and his philosophye,
Than robes riche, or fithele, or gay sautrye [fiddle, psaltery].
But al be that he was a philosophre,
Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre;
But al that he mighte of his freendes hente [get],
On bokes and on lerninge he it spente,
And bisily gan for the soules preye
Of hem that yaf him wher-with to scoleye [gave, study].
Of studie took he most cure and most hede.
Noght o word spak he more than was nede,
And that was seyd in forme and reverence,
And short and quik, and ful of hy sentence [high].
Souninge in moral vertu was his speche [conducing to],
And gladly wolde he lerne, and gladly teche.”

Almost equally pleasing is his picture of another who lived with a rich churl—

“A chambre hadde he in that hostelrye
Allone, with-outen any companye,
. . . . . . . . . .
His Almageste and bokes grete and smale,
His astrelabie, longinge for his art,
His augrim-stones layen faire a-part
On shelves couched at his beddes heed.”

Both descriptions have been used as evidence that books were not so scarce as supposed; that poor people could get books if they specially needed them. But are these pictures quite true? Has not the poet taken advantage of the licence allowed to his kind? The records preserved at Oxford do not corroborate him. Some of the students were very poor. It seems likely that a would-be clerk attached himself to a master or scholar as a servant in return for teaching in the “kunnyng of writyng” and perhaps other knowledge—

“This endenture bereth witnesse that I, John Swanne, þe sone of John Swanne of Bridlington, in þe counte of Yorke, have putte me servante unto William Osbarne, forto serve him undir þe foorme of a servante for þe terme of iiii. yere, and þe seide William Osbarne forto enfoorme þe seide John Swann in þe kunnyng of writyng, and þe seide John Swann forto have þe first yere of þe seide William Osbarne iijs. iiijd. in money, and ij. peier [pairs] of hosen, and ij. scherts [shirts] and iiij. peire schoon [pairs of shoes], and a gowne, and in þe secunde yeere xiijs. iiijd., and in þe iij. yere xxs. and a gowne, and in þe iiij. yeere xls. And in þe witnesse hereof, etc.” (1456).[563]

Mr. Anstey points out that a very large number, probably the majority of scholars, were not well provided for. They eked out their precarious allowances by begging, by learning handicrafts, and by “picking up the various doles at funerals and commemoration masses, where such needy miserables were always to be found.”[564] Such students would not be likely to have many or perhaps any books. “The stock of books possessed by the younger scholars seems to have been almost nil. The inventories of goods, which we possess, in the case of non-graduates contain hardly any books. The fact is that they mostly could not afford to buy them.... The chief source of supplying books was by purchase from the University sworn stationers, who had to a great extent a monopoly, the object of which was to prevent the sale and removal from Oxford of valuable books. Of such books there were plainly very large numbers constantly changing hands; they were the pledges so continually deposited on borrowing from chests, and seem, from scattered hints, to have been a very fruitful source of litigation and dispute.”[565] Most of these books were in the hands of seniors. Truly enough many a poor clerk would as lief have twenty “bokes” to his name as anything else treble the value. But he would undergo much sharp self-denial and receive much “wher-with to scoleye” ere he got together so considerable a collection of “bokes grete and smale,” to say nothing of instruments. As such a large proportion of the scholars were poor, and unable to acquire books, nearly all the instruction given was oral. Well-to-do scholars would not find, therefore, books of very great service; and indeed they were as ill-equipped in this respect as their poorer brethren. The accounts of the La Fytes, two scholars whose expenses were paid by Edward I himself, contain records of the purchase of two copies of only the Institutions of Quintilian (c. 1290).[566] Is not Chaucer describing his own room in both passages—the room he loved to seek after his day’s work at the desk? Here at the bedhead are his books, including the astronomical treatise of Ptolemy called Almagest. Beside them is the astrolabe, an instrument about which he wrote; and trimly arranged apart his augrim-stones, or counters for making calculations. Such an outfit we might expect him to have: just such a library, neither smaller nor larger.

This supposition calls to mind another argument sometimes used to prove how easy it was to make a small collection of books. Chaucer’s poems display his acquaintance, more or less thoroughly, with many authors. Surely, it is urged, his library was a good one for the time: then how was it possible for a man of his means to own such? He was not wealthy. As a courtier and a public officer the calls upon his purse must have been heavy: little indeed could be left for books. The explanation is probably simple. Books were freely lent, more freely than nowadays; and Chaucer would be able to eke out his library in this way. Another point is important. Professor Lounsbury, who has spent years in an exhaustive study of Chaucer, points out a curious circumstance. “It must be confessed,” he says—a shade of disparagement lurks in the phrase—“it must be confessed that Chaucer’s quotations from writers exhibit a familiarity with prologues and first books and early chapters which contrasts ominously with the comparative infrequency with which he makes citations from the middle and latter parts of most of the works he mentions.”[567] Surely the implication is unjust. Stationers used to let out on hire parts of books or quires. Manuscript volumes were also often made up of parts of works by several authors. Books being scarce, it was preferable to make some volumes select miscellanies, little libraries in themselves. Hear Chaucer himself—

“And eek ther was som-tyme a clerk at Rome,
A cardinal, that highte Seinte Jerome,
That made a book agayn Jovinian;
In whiche book eek ther was Tertulan,
Crisippus, Trotula, and Helowys,
That was abbesse nat fer fro Parys;
And eek the Parables of Salomon,
Ovydes Art, and bokes many on,
And alle thise were bounden in o volume.”[568]

In composite volumes often only the earlier parts of authors’ works were included. If Chaucer owned a few books of this kind, his familiarity with parts of authors—and oftenest with the earlier parts—is accounted for satisfactorily; so also is the range and variety of his reading. Examine the Christ Church Canterbury catalogue in Henry Eastry’s time, and note what a remarkable variety of subjects is comprised in what we nowadays consider rather a paltry number of books. There is another point worth bearing in mind. Speaking of Bishop Shirwood’s books, a writer in the English Historical Review says: “Many of the books bear his mark, Nota, scattered over the margins, or a hand with a long pointing finger. These notes occur usually at the beginnings. In the days when chapters and sections were unknown and division into books rare, when headlines were not and pages sometimes had no signatures even, not to speak of numbers, a reader had to go solidly through a book, and could not lightly turn up a passage he wished for, by the aid of a reference. But except in Cicero and in Plutarch—which is read almost from beginning to end—the marks do not often go far. Shirwood was doubtless too busy to find much time for reading, and before he had made much way with a book a new purchase had come to arouse his interest.”[569]

But to the general rule of scarcity of books some exceptions are known. When a book won a reputation, the cost of producing copies was not wholly restrictive of circulation. Copies of some works of the Fathers were produced in great numbers. The Bible, whole or in part, was copied with such industry that it became the commonest of manuscripts, as it now is the commonest of printed books. Peter Lombard’s Sentences became a famous book: the standard of the schools; everywhere to be found side by side with the Bible, everywhere discussed and commented upon. A twelfth century author of quite different character had a good hold upon the people; the number of copies of Geoffrey of Monmouth must have been considerable, for the British Museum now has thirty-five copies and Bodley’s Library sixteen. “Possibly, no work before the age of printed books attained such immediate and astonishing popularity ... translations, adaptations, and continuations of it formed one of the staple exercises of a host of medieval scribes.”[570] A glance at the monastic and academic library catalogues of later date than mid-thirteenth century will prove more clearly than a shelf full of books how enormous was the influence of Aristotle. If such a collocation as the Bible and Shakspere sums up the present-day Englishman’s ideals of spiritual sustenance and literary power, a similar collocation of the Bible and Aristotle would sum up, with a greater approach to truth, the ideals of the medieval schoolman. Popularity fell to Piers Plowman. Apart from the large currency given to it by ballad singers, many manuscripts were in existence, for even now forty-five of them, more or less complete, remain. As M. Jusserand aptly remarks: “This figure is the more remarkable when we consider that, contrary to works written in Latin or in French, Langland’s book was not copied and preserved outside his own country.”[571] Again, but a few years after the writing of the Canterbury Tales, a copy of it was bequeathed, among other books, by a clerk named Richard Sotheworth of East Hendred, Berks (1417).[572] The impression is left upon one’s mind that this work had found its way quickly and in many copies into country places.

But as only a few books had a comparatively large circulation, these few had a disproportionately powerful influence. The Bible was paramount. Aristotle dominated the whole mental horizon of the schoolmen. Alfred of Beverley tells us that Geoffrey of Monmouth’s book “was so universally talked of that to confess ignorance of its stories was the mark of a clown.”[573] So great was the influence of Piers Plowman, that from it were taken watchwords at the great rising of the peasants.[574] The power of such works could not be wholly hemmed in by the barrier of manuscript: like a spring torrent it would burst forth and carry all before it. In the manuscript period a book of great originality and power, or a work which reproduced the thought of the time accurately and with spirit, ran no great risk of being passed over and forgotten; too little was produced for much that was good to be lost. It was copied once and again; became very slowly but very surely known to a few, then to many; and all the time waxed more and more influential in its teaching. The growth was slow, but then the lifetime was long. Now the chance of a good book going astray is much greater. What watcher of the great procession of modern books does not fear that something supremely fine and great has passed unobserved in the huge, motley crowd?

APPENDIX A

PRICES OF BOOKS AND MATERIALS FOR BOOKMAKING

Note.—Following is a selection from a large number of prices recorded in various places. In making the selection I have included books of various prices. An asterisk (*) before the reference signifies that additional prices will be found in the same place.

These prices must be multiplied at least ten times before the value set upon books in the Middle Ages can be compared with the value set upon them to-day.

Date Description Price
BIBLES
1344 Bible for Merton College £3
Rogers, i. 646
1354-74 For redeeming a Bible which lay in Langeton
chest (1354) £3
For a Bible pledged in Chichester chest (1357) £3
For a Bible redeemed from Chichester chest (1358) £3
For Bible pledged in Winton chest (1358) £3
To our barber for a Bible pledged to him in time
of John Dagenet 4 marks.
O. H. S., 27, Boase, xlviii.
1376 Bible, small 12 fr.
Robinson, 5
c. 1387 Bible for New College £2, 13s. 4d.
Another £1, 6s. 8d.
Another £1, 0s. 0d.
O. H. S., 32, Collect., 220
15 c. Bible, 13 cent., 358 ff., double cols. of 53
lines, in good small hand 5 marks.
James4, 19
1423 Pro j Biblia, cum ij signaculis deauratis £6, 13s. 4d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 76
1439 Bible £3, 6s. 8d.
James10, xxiv.
1444 Bible £2, 13s. 0d.
James10, xxiv.
1449 Bible covered with red leather, and having
gilded clasps £6, 13s. 4d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 110
1452 Bible £6, 13s. 4d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 132
1471 Bible, in 5 vols. £2
James10, xxiv.
1473 Bible bought at Oxford. Now Brit. Mus. MS.
Burney 11 20s.
James, 515
MISSALS
1358 Missal pledged in Burnel chest 8s. 4d.
O. H. S., 27, Boase, xlviii.
1383-4 Abbot Litlington's missal£34, 14s. 7d.
Robinson, 7-8
1449 Old Missal, de usu Ebor. 26s. 8d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 110
1452 Missal, de usu Ebor. £4, 13s. 4d.
Old Missal 10s.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 132-33
1459 A fair mass book £10
Rogers, iv. 600
1468 Missal £4
Surtees Soc., xlv. 163
1491 Missal 40s.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 161 n.
1509 A new masboke couered with white lether and ij
longe claspes of latyn £4
A little massebooke after the ffrenche use 3s. 4d.
C. A. S. (N.S.) 8vo ser., iii. 361
BREVIARIES
1370 Portiforium 10s.
Cam. Soc., Bury Wills, 1
1395 Portiforium notatum 20s.
Parvum portiforium 33s. 4d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 6
1400 Portiforium de usu Sarum 66s. 8d.
Ibid., 13
1449 Great portiforium de usu Ebor.£11, 3s. 6d.
Great portiforium de usu Sarum 53s. 4d.
Ibid., 110
1451 Portiforium 6s. 8d.
Mun. Acad., 609
1452 Portiforium de usu Sarum 53s. 4d.
Portiforium de usu Ebor. 53s. 4d.
Portiforium 13s. 4d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 132-33
1491 Portiforium de Ebor. 43s. 4d.
Ibid., 161n.
1518 A little portuos lyinge to plegge in teamce street 53s. 4d.
Reliquary, vii. 18
PSALTERS
Before
1300 Psalter, with glosses 10s.
Warton, i. 188n.
1376 Psalter, glossed 12 fr.
Robinson, 6
c. 1380 Psalter, glossed 26s. 8d.
O. H. S., 32, Collect., 226
1395 Psalter, in large letters; price 6s. 8d.
sold for 13s. 4d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 6
1447 Psalter 3s. 8d.
Rogers, iv. 600
1449 Psalter, glossed 11s.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 110
1451 Psalter, glossed 6s. 8d.
Mun. Acad., 609
1452 Psalter, glossed 13s. 4d.
Illuminated Psalter 13s. 4d.
Small Psalter 6s. 8d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 132-33
1468 Psalter 8s. 4d.
Ibid., 163
c. 1470 Psalter 6s. 8d.
Paston Letters, ed. Gairdner, vi. 175-77
ANTIPHONARIES
c. 1420-40 Antiphonary for S. Albans £6s, 13s. 4d.
Another £6
Ann. mon. S. Alb. a J. Amund., ii. 256-71
1459 2 new great antiphons £13, 6s. 8d.
Rogers, iv. 600
1491 Antiphonary [with musical notation] 33s. 4d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 161 n.
1509 A grete antyphoner in parchement with legent
couered with white lether with ij long claspes of
latyn £8
An olde litle antyphoner withoute couer and
claspes 3s. 4d.
C. A. S. (N.S.), 8vo ser., iii. 361
PROCESSIONALS
1449 20 new Processionals for All Souls College £5, 13s. 4d.
Rogers, iv. 600
1509 A Processionall noted [with musical notation]
couered with Tawny lether and ij long claspes 26s. 8d.
A processionall couered with Tawny lether with
oon claspe 5s.
C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 361
MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS
c. 690 Land sufficient for 8 families exchanged for a book
on cosmography, of admirable workmanship.
Vitæ Abb. § 15
1174 Bede's Homilies and S. Austin's Psalter exchanged
for 12 measures of barley and a pall, on which
was embroidered in silver the history of
S. Birinus converting a Saxon king.
Warton, i. 186
Before
1300 Historia Scholastica [Peter Comestor], [Cf. 1452.] £1
Concordance 10s.
Four greater prophets, with glosses 5s.
*Warton, i. 188n.
1300 Book of Decretals 3s.
*Stevenson, Hist. of Ely
1306 A school book 2d.
Rogers, i. 645-56
1322 Liber gardanarum £3, 6s. 8d.
Rogers, i. 646
1357 For book on Prophets and the third part of
Thomas Aquinas (tertia pars Summae), pledged
in Tykeford chest 13s. 4d.
O. H. S., 27, Boase, xlviii.
c. 1360 La Bible Hystoriaus, ou Les Histories escolastres.
B.M. Reg. 19 D ii. Taken from King of
France at Poitiers; bought by Wm. Montagu,
for 100 marks.
Ordered to be sold by the Last will of his
Countess Elizabeth for 40 livres.
Warton, i. 187
1376 Dictionary in 3 volumes 200 francs.
Gospels glossed in 1 volume 15 francs.
N. de Lyra on the Gospels and the Epistles of Paul 37½ francs.
Quodlibeta of Herveus Natalis Brito 3 francs.
Milleloquium Augustini [anthology of S. Augustine
by Bartholomew of Urbino] 80 francs.
Augustine, super psalterium abbreviatus cum
septem quaternis non ligatis 1 franc.
N. de Lyra, third part 37½ francs.
Small concordance 1 franc.
Speculum Historiale, first part, by Vincent of
Beauvais 50 francs.
Augustine, de Civitate Dei 12 francs.
Lombard's Sentences. [Cf. 1423, 1452.] 6 francs.
Boëthius, de Consolatione philosophiae, cum aliis. 10 francs.
Summa Hostiensis [one of the chief books on
canon law]. [Cf. 1380.] 20 francs.
1376 Cronica Martiniana, by Martinus Polonus; Bede,
de Gestis Anglorum; Life of S. Thomas, in
1 volume 10 francs.
Anselm, de Similitudinibus 2 francs.
*Robinson, 5-7
1378 Wylliott's book on natural philosophy £3, 6s. 8d.
Rogers, i. 646
1379 11 quires of Bacon's Mathematics 5s. 6d.
Rogers, i. 646
c. 1380 Lectura T. Alquini super 410 sententiarum 10s.
Evangelium Johannis et Apocalypsis glosatum 20s.
Concordantiae Bibliae 8s.
Sermones veteres 3s. 4d.
Sermones N. Gorham de communi sanctorum 5s.
Liber Genesis glosatus 20s.
Legenda Aurea 20s.
Augustine, de Civitate Dei 53s. 4d.
Haymo super epistolas Pauli 100s.
Evangelium Mathaei 2s.
" Johannis glos. 3s. 4d.
Biblia versificata 5s.
Quaternus sermonum 2s. 6d.
Epistolae Sidonii, in quaterno 12d.
Albertus Magnus, de vegetabilibus et plantis cum
multis aliis 53s. 4d.
Textus Metha[physi]cae 10s.
Commentator super libros caeli et mundi 5s.
Liber de Anima, continens 3 libros cum aliis 3d.
Textus naturalis philosophiae 16s.
" 13s. 4d.
" 13s. 4d.
Tractatus de Animalibus 4s.
Liber Decretalium non glosatus 3s. 4d.
Liber Decretalium 16s. 8d.
Summa Hostiensis. [Cf. 1376.]£4, 13s. 4d.
Liber Sextus decretalium. [Cf. 1423, 1445,
1451.] 75s.
Codex. [Cf. 1423.] 31s. 4d.
Liber inforciatus. [Cf. 1423, 1445.] 20s.
Digestum vetus. [Cf. 1423.] 5s.
O. H. S., 32, Collect., 224-41
1389 Problems of Aristotle for Exeter College £4
Boëthius, De Disciplina Scholarum, and De
Consolatione philosophiæ 5 marks.
O. H. S., 27, Boase, xxxvi.
1394 Parchment for 4 choir books, and writing them£11, 13s. 3d.
Surtees Soc., xxxv. 130
c. 1394 Writing, illuminating and other expenses of a
primer, given to the Lady Queen of Castile,
i.e. Constance, 2nd wife of John of Gaunt 63s. 6d.
C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 401
1395 Cronica Martiniana, cum aliis.
Priced 3s. 4d., sold for [Cf. price in 1376] 3s. 4d.
Libellus cum causa T. Cantuariensis, et aliis.
Priced 2s., sold for 3s. 4d.
Repertorium Willelmi Durand.
Priced 6s. 8d., not sold 6s. 8d.
William de Mandagoto de Electionibus. Priced
5s., sold for 6s. 8d.
Constitutions of Ottobonus, cum aliis. Priced
18d., not sold 18d.
Petrus de Formâ dictandi, quire. Priced 2s.,
not sold [Cf. 1443] 2s.
Bernard, Meditationes, cum aliis 5s.,
sold for 6s.
Mandeville on paper, in French. 2s., not sold 2s.
Quire, de Arte dictandi, with letters of Peter of
Blois. 2s., not sold 2s.
Textus Clementinarum [Decretals of Clement]
12d., not sold 12d.
Brut in French. 2s., not sold 2s.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 6
1397 Vellum for 6 Processionals, and writing, noting
(notatio, musical notation), illuminating and
binding them 73s. 4d.
Surtees Soc., vii. xxvi.-vii. n.
15 c. Liber Scintillarum 2s.
Augustine on John 10 marks.
C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 403
15 c. For 39 quires parchment at vid.=xxs.
vid. (sic) 19s. 6d.
For writing same at xxd. quire 65s.
For illuminating 12d.
For binding 2s. 6d.
Summa £4, 8s. 0d.
James3, 105
15 c. 27 quires parchment at iiid. 6s. 9d.
For writing same at 16d. 36s.
Illumination 8d.
Binding 2s.
Summa 45s. 5d.
Ibid., 128
15 c. 27 quires and 6 fo. parchment at iiid. 6s. 9d.
For writing same at 16d. 36s.
Illumination 6d.
Binding 2s.
Total 45s. 3d.
Ibid., 133
15 c. 33 quires parchment 8s. 3d.
For writing same at 16d. 44s.
Illumination 12d.
Binding 2s.
Total 55s. 3d.
Ibid., 169
15 c. 29 quires parchment at iiid. 7s. 3d.
For writing same at 16d. 38s. 8d.
Illumination 12d.
Binding 2s.
Total 48s. 11d.
Ibid., 226
15 c. Antonius Andreas, super Metaphysica, etc., 153ff.,
on paper 13s. 4d.
James3, 290
1400 John of Meun's Roman de la Rose, sold before
the palace gate at Paris £33, 6s. 6d.
Warton, i. 187
1400 Tabula Martiniana 3s. 4d.
Gradual, de usu Ebor. 40s.
Catholicon. [Cf. 1452.] £4, 10s. 0d.
*Surtees Soc., xlv. 13
1414 For mending one old mass book almost worn out;
for parchment and new writing in divers parts
and for the binding and new clasps, and a skin
to cover the book 11s. 2d.
Archæologia, lvii. 208-9
1420-40 Three books given to the Duke of Gloucester,
Cato glossed, and two books of Abbot Whethamstede's
own composition £10
Book of astronomy, given to the Duke of Bedford £3, 6s. 8d.
Boëthius, de Consolatione philosophiae, glossed £5
Holkot, super Sapiéntiam Salomonis 13s. 4d.
Holkot, Sermons £3, 6s. 8d.
Thos. Netter of Walden and Wm. Wodeford
against Wyclif. 2 vols. £6, 13s. 4d.
*Ann. mon S. Alb. a J. Amund. ii. 256, 259,
268-71.
1420-40Alan de Lisle's Anticlaudianus, cum quaestionibus
in eodem 13s. 4d.
Unus parvus libellulus, cum metris et tabulis
diversis 13s. 4d.
* Ann. mon S. Alb. a J. Amund. ii. 256,
259, 268-71.
1423 Magister Sententiarum. [Cf. 1376, 1452.] 16s.
Concordance 20s.
Gregory's Pastoral care 4s.
Anselm, Cur Deus homo. [Cf. 1451.] 10s.
Archdeacon Guido de Baysio's Rosarium 40s.
Liber Sextus Decretalium. [Cf. 1380, 1445, 1451.] 40s.
Digestum Inforciatum. [Cf. 1380, 1445.] 13s. 4d.
Digestum vetus. [Cf. 1380.] 13s. 4d.
Codex. [Cf. 1380.]£1, 6s. 8d.
Surtees Soc., xlv. 76
1432 Dr. Thomas Gascoigne gave 6 books to Lincoln
College, value £17, 10s.
Clark, Linc. Coll. (Coll. Hist.)
1438 Thomas Aquinas super primum Sententiarum £1
Thomas Aquinas in secundum Sententiarum £1, 6s. 8d.
James10, xxiv.
1441 Tabula super Senecam et Boetium de Consolat. et
de disciplina scholarium 1s. 8d.
James10, xxiv.
1442 One part of Lyra £3, 6s. 8d.
James10, xxiv.
1443 27 volumes bought from John Paston's Exors. for
King's Hall, Cambridge. £8, 17s. 4d.
1443 For an old book, Postillae super Lucam 2s.
James10, xxiv.
1443 Petrus de formâ dictandi. [Cf. 1395.] 1s. 8d.
Mun. Acad., 532
1445 Book of philosophy, cum tractatibus Alberti 13s. 4d.
James10, xxiv.
1445 Liber Sextus Decretalium, pledged for. [Cf. 1380, £1, et ob.
1423, 1451.]
Digestum Inforciatum, pledged for. [Cf. 1380, 3s. 4d.
1423.]
* Mun. Acad., 543
1449 Cicero, Rhetoric 3s. 4d.
James10, xxiv.
1451 Petrus de Palude [? in Sententiis] 2s.
Epistles of Seneca ad Lucilium 2s.
Gregory's Sermons 6s. 8d.
Plato, Timaeus 6d.
Digestum vetus. [Cf. 1380, 1423] 4s.
Liber Sextus Decretalium, cum glossa cardinali.
[Cf. 1380, 1445, 1423.] 5s.
Codex. [Cf. 1423.] 4s.
Bernardus Parmensis de Botone, Casus longus 5s.
Martial 1s.
Anselm, Cur Deus homo. [Cf. 1423.] 2s. 4d.
Decretals of Clement 3s. 4d.
Vetus liber Decretalium 1s. 4d.
* Mun. Acad., 609
1452 Isidore, Etymologies; Bede, Historia
Ecclesiastica 30s.
Augustine, de spiritu et anima, with
the Meditations of S. Bernard, and many
other contents 40s.
Guillelmus Parisiensis de virtutibus 20s.
Bartholomeus Anglicus [Bartholomew de Glanville]
de proprietatibus rerum 6s. 8d.
Pupilla oculi. [There were several books of this
title.] 20s.
Catholicon. [Cf. 1400.] £4
Polichronica 20s.
Historia Scholastica. [Cf. bef. 1300.] 5s.
Lombard's Sentences. [Cf. 1376, 1423.] 16s.
* Surtees Soc., xlv. 132-3
1453 Book by Wyclif 7s. 6d.
Book against Wyclif 3s. 6d.
More's book on Wyclif and other books £2, 2s. 0d.
Rogers, iv. 600
1455 Nicolaus de Gorham super Psalterium, pledged
for £1, 6s. 8d.
James10, xxiv.
1455 Gregory the Great's Works, 157 leaves £3, 6s. 8d.
Library (N. S.), viii. 172
1456 Avicenna, redeemed for £1, 6s. 4d.
James10, xxiv.
1457 Aegidius super Physica 16s. 8d.
James10, xxiv.
1457 Aristotle de animalibus 5s. 6d.
James10, xxiv.
1459 A Holy Legend £10
Rogers, iv. 600
1462 Aristotle, Rhetor. Polit., etc. 8s. 5d.
James10, xxiv.
1462 Map of the world, bought for New College £5
Rogers, iv. 600
1467 Cicero, de Officiis and Ambrosius super eodem 6s.
James10, xxiv.
c. 1468 S. Augustine's Epistles £1, 13s. 4d.
Library (N.S.), viii. 172
1468 Richard Rolle's Meditatio de passione domini 4d.
*Surtees Soc., xlv. 163
1469 Jerome's Epistles £1
James10, xxiv.
1469 Vellum, writing, correcting, illuminating, and
binding a Lectionary in redskin, and cleaning
the book 64s. 3d.
Library, ii. (1890), 243
c. 1470 iij bokes of soffistre 1s. 8d.
A red boke with Hugucio and Papie £1
A boke of Seynt Thomas de Veritatibus 10s.
1 boke of xij chapetyrs of Lyncoln,
and a boke of Safistre 10s.
1 premere (primer?) 2s.
* Gairdner, Paston Letters, vi. 175, 177
1472 Thomas Aquinas, Tabula on works 5s. 4d.
James10, xxv.
1481 Alexander Aphrodisaeus, super libros de Anima £1, 13s. 4d.
Rogers, iv. 600-1
1502 Hugo de Vienna's works in 7 volumes [printed] £2, 6s. 4d.
Rogers, iv. 600-1
1509 A printed legende in paper de usu Saris coueryd
with white lether with ij short claspes of latyn 3s. 4d.
C. A. S. (N.S.), 8vo ser., iii. 361
1509 A graile couered with white lether with ij long
claspes £4, 6s. 8d.
A graile couered with white lether having ij
longe claspes 53s. 4d.
A prikesong boke in parchement 13s. 4d.
C. A. S. (N.S.), 8vo ser., iii. 361
c. 1525 Cicero, de Officiis, bought by Thos. Linacre;
now B. M. Reg. 15 A vi. 8d.
James, 519
1531 4 hymnaria for the quire at ⅓ 5s.
Rogers, i. 600-1
1538 1 Statutes of the Kingdom 14s.
Polydore Vergil's history 6s. 8d.
Rogers, i. 600-1
1539 Giorgio della Valle [? Aristotle's Poetics] 10s.
Rogers, iv. 600-1
1540 Map of the World 4s. 0d.
Suidas in Greek [? printed ed. 1499] £1, 12s. 0d.
Erasmus on New Testament 9s.
Rogers, iv. 600-1
1542 Theophylact and Eustathius [? printed ed. 1542] £2, 2s. 0d.
Epiphanius 8s.
Rogers, iv. 600-1
Parchment for, writing, rubrishing and binding a
book called "Domyltone," also rubrishing
Heytesbury's Sophismata. ["Domyltone" was
perhaps one of John of Dumbleton's books] 15s. 4½d.
Hist. MSS., 2nd Rept., App. 129;
Bibliographica, iii. 148
Note.--Many prices of books at Winchester
College, temp. Henry VI will be found in
Archæol. Jour. xv. (1858) 62-74.
WRITING
1346 For writing a Psalter with Kalendar 5s. 6d.
And a "placebo et dirige cum ympnario et
collectario" 4s. 3d.
Surtees Soc., xxxv. 165
1383-4 For writing Abbot Litlington's Missal during
two years £4
Robinson, 7-8
1383-4 Livery for the scribe 20s.
For writing notes (musical notation) in Abbot
Litlington's Missal 3s. 4d.
Robinson, 7-8
1393 Writing 2 Graduals £4, 6s. 8d.
Surtees Soc., xxxv. 130
1397 For writing a Legenda of 34 "quires" 72s.
Surtees Soc., vii. xxvi-xxvii n.
15c. Writing 25 quires at 16d. 33s. 4d.
James3, 234
? 15 c. Writing per quire. 16d.
C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 398
1430 N. de Lyra transcribed 100 marks
Warton, i. 187 n.
1467 Item, for wrytynge of a quare and demi ... prise
the quayr, xxd. 2s. 6d.
Item, for wrytenge of a calendar 12d.
Item, for notynge (musical notation) of v.
quayres and ij leves, prise of the
quayr, viij[d.] 3s. 7d.
Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 4
1469 For writing a "litill booke of Pheesyk" 2d.
For writing "the tretys of Werre in iiij books,
which conteyneth lx levis aftir ijd. a leaff" 10s.
For writing "De Regimine Principum, which
conteyneth xlvti leves, aftir a peny a leef,
which is right wele worth" 3s. 9d.
*Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 2-4
1469 For writing a Lectionary of 18 quires and 9 skins 28s. 4d.
Library, ii. (1890) 243
ILLUMINATING
1374 Church of Norwich paid for illuminating a
Graduale and Consuetudinary £22, 9s.
Merryweather, 36n.
1383-4 For illumination of the large letters in Abbot
Litlington's Missal £22, 0s. 3d.
Robinson, 7-8
1393 Illuminating 2 graduals £2
Surtees Soc., xxxv. 130
1395 Illuminating 3 graduals £2
Surtees Soc., xxxv. 130
1397 Illuminating and binding Legenda of 34 "quires" 30s.
Surtees Soc., vii. xxvi-xxvii n.
1445 Yearly wages of an illuminator at Oxford, four
marks, ten shillings
Mun. Acad., 551
1467 Sir John Howard paid Thomas Lympnour of
Bury St. Edmunds for illuminating, and other
work
For viij. hole vynets [or small miniatures]
prise the vynett, xijd 8s.
Item, for xxj. demi-vynets ... prise the
demi-vynett, iiijd. 7s.
Item, for Psalmes lettres xvc and di' ... the
prise of C. iiijd. [I.e., 1550 at 4d.
a hundred] 5s. 2d.
Item, for p'ms letters lxiijc ... prise of a
C., jd. 5s. 3d.
Item, for floryshynge of capytalls, vc 5d.
Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 4
1469 For rubrishing a book 3s. 4d.
Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 4
1469 Illuminating a Lectionary 13s. 6d.
Library, ii. (1890) 243
BINDING
1383-4 Binding Abbot Litlington's Missal 21s.
Robinson, 7-8
1384-5 Covering a great Portiforium 3s. 2d.
Covering a book and making three silver clasps 5s. 8d.
Robinson, 8
1392 Binding seven books 4s. 0d.
O. H. S., 27, Boase, xlviii.
1395 Binding large gradual (York Cathedral) 10s.
Surtees Soc., xxxv. 130
? 15c. Binding (in white skin over wooden boards) 2s.
C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 398
1412-13 Stitching 67 books at 1½d. a book, with
13d. in addition 9s. 5½d.
Stitching covers of 52 books at 1d. 4s. 4d.
C. A. S. (N.S.), iv. 300-3
1428 Binding Bible in 2 vols. 5s. 3d.
Rogers, iv. 600
1467 Item, for byndynge of the boke [a Psalter or
other liturgical book] 12s.
Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 4
1469 Binding a Lectionary in redskin, and correcting
the book 5s. 5d.
Library, ii. (1890) 243
Note.--For many prices for binding,
repairing, and chaining books, see
Bibliographical Society's Monograph 13,
p. 18-19.