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Late Medieval English Scribes icon

Late Medieval English Scribes

105 results from this resource . Displaying 41 to 60

No of Folios: 27 + i Pagination: Fairly recent foliation in pencil in top right corner of rectos. Quiring: 1(2), 2(9 i missing), 3(8), 4(8) and i Signatures: Traces of 'b' followed by Roman numerals in the second quire of

for prologues and tales. Marginal Headings: Authorities cited in Tale of Melibeus and Parson's Tale in the margins in the ink of the text. Running Titles: In the ink of the text and preceded by red paraphs. Paragraph Marks: Red

honur of this boke and of meny mo benedicamus domino'. Table of Contents: Modern on fii-ii(v) Flourished Initials: High quality pen drawings in brown ink varying between booklets. Further Information: James Catalogue; Linne R. Mooney, 'Scribes and Booklets of Trinity

in black ink after f11. Quiring: 8 except for first quire of four leaves only because of missing text. Signatures: Despite the dirty and degraded condition of many of the lower corners, it is still possible to see the occasional

with red flourishing. Miniatures: On f1v dream of Nabuchodonosor. Flourished Initials: 2-line blue initials with red flourishing. Other Names (not owners): From Digital Scriptorium description: Verney family; Henry Hart; Edward Bromley; Gatacre family of Claverley, Shropshire; Quaritch catalogue 344 (1924)

much later date. Marginal Headings: Added by the scribe in the ink of the text in the tales of the Clerk and Wife of Bath. In the Tale of Melibeus there are numerous marginal names and references to authorities. Running

red flourishing extending into margins. Used at the beginning of prologues and tales. Other Names (not owners): Very little of any help survives in the manuscript. It was left by Richard Rawlinson to the Bodleian after 1755. Flourished Initials: Blue

the tail of 'h' to flick counter-clockwise to finish. Usage: 'He'; one of the slightly more elaborate upper case 'H's in the scribe's repertoire. Usage: 'How'; a somewhat larger version of lower case 'H' as the initial letter of a

'dede'; an example of both versions in this word. Usage: 'qd'; again a classic 'qd' by this scribe with tag forming a curve from the centre of the loop of 'd'. g Usage: 'gladnesse'; the upper compartment of 'g' usually

Gowerian/Northern Material: Parchment No of Folios: i original parchment flyleaf stained by fold-over of leather + 205 + ii original parchment flyleaves second verso of which stained by fold-over of leather. Pagination: Modern pencil upper outer of rectos, foliating, but

Usage: 'What'; 'W' at the beginning of a line tipped with red ink. y Usage: 'youre'; Usage: 'away'; the last letter of the last word of a line. Usage: 'Yit'; the first letter of a line. Yogh Usage: 'ȝif'; yogh

the fork of 'y' drops below the level of the lower line of surrounding graphs. Usage: 'wey'; Thorn and Yogh Usage: 'heriþ'; thorn is ubiquitous, used on all occasions on this folio for 'th'. Usage: 'þanne'; the lobe of thorn

the beginning of a line. y Usage: 'may'; the left arm of 'y' is frequently separate from the right. Usage: 'eu(er'y'; the tail of 'y' turns counter-clockwise. Usage: 'opynyon'; Usage: 'York'; upper case graph for the name of a place.

London, Society of Antiquaries MS 134 USA, New York, Pierpont Morgan Library MS M 875 Current Manuscript: London, Society of Antiquaries MS 134 Folios: 1-297 Sampled Folios: 35r, 42r, 262v Image Rights: Reproduced with permission of the Society of Antiquaries

(not owners): On f274v a shield with the arms of Knyvet, identified by Manly and Rickert as those of Sir Edmund Knyvet (d. 1546) of Norfolk. They trace the progress of the manuscript to other Norfolk families, the Walopoles and

341 lines at beginning of Prologue, probably 2 leaves Language: English and Latin Date Range: 1400-1425 (certainly decoration done after 1413 because of the green wash used) Scribal Hands: Gower Scribe III Material: Parchment No of Folios: 1 marbled and

A Catalogue of Chaucer Manuscripts, vol. 1, Works Before 'The Canterbury Tales', pp. 67-68, Aldershot, Hants: Scolar Press, 1995. Windeatt, B.A. (ed.), Geoffrey Chaucer, Troilus & Criseyde: a new edition of 'The Book of Troilus' (London and New York, 1984),

f107v. They then made associations with a priory of Austin Canons at Hempton in Norfolk whose patron in 1483 was Anthony Wydeville, related by marriage to Richardof Gloucester. From the evidence of an early pressmatk, Seymour suggests that the

on the death of King Edward IV; poem beginning 'Musyng alone'; Latin articles on the Passion; Canterbury Tales (ff6-194); 'Periculum animarum'; a list of the deaths of English Kings from Edward I to the accession ofRichard III. Language: English

the manuscript owned by Edmund Canby of Yorkshire (I: 616, 627). The manuscript was examined by Urry in 1714 and thereafter passed through the hands of Charles Ingram, Viscount Irvine J.P. Kemble and Richard Heber. It went from Heber to

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 28 March 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=richard%20of%20york&sr=ls&st=40