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Full text of "Old English libraries; the making, collection and use of books during the middle ages"

Presented to the 

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO 
LIBRARY 

by the 

ONTARIO LEGISLATIVE 
LIBRARY 

1980 



THE ANTIQUARY'S BOOKS 

GENERAL EDITOR: J. CHARLES COX, LL.D., F.S.A. 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 




tame antcotflttnrt mcrrto Arm to 



ABBOT WHETHAMSTEDE 




OLD ENGLIS 1 
LIBRARIES a!U. 

THE MAKING, COLLECTION, AND USE OF BOOKS 
DURING THE MIDDLE AGES 



BY 



ERNEST A. SAVAGE 



WITH FIFTY-TWO ILLUSTRATIONS 




METHUEN & CO. LTD. 

36 ESSEX STREET W.C. 

LONDON 




First Published in ipn 



PREFACE 

WITH the arrangement and equipment of 
libraries this essay has little to do : the 
ground being already covered adequately 
by Dr. Clark in his admirable monograph on The 
Care of Books. Herein is described the making, 
use, and circulation of books considered as a means 
of literary culture. It seemed possible to throw a 
useful sidelight on literary history, and to introduce 
some human interest into the study of bibliography, 
if the place held by books in the life of the Middle 
Ages could be indicated. Such, at all events, was 
my aim, but I am far from sure of my success in 
carrying it out ; and I offer this book merely as 
a discursive and popular treatment of a subject 
which seems to me of great interest. 

The book has suffered from one unhappy circum- 
stance. It was planned in collaboration with my 
friend Mr. James Hutt, M.A., but unfortunately, 
owing to a breakdown of health, Mr. Hutt was only 
able to help me in the composition of the chapter 
on the Libraries of Oxford, which is chiefly his work. 
Had it been possible for Mr. Hutt to share all the 
labour with me, this book would have been put 
before the public with more confidence. 



vi OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

More footnote references appear in this volume 
than in most of the series of "Antiquary's Books." 
One consideration specially urged me to take this 
course. The subject has been treated briefly, and 
it seemed essential to cite as many authorities as 
possible, so that readers who were in the mood might 
obtain further information by following them up. 

In a book covering a long period and touching 
national and local history at many points, I cannot 
hope to have escaped errors ; and I shall be grateful 
if readers will bring them to my notice. 

I need hardly say I am especially indebted to 
the splendid work accomplished by Dr. Montague 
Rhodes James, the Provost of King's College, in 
editing The Ancient Libraries of Canterbury and 
Dover, and in compiling the great series of descrip- 
tive catalogues of manuscripts in Cambridge and 
other colleges. I have long marvelled at Dr. James' 
patient research ; at his steady perseverance in an 
aim which, even when attained as it now has been 
could only win him the admiration and esteem of 
a few scholars and lovers of old books. 

I have to thank Mr. Hutt for much general 
help, and for reading all the proof slips. To Canon 
C. M. Church, M.A., of Wells, I am indebted for 
his kindness in answering inquiries, for lending me 
the illustration of the exterior of Wells Cathedral 
Library, and for permitting me to reproduce a plan 
from his book entitled Chapters in the Early History 
of the Church of Wells. The Historic Society of 



PREFACE vii 

Lancashire and Cheshire have kindly allowed me 
to reproduce a part of their plan of Birkenhead 
Priory. Illustrations were also kindly lent by the 
Clarendon Press, the Cambridge University Press, 
Mr. John Murray, Mr. Fisher Unwin, the Editor 
of The Connoisseur, and Mr. G. Coffey, of the Royal 
Irish Academy. A small portion of the first chapter 
has appeared in The Library, and is reprinted by 
kind permission of the editors. Mr. C. W. Sutton, 
M.A., City Librarian of Manchester, has been in 
every way kind and patient in helping me. So too 
has Mr. Strickland Gibson, M.A., of the Bodleian 
Library, especially in connexion with the chapter on 
Oxford Libraries. Thanks are due also to the 
Deans of Hereford, Lincoln, and Durham, to Mr. 
Tapley - Soper, City Librarian of Exeter, and to 
Mr. W. T. Carter, Public Librarian of Warwick ; 
also to my brother, V. M. Savage, for his drawings. 
The general editor of this series, the Rev. J. Charles 
Cox, LL.D., F.S.A., gave me much help by reading 
the manuscript and proofs ; and I am grateful to him 
for many courtesies and suggestions. 

ERNEST A. SAVAGE 



CONTENTS 



CHAP. PAGE 

I. THE USE OF BOOKS IN EARLY IRISH MONASTERIES i 



II. THE ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS . . 23 

III. LIBRARIES OF THE GREAT ABBEYS BOOK-LOVERS AMONG 

THE MENDICANTS DISPERSAL OF MONKISH LIBRARIES 45 

IV. BOOK MAKING AND COLLECTING IN THE RELIGIOUS 

HOUSES ....... 73 

V. CATHEDRAL AND CHURCH LIBRARIES . . .109 

VI. ACADEMIC LIBRARIES : OXFORD .... 133 

VII. ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: CAMBRIDGE . . . 155 

VIII. ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: THEIR ECONOMY . . .165 

IX. THE USE OF BOOKS TOWARDS THE END OF THE 

MANUSCRIPT PERIOD . . . . . 173 

X. THE BOOK TRADE ... . . 199 

XI. THE CHARACTER OF THE MEDIEVAL LIBRARY, AND 

THE EXTENT OF CIRCULATION OF BOOKS . . 209 
ix 



x OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

PAGE 

APPENDIX A. PRICES OF BOOKS AND MATERIALS FOR BOOK- 
MAKING . . . . . .243 



APPENDIX B. LIST OF CERTAIN CLASSIC AUTHORS FOUND IN 

MEDIEVAL CATALOGUES . . . .258 

APPENDIX C. LIST OF MEDIEVAL COLLECTIONS OF BOOKS . 263 
APPENDIX D. LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL REFERENCE WORKS 286 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT 

PAGE 

WRITING IN BOOK OF KELLS . . . . .14 

From THOMPSON'S Greek and Latin Palceography 

WRITING IN BOOK OF ARMAGH . . . . .15 

From THOMPSON'S Greek and Latin Palceography 

WRITING IN GR^ECO-LATIN ACTS, PROBABLY USED BY BEDE . 27 

From MS. Bodl. Laud. Gr. 35, f. 63 

WRITING IN BENEDICTIONAL OF ST. ETHELWOLD . . 43 

From Archceologia, xxiv. 

PLAN OF SCRIPTORIUM, BIRKENHEAD PRIORY . . -74 

Redrawn from Trans, of the Lancashire and Cheshire Historic 
Society 

ANCIENT STALL, OR CARRELL, IN BISHOP'S CANNINGS CHURCH, 

WILTS ........ 77 

From Cox AND HARVEY'S English Church Furniture 

TABLET CASE AND WAXED TABLET . . . .84 

From COFFEY'S Celtic Antiquities in the Museum of the R.LA. 

PLAN SHOWING DISPOSITION OF BOOKS IN CISTERCIAN 

HOUSES ........ 93 

Redrawn from GASQUET'S English Monastic Life 

PLAN SHOWING PROBABLE SITUATION OF LIBRARY OF WELLS 

CATHEDRAL IN THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY . .122 

Redrawn from Canon CHURCH'S Chapters in the History of 
Wells Cathedral 

BERKBLOCK VIEW OF DUKE HUMFREY'S LIBRARY . 140 

From MS. Bodl. 13 

AUTOGRAPH OF DUKE HUMFREY OF GLOUCESTER . 191 

From MS. Harl. 1705, f. 960 

RECORD OF SALE OF BOOK CAPTURED AT POITIERS . . 234 

From MS. Reg. 19, D ii. opposite f. i 
xi 



LIST OF PLATES 



ABBOT WHETHAMSTEDE ..... Frontispiece 

From MS. Cott. Nero, D vii. f. 270 

PLATE FACING PAGE 

I. (a) ANCIENT SATCHEL OF IRISH MISSAL, CORPUS CHRISTI 

COLLEGE, OXFORD . . . . .12 

By permission of the Governing Body 

() COVER OF STOWE MISSAL . . . .12 

Museum of Royal Irish Academy, Dublin (A.D. 1023-1052) 

II. ILLUMINATED PAGE OF BOOK OF KELLS . . .14 

From WESTWOOD'S Facsimiles 

III. THE SHRINE OF THE CATHACH PSALTER, ELEVENTH 

CENTURY ....... 16 

From The Connoisseur, by permission of the Editor 

IV. CUMDACH OF ST. MOLAISE'S GOSPELS : FRONT AND 

BOTTOM ....... 20 

From COFFEY'S Celtic Antiquities in Museum of Royal Irish 
Academy, by permission of the Council 

V. BENEDICTIONAL OF ST. ETHELWOLD : NATIVITY OF 

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST . . . . .42 

From Arch&ologia , xxiv. 

VI. BENEDICTIONAL OF ST. ETHELWOLD : THE ASCENSION . 44 

From Arck&ologitt, xxiv. 

VII. (a) ABBOT ROGER DE NORTHONE WITH HIS BOOKS . 48 

From MS. Cott. Nero, D vii. f. i83 

(b) ABBOT GARIN WITH HIS BOOKS . . .48 

From MS. Cott. Claud. E iv. pt. i., f. 125^ 

VIII. ABBOT SIMON OF ST. ALBANS AT HIS BOOK-CHEST . 50 

From MS. Cott. Claud. E iv. pt. i. f. 124 
xii 



LIST OF PLATES xiii 

PLATE FACING PAGE 

IX. GREY FRIARS, LONDON (CHRIST'S HOSPITAL) : OLD 

HALL AND WHITTINGTON'S LIBRARY . . -54 

From Trollope's History of Christ's Hospital 

X. GREY FRIARS CATALOGUE OF CONVENTUAL LIBRARIES 58 

From MS. Bodl. Tanner, 165, f. ng 

XI. TWELFTH CENTURY ILLUMINATION FROM BURY ST. 

EDMUND'S ABBEY . . . . .64 

From MS. 2, f. 28 1, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, 
by permission of the Master and Fellows 

XII. WESTMINSTER ILLUMINATION, THIRTEENTH CENTURY 68 

From MS. Reg. 2 A xii. f. 14, Brit. Mus. 

XIII. THE CLOISTERS, GLOUCESTER, SHOWING CARRELLS . 76 

From MURRAY'S Cathedrals 

XIV. A SCRIBE AND HIS TOOLS, FROM A VERY ANCIENT MS. 82 

From MS. Harl. 2820, f. 120 

XV FURNESS ABBEY : CLOISTERS AND CHAPTER HOUSE . 94 

XVI. FACSIMILE OF LIBRARY CATALOGUE OF SYON MONAS- 
TERY ....... 104 

From BATESON'S Catalogue of Syon Monastery 

XVII. MEDIEVAL BINDING: MR. YATES THOMPSON'S HEGE- 

SIPPUS . . . . . . .108 

From BATESON'S Mediceval England 

XVIII. ANCIENT BOOK-BOX IN EXETER CATHEDRAL . . 110 

Photo by HEATH & BRADNEE, Exeter 

XIX. CHAINED BOOKS, HEREFORD CATHEDRAL LIBRARY . 116 

By permission of the Dean of Hereford 

XX. OLD LIBRARY, LINCOLN CATHEDRAL . . .118 

Photo by G. HADLEIGH, Lincoln. By permission of the 
Dean of Lincoln 

XXI. WELLS CATHEDRAL: LIBRARY OVER CLOISTER . 122 

Photo by T. W. PHILLIPS, Wells 



xiv OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

PLATE FACING PAGE 

XXII. ST. MARY'S CHURCH, OXFORD : FIRST HOME OF 

UNIVERSITY LIBRARY. . . . .132 

Photo by H. W. TAUNT, Oxford 

XXIII. (a) ILLUMINATOR OF ST. ALBANS . . .134 

From MS. Cott. Nero, D iii. f. 105 

(b) DOCUMENT BEARING THE NAMES OF MEMBERS 

OF THE BOOK-TRADE, c. 1180 . . .134 

From BARNARD'S Companion to English History 

XXIV. (a) DUKE HUMFREY AND ELEANOR OF GLOUCESTER 

JOINING THE CONFRATERNITY OF ST. ALBANS . 138 

From MS. Cott. Nero, D vii. f. 154^ 

(b} ANCIENT ROOF OF DUKE HUMFREY'S LIBRARY . 138 

Photo by JAS. HUTT, M.A. 

XXV. DUKE HUMFREY'S LIBRARY, OXFORD . . .142 

Photo by H. W. TAUNT 

XXVI. LIBRARY OF CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE, OXFORD . 144 
Photo by H. W. TAUNT 

XXVII. MERTON COLLEGE LIBRARY, OXFORD . . .152 

Photo by H. W. TAUNT 

XXVIII. PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY, 

CAMBRIDGE . . . . . .156 

From LOGGAN'S Cantab. Illus. 

XXIX. LIBRARY OF CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE, OXFORD, 

FROM MASTER'S GARDEN . . . .170 

Photo by H. W. TAUNT 

XXX. CARMELITE IN HIS STUDY . . . .184 

From MS. Reg. 14 E i. f. 3, Brit. Mus. 

XXXI. A SCRIBE (ST. MARK WRITING HIS GOSPEL), FROM 

THE BEDFORD HOURS . . . .196 

From Add. MS. 18850, f. 24, Brit. Mus. 



LIST OF PLATES xv 

PLATE FACING PAGE 

XXXII. A SCRIBE AT WORK, FROM EADWINE'S PSALTER, 

c. 1150 . . . . . . . 202 

From BATESON'S Mediceval England 

XXXIII. ENGLISH ILLUMINATED WORK UNDER FRENCH IN- 

FLUENCE, FROM TENISON PSALTER. . .214 

From MS. Add. 24686, f. 12, Brit. Mus. 

XXXIV. FRESCO OF THE SEVEN LIBERAL ARTS, BY T. GADDI, 

CHURCH OF S. M. NOVELLA, FLORENCE . . 222 

Photo by ALINARI 

XXXV. ANCIENT VELLUM BOOK-MARKER . . . 230 

From MS. 49, Corpus Christ! College, Camb., by per- 
mission of the Master and Fellows 




OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



CHAPTER I 

INTRODUCTORY THE USE OF BOOKS IN 
EARLY IRISH MONASTERIES 

"What tyme ]?at abbeies were first ordeyned 
and monkis were first gadered to gydre." 

Inscribed in MS. of Life of Barlaam and Josaphat^ 
Peterhouse, Camb. 

i 

TO people of modern times early monachism must seem 
an unbeautiful and even offensive life. True piety 
was exceptional, fanaticism the rule. Ideals which 
were surely false impelled men to lead a life of idleness and 
savage austerity, to sink very near the level of beasts, as 
did the Nitrian hermits when they murdered Hypatia in 
Alexandria. But this view does not give the whole truth. 
To shut out a wicked and sensual world, with its manifold 
temptations, seemed the only possible way to live purely. 
To get far beyond the influence of a barbaric society, utterly 
antagonistic to peaceful religious observance, was clearly the 
surest means of achieving personal holiness. Monachism 
was a system designed for these ends. Throughout the 
Middle Ages it was the refuge the only refuge for the 
man who desired to flee from sin. Such, at any rate, was 
the truly religious man's view. And if monkish retreats 
sheltered some ignorant fanatics, they also attracted many 



2 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

representatives of the culture and learning of the time. 
This was bound to be so. At all times solitude has been 
pleasant to the student and thinker, or to the moody lover 
of books. 

By great good fortune, then, the studious occupations 
which did so much to soften monkish austerities in the 
Middle Ages, were recognised early as needful to the system. 
Even the ascetics by the Red Sea and in Nitria did not 
deprive themselves of all literary solace, although the more 
fanatical would abjure it, and many would be too poor to 
have it. The Rule of Pachomius, founder of the settlements 
of Tabenna, required the brethren's books to be kept in a 
cupboard and regulated lending them. These libraries are 
referred to in Benedict's own Rule. We hear of St. Pachomius 
destroying a copy of Origen, because the teaching in it was 
obnoxious ; of Abba Bischoi writing an ascetic work, a copy of 
which is extant ; of anchorites under St. Macarius of Alex- 
andria transcribing books ; and of St. Jerome collecting a 
library summo studio et labore, copying manuscripts and study- 
ing Hebrew at his hermitage even after a formal renunciation 
of the classics, and then again, at the end of his life, bringing 
together another library at Bethlehem monastery, and 
instructing boys in grammar and in classic authors. Basil 
the Great, when founding eremitical settlements on the 
river Iris in Pontus, spent some time in making selections 
from Origen. St. Melania the younger wrote books which 
were noted for their beauty and accuracy. And when 
Athanasius introduced Eastern monachism into Italy, and 
St. Martin of Tours and John Cassian carried it farther 
afield into Gaul, the same work went on. In the cells 
and caves of Martin's community at Marmoutier the 
younger monks occupied their time in writing and sacred 
study, and the older monks in prayer. 1 Sulpicius Severus 

1 Healy, 46. 



INTRODUCTORY 3 

(V. 353-425), the ecclesiastical historian, preferred retire- 
ment, literary study, and the friendship and teaching of 
St. Martin to worldly pursuits. At the famous island 
community of Lerins, in South Gaul, were instructed 
some of the most celebrated scholars of the West, among 
them St. Hilary. " Such were their piety and learning that 
all the cities round about strove emulously to have monks 
from Lerins for their bishops." l Another centre of studious 
occupation was the monastery of Germanus of Auxerre ; 
while near Vienne was a community where St. Avitus 
(c. 525) could earn the high reputation for holiness and learn- 
ing which won him a metropolitan see. Many other facts 
and incidents prove the literary pursuits of the Gallic ascetics ; 
as, for example, the reputation the nuns of Aries in the 
sixth century won for their writing ; and the curious story 
of Apollinaris Sidonius driving after a monk who was 
carrying a manuscript to Britain, stopping him, and there 
and then dictating to secretaries a copy of the precious 
book which had so nearly escaped him. 2 



I n 

Monachism of this Eastern type came from Gaul to 
Ireland. 3 St. Patrick received his sacred education at 
Marmoutier ; under Germanus at Auxerre ; and possibly 
at Lerins. His companions on his mission to Ireland, and 
the missionaries who followed him, nearly all came from 
the same centres. Naturally, therefore, the same practices 
would be observed, not only in regard to religious discipline 
and organisation, but in regard to instruction and study. 
Even the mysterious Palladius, Patrick's forerunner, is said 

1 Healy, 50. 2 Sandys, i. 245. 

3 On the connection between Eastern and Celtic monachism, see Stokes 
(G.T.). 



4 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

to have left books in Ireland. 1 But the earliest important 
references to that use of books which distinguishes the 
educated missionary from the mere fanatical recluse are in 
connexion with Patrick. Pope Sixtus is said to have 
given him books in plenty to take with him to Ireland. 
Later he is supposed to have visited Rome, whence he 
brought books home to Armagh. 2 He gave copies of 
parts of the Scriptures to Irish chieftains. To one Fiacc 
he gave a case containing a bell, a crosier, tablets, and a 
meinister, which, according to Dr. Lanigan, may have been 
a cumdach enclosing the Gospels and the vessels for the 
sacred ministry, or, according to Dr. Whitley Stokes, 
simply a credence-table. 3 He sometimes gave a missal 
(lebar nuird). He had books at Tara. On one occasion 
his books were dropped into the water and were " drowned." 
Presumably the books he distributed came from the Gallic 
schools, although his followers no doubt began transcribing 
as opportunity offered and as material came to hand. 
Patrick himself wrote alphabets, sometimes called the 
" elements " ; most likely the elements or the A B C of the 
Christian doctrine, corresponding with the " primer." 4 

This was the dawn of letters for Ireland. By dis- 
seminating the Scriptures and these primers, Patrick and 
his followers, and the train of missionaries who came after- 
wards, 5 secured the knowledge and use of the Roman 
alphabet. The way was clear for the free introduction of 
schools and books and learning. " St. Patrick did not do 
for the Scots what Wulfilas did for the Goths, and the 
Slavonic apostles for the Slavs ; he did not translate the 

1 Stokes (W.), T. L. t i. 30; ii. 446. 2 Ib. ii. 421 ; ii. 475. 

3 D. N. B., xliv. 39; Stokes (W.), T. L., i. 191. 

4 Abgitorium t abgatorium ; elementa, elimenta. Stokes (W.), T. L., i. cliii. ; 
also i. Ill, 113, 139, IQI, 308, 320, 322, 326, 327, 328. 

5 In 536, fifty monks from the Continent landed at Cork. Montalembert, 
ii. 248n, Migrations from Gaul were frequent about this time. 



^ 



INTRODUCTORY 5 

sacred books of his religion into Irish and found a national 
church literature. . . . What Patrick, on the other hand, and 
his fellow-workers did was to diffuse a knowledge of Latin 
in Ireland. To the circumstance that he adopted this line 
of policy, and did not attempt to create a national 
ecclesiastical language, must be ascribed the rise of the 
schools of learning which distinguished Ireland in the 
sixth and seventh centuries." 1 

Mainly owing to the labours of Dr. John Healy, we 
now know a good deal about the somewhat slow growth 
of the Irish schools to fame ; but for our purpose it will do 
to learn something of them in their heyday, when at last 
we hear certainly of that free use of books which must 
have been common for some time. From the sixth to the 
eighth century Ireland enjoyed an eminent place in the 
world of learning ; and the lives and works of her scholars 
imply book-culture of good character. St. Columba was 
famed for his studious occupations. Educated first by 
Finnian of Moville, then by another tutor of the same 
name at the famous school of Clonard, he journeyed to 
other centres for further instruction after his ordination. 
From youth he loved books and studies. He is represented 
as reading out of doors at the moment when the murderer 
of a young girl is struck dead. In later life he realized 
the importance of monastic records. He had annals 
compiled, and bards preserved and arranged them in the 
monastic chests. At lona the brethren of his settlement 
passed their time in reading and transcribing, as well as in 
manual labour. Very careful were they to copy correctly. 
Baithen, a monk on lona, got one of his fellows to look 
over a Psalter which he had just finished writing, but 
only a single error was discovered. 2 Columba himself 
became proficient in copying and illuminating. He could 

1 Bury, 217 ; cp. 220. 2 Joyce, i. 478. 




6 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

not spend an hour without study, or prayer, or writing, or 
some other holy occupation. 1 He transcribed, we are told, 
over three hundred copies of the Gospels or the Psalter a 
magnification of a saint's powers by a devout biographer, 
but significant as it testifies to Columba's love of 
studious labours, and shows how highly these ascetics 
thought of work of this kind. On two occasions, being a 
man as well as a saint, he broke into violence when crossed 
in his love of books. One story tells how he visited a holy 
and learned recluse named Longarad, whose much-prized 
books he wished to see. Being denied, he became wroth 
and cursed Longarad. " May the books be of no use to 
you," he cried, " nor to any one after you, since you with- 
hold them." So far the tale is not improbable, but a little 
embroidery completes a legend. The books became un- 
intelligible, so the story continues, the moment Longarad 
died. At the same instant the satchels in all the Irish 
schools and in Columba's cell slipped off their hooks on to 
the ground. 

A quarrel about a book, we are told, changed his 
career. He borrowed a Psalter from Finnian of Moville, 
and made a copy of it, working secretly at night. Finnian 
heard of the piracy, and, as owner of the original, claimed 
the copy. Columba refused to let him have it. Then 
Diarmid, King of Meath, was asked to arbitrate. Arguing 
that as every calf belonged to its cow, so every copy of a 
book belonged to the owner of the original, he decided in 
Finnian's favour. Columba thought the award unjust, and 
said so. A little later, after another dispute with Diarmid 
on a question of monastic immunity, he called together his 
tribesmen and partisans, and offered battle. Diarmid was 
defeated. For some reason, not quite clear, these quarrels led 
to Columba's voluntary exile (c. 563). He sailed from Ireland, 

1 Adamnan, lib. ii. c. 29, iii. c. 15 and c. 23. 



INTRODUCTORY 7 

and landed upon the silver strand of lona, and to the end of 
his days his work lay almost entirely amid the heather-covered 
uplands and plains of this little island home. 1 lona be- 
came a renowned centre of missionary work, quite over- 
shadowing in importance the earlier " Scottish " settlement 
of Whitherne or Candida Casa. Pilgrims went thither 
from Ireland and England to receive instruction, and 
returned to carry on pioneer work in their own homeland. 
Thence went forth missionaries to carry the Christian 
message throughout Scotland and northern England. 
Perhaps, too, here was planned the expedition to far-off 
Iceland. " Before Iceland was peopled by the Northmen 
there were in the country those men whom the Northmen 
called Papar. They were Christian men, and the people 
believed that they came from the West, because Irish 
books and bells and crosiers were found after them, and 
still more things by which one might know that they were 
west- men, i.e. Irish." 2 

Not only to the far north, but to the Continent, did the 
Irish press their energetic way. In Gaul their chief missionary 
was Columban (c. 543615), who had been educated at 
Bangor, then famous for the learning of its brethren. His 
works display an extensive acquaintance with Christian 
and Latin literature. Both the Greek and Hebrew 
languages may have been known to him, though this 
seems improbable and inconceivable. 3 In his Rule he 
provides for teaching in schools, copying manuscripts, and 
for daily reading. 4 



1 Dr. Skene says the Psalter incident "bears the stamp of spurious tradition" ; 
so does the Longarad story ; but it is curious how often sacred books play a part 
in these tales. 

2 Henderson, Norse Infltience on Celtic Scotland, 5-6. 

3 Moore, Hist, of Ireland, i. 266. 

4 Healy, 379 ; Stokes (M. ) 2 , 1 18. Ergo quotidie jejunandum est, sicut quotidie 
orandum est, quotidie laborandum, quotidie est legendum. 



8 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

The monasteries of Luxeuil, Bobio, and St. Gall, 
founded by him and his companions on their mission in 
Gaul and Italy, became the homes of the most famous 
conventual libraries in the world a result surely traceable 
to the example set by the Irish ascetics, and to the tradition 
they established. 1 

Other Irish monks are better known for their literary 
attainments than for missionary enterprise. St. Cummian, 
in a letter written about 634, displays much knowledge of 
theological literature, and a good deal of knowledge of a 
general kind. 2 Another monk named Augustine (c. 650) 
quotes from Eusebius and Jerome in a work affording many 
other evidences of learning. 3 Aileran (c. 660), abbot of 
Clonard, wrote a religious work which proves his acquaint- 
ance with Jerome, Philo, Cassian, Origen, and Augustine. 4 

An Englishman supplies valuable evidence of the state of 
Irish learning. Aldhelm's (c. 656709) works prove him to 
have had access in England to a good library ; while in one 
learned letter he compares English schools favourably with 
the Irish, and declares Theodore and Hadrian would put Irish 
scholars in the shade. Yet he is on his mettle when com- 
municating with Irish friends or pupils ; he clearly reserves 
for them the flowers of his eloquence. 5 The Irish schools 
were indeed successful rivals of the English schools, and 
Irish scholars could use libraries as good, or nearly as good, 
as that at Aldhelm's disposal. At this time the attraction 
which Ireland and lona had for English students was extra- 

1 A ninth century catalogue of St. Gall mentions thirty-one volumes and 
pamphlets in the Irish tongue Prof. Pflugk-Harttung, in R. H. S. (N. S. ), 
v. 92. Becker names only thirty, p. 43. At Reichenau, a monastery near St. 
Gall, also famous for its library, there were ' ' Irish education, manuscripts, and 
occasionally also Irish monks." "One of the most ancient monuments of the 
German tongue, the vocabulary of St. Gall, dating from about 780, is written in 
the Irish character." 

2 D.C.B. sub nom. . 3 Stokes (G. T.), 221. 
4 Ib. 220. 5 Haddan, 267. 



INTRODUCTORY 9 

ordinary. English crowded the Irish schools, although 
the Canterbury school was not full. 1 The city of Armagh 
was divided into three sections, one being called Trian- 
Saxon, the Saxon's third, from the great number of Saxon 
students living there. 2 

In 664 many English, both high and low in rank, left 
their native land for Ireland, where they sought instruction 
in sacred studies, or an opportunity to lead a more, ascetic 
life. Some devoted themselves faithfully to a monkish 
career. Others applied themselves to study only, and for 
that purpose journeyed from one master's cell to another. 
The Irish welcomed all comers. All received without 
charge daily food : barley or oaten bread and water, or 
sometimes milk cibus sit vilis et vespertinus a plain meal, 
once a day, in the afternoon. Books were supplied, or 
what is more likely, waxed tablets folded in book form. 
Teaching was as free as the open air in which it was 
carried on. 3 

Among the English at one time or another taking ad- 
vantage of Irish hospitality were Gildas (c. 540), first native 
historian of England ; 4 Ecgberht, presbyter, a Northumbrian 
of noble birth ; Ethelhun, brother of Ethelwin, bishop 
of Lindsay ; Oswald, king of Northumbria ; Aldfrith, 
another Northumbrian king, who was educated either in 
Ireland or lona ; Alcuin, who received instruction at 
Clonmacnoise ; 5 one named Wictberht, " notable ... for his 
learning and knowledge, for he had lived many years as 
a stranger and pilgrim in Ireland"; and St. Willibrord, who 
at the age of twenty journeyed to Ireland for purposes of 
study, because he had heard that learning flourished in 
that country. 6 

1 Hyde, 221. 2 Joyce, Short Hist, off., 165. 

3 Bede, H. ., iii. 27 ; Healy, 101 ; Stokes (G. T.), 230. 
Camb. Lit., i. 66. 5 Healy, 272. 6 Alcuin, Willibrord, c. 4. 



io OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



111 

Most of the references we have made above belong to 
the sixth and seventh centuries, usually regarded as the 
best age of Irish monachism. But the Irish enjoyed their 
reputation unimpaired for a long time. Just before and 
after the Northmen descended on their land in 7 9 5, we find 
them making their mark abroad, not so much as missionaries 
but as scholars and teachers. 1 

A few instances will suffice. " The Acts of Charles, 
written by a monk of St. Gallen late in the ninth century, 
tells us of ' two Scots from Ireland,' who ' lighted with the 
British merchants on the coast of Gaul,' and cried to the 
crowd, ' If any man desireth wisdom, let him come unto us 
and receive it, for we have it for sale.' They were soon in- 
vited to the court of Charles. One of them, Clement, partly 
filled the place of Alcuin as head of the palace school." ' 
His reputation soon became widespread, and the abbot of 
Fulda sent several of his most capable monks to him to 
learn grammar. 3 His companion, Dungal, went on to Italy. 
He enjoyed a full share of the learning of his time ; was a 
student of Cicero and Macrobius ; knew Virgil well ; and 
had some Greek. 4 A few fine books were bequeathed 
by him to the Irish monastery of Bobio, where copies 
were written and distributed through Italy. According 
to the learned Muratori, in one of these manuscripts 
is an inscription proving Dungal's ownership. 5 One 



1 See full account, R. H. S. (N. S.), v. 75. 

2 Sandys, i. 480. 

3 K. H. S. (N. S.), v. 90. 

4 Sandys, i. 480 ; Stokes (M.) 2 , 2IO. 

5 " Sancte Columba tibi Scotto tuus incola Dungal 
Tradidit hunc librum, quo fratrum corda beentur. 
Qui leges ergo Deus pretium sit muneris, oro." Healy, 392. 



INTRODUCTORY n 

of the books so bequeathed was the famous Antiphonary 
of Bangor, now in the Ambrosian library at Milan. 

Clement and Dungal were not the only Irishmen of 
note on the Continent. One, Dicuil, was an exponent of 
geography. He founded his treatise (c. 825) on Caesar, 
Pliny, and Solinus ; he quotes and names many other 
writers, including fourteen Greek ; and generally impresses 
us with his earnest studentship. An Irish monk named 
Donatus wandered to Italy and became bishop of Fiesole 
(c. 829); he, too, was a scholar acquainted with Virgil, a 
teacher of grammar and prosody, and a lecturer on the 
saints. 1 Sedulius, the commentator, an Irish monk of 
Liege, copied Greek psalters, wrote Latin verses, knew 
Cicero's letters, the works of Valerius Maximus, Vegetius, 
Origen, and Jerome; was well acquainted with mythology and 
history, and perhaps had some Hebrew. 2 Another Irishman, 
John the Scot (Joannes Scotus Erigena), became the most 
eminent scholar of his time : he alone, among all the learned 
men Charles the Bald had about him, was able to translate 
from Greek (c. 8 5 8-860). Well might Eric of Auxerre, writ- 
ing to Charles, express his astonishment at this train of 
philosophers from Ireland, that barbarous land on the 
confines of the world. 3 All these wanderers, and many 
more, must have been responsible for the dissemination of 
the books produced by Irish hands ; and, in fact, many 
manuscripts of Celtic origin and early in date, are still on 
the Continent, or have been found there and brought to 
Ireland. 4 



1 Stokes (M.) 2 , 206-7, 247. 2 Sandys, i. 463. 

3 Moore, Hist, of I., i. 299 ; Boll. lul. t. vii. 222. 

4 The following, among others, are still on the Continent : Gospels of Willi- 
brord (Bibl. Nat. Lat. 9389, 739), Gospel of St. John (Cod. 60 St. Gall 
c. 750-800) ; Book of Fragments (No. 1395, St. Gall, c. 750-800); The Golden 
Gospels (Royal library, Stockholm, 871) ; Gospels of St. Arnoul, Metz 
(Nuremberg Museum, 7th c.). Cp. Maclean, 207-8 ; Hyde, 267. 



12 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

In some respects the evidence of book-culture in 
Ireland in these early centuries is inconsistent. The jealous 
guard Longarad kept over his books, the quarrel over 
Columba's Psalter, and the great esteem in which scribes 
were held, 1 suggest a scarcity of books. The practice of 
enshrining them in cumdachs, or book-covers, points to a 
like conclusion. On the other hand, Bede tells us the 
Irish could lend foreign students books, so plentiful were 
they. His statement is corroborated by the number of 
scribes whose deaths have been recorded by the annalists ; 
the Four Masters^ for example, note sixty-one eminent 
scribes before the year 900, forty of whom belong to the 
eighth century. 2 In some of the monasteries a special 
room for books was provided. The Annals of Tigernach 
refer to the house of manuscripts. 3 An apartment of this 
kind is particularly mentioned as being saved from the 
flames when Armagh monastery was burned (1020). 
Another fact suggesting an abundance of books was the 
appointment of a librarian, which sometimes took place. 4 
Although a special book-room and officer are only to be 
met with much later than the best age of Irish monachism, 
yet we may reasonably assume them to be the natural 
culmination of an old and established practice of making 
and using books. 

Such statements, however, are not necessarily con- 
tradictory. Manuscripts over which the cleverest scribes 
and illuminators had spent much time and pains would be 
jealously preserved in cases or shrines ; still, when we 
remember how many precious fruits of the past must have 

1 Adamnan, 36511. 

2 Hyde, 220; Stokes (M.), IO, " Connachtach, an Abbot of lona who died 
in 802, is called in the Irish annals 'a scribe most choice.'" Trenholme, 
lona, 32. 

3 Teck-scrcptra ; domus scripturarum. 

4 Leabhar coimedach. Adamnan, 359, note m. 



PLATE I 





INTRODUCTORY 13 

perished, the number of beautiful Irish manuscripts extant 
goes to prove that books even of this character could not 
have been extraordinarily rare. " Workaday " copies of 
books would be made as well, in comparatively large 
numbers, and would no doubt be used very freely. Besides 
books properly so called, the religious used waxed tablets 
of wood, which were sometimes called books. St. Ciaran, 
for example, wrote on staves, which are called in one place 
his tablets, and in two other places the whole collection of 
his staves is called a book. 1 Such tablets were indeed 
books in which the fugitive pieces of the time were 
written. 2 Considering all things, Bede was without doubt 
quite correct in saying the Irish had enough books to lend 
to foreign students. 

iv 

Our account of the work accomplished by the Irish 
monks would be incomplete without reference to their 
writing, illuminating, and book-economy, the relics of which 
are so finely rare. 

The old Irish runes gave place slowly to the Roman 
alphabet, which came into use, as we have already observed, 
after St. Patrick's mission. This new writing was in two 
forms round and pointed but both were derived from the 
Roman half-uncial style. The clear and beautifully-shaped 



1 Joyce, i. 483. 

2 At vero hoc audiens Colcius tempus et horam in tabula describens. 
Adamnan, 66. Columba is said to have blessed one hundred polaires or tablets 
(Leabhar Breac, fo. 16-60 ; Stokes (M.), 51). The boy Benen, who followed Pat- 
rick, bore tablets on his back (folaire, corrupt forpdlaire}. Stokes (W.), T. Z., 47. 
Patrick gave to Fiacc a case containing a tablet. Ib. 344. An example of a waxed 
tablet, with a case for it, is in the Museum of the Royal Irish Academy. The 
case is a wooden cover, divided into hollowed-out compartments for holding the 
styles. This specimen dates from the thirteenth or fourteenth century. Slates 
and pencils were also in use for temporary purposes. Joyce, i. 483. 



i 4 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Irish round hand is closely akin to the half-uncial character 
of fifth and sixth century Latin writings found on the 
Continent. The Book of Kells, written probably at the end 
of the seventh century, is the finest example of the orna- 
mental Irish round hand. St. Chad's Gospels, now at 
Lichfield, written about the same time, is a manuscript of 
like character, but not so good. A later manuscript, the 
Gospels of MacRegol, which dates from the beginning of 
the ninth century, shows marked deterioration in the writing. 




uirm 




THUS a 




BOOK OF KELLS, SEVENTH CENTURY 

The Irish pointed style, used for quicker writing, is but 
a modified, pointed variety of the round hand, the letters 
being laterally compressed. This hand appears in some 
pages of the Book of Kells, but the best example is in the 
Book of Armagh. 1 

Although the Roman alphabet was introduced by 
Augustine at the Canterbury school, it wholly failed to 
have any effect on the native hand from that source. On 
the other hand, when, in the seventh century, Northumbria 

1 See Thompson, 236, where Irish calligraphy is fully dealt with ; Camb. Lit., 
i. 13. 



PLA'l E 




ILLUMINATED PAGE OF THE BOOK OF KELLS 



INTRODUCTORY 15 

was converted by Irish missionaries, the new Christians 
copied the Irish writing, so well, indeed, that the earliest 
specimens extant can hardly be distinguished from the 
beautiful penmanship of the Irish. The Book of Durham, 
generally called the Lindisfarne Gospels, of about 700, 
is an exquisite Northumbrian example of the Irish round 
hand, in the characteristic broad, heavy - stroke letters. 
Another good specimen of this style is the eighth century 
manuscript of Bede's Ecclesiastical History, in Cambridge 
University Library. 

Irish illumination is as characteristic as the writing. 
Pictures and drawings of the 

human figure are not so 

. ., , c 

common as in the work of 

other schools, and when they 

do appear are not often good. |ifpt4if tiluUttjA ufl< <]fmV.tir 

Still, some of them, as the wp ^^^nwh^nrHil * jw 

scenes from the life of Christ * fl ^Wf2f r *S f ** 

in the Book of Kells, are quite ^^4**^ 
unlike the illuminations of BOOK OF ARMAGH, BEFORE 

A.D. 844 

any other school ; while the 

portraits of the Evangelists in the same book, in the Book 
of MacRegol, and in the Lindisfarne Gospels, are singularly 
interesting. Floral work is also rare. But in geometrical 
ornament, beautifully symmetrical diagonal patterns, zig- 
zags, waves, lozenges, divergent spirals, intertwisted and 
interwoven ribbon and cord work and in grotesque 
zoological forms, lizards, snakes, hounds, birds, and dragons' 
heads, the Irish school attained their highest artistic 
development. Their art is striking, not for originality, not 
for its beauty, which is nevertheless great, but for pains- 
taking. Knowing but one style of making a book beautiful, 
they lavished much time and loving care to achieve their 
end. The detail is extraordinarily minute and compli- 



16 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

cated. " I have counted," writes Professor Westwood, " [with 
a magnifying glass] in a small space scarcely three-quarters 
of an inch in length by less than half an inch in width, in 
the Book of Armagh, no less than I 5 8 interlacements of a 
slender ribbon pattern formed of white lines edged with 
black ones." But, this intricacy notwithstanding, the designs 
as a whole are usually bold and effective. In the best kind 
of Irish illumination gold and silver are not used, but the 
colours are varied and brilliant, and are employed with 
taste and discretion ; while the occasional staining of a leaf 
of vellum with a fine purple sometimes adds beauty and 
much distinction to an excellent design. 

Of intricate geometrical ornament and grotesque figures, 
the illumination representing the symbols of the Four 
Evangelists (fo. 290) of the Book of Kells is perhaps the 
best example. Of divergent spirals and interlaced ribbon 
work the frontispiece of St. Jerome's Epistle in the Book of 
Durrow affords notable examples. Two of the peculiar 
features of Irish decoration the rows of red dots round a 
design and the dragon's head appear in the earliest, or 
nearly the earliest, Irish manuscript extant, namely, the 
Cathach Psalter, now in the Museum of the Royal Irish 
Academy. Whether the essential and peculiar features of 
this ornamentation are purely indigenous, as Professor 
Westwood contends, or whether they are of Gallo-Roman 
origin, as Fleury argues, is a moot point, calling for 
complicated discussion which would be out of place 
here. 

The amount of illumination in the existing manuscripts 
varies, but the pages chosen for illuminating are nearly 
always the same. In the Book of Kells the illuminations 
consist of three portraits of the Evangelists, three scenes 
from the life of Christ, three combined symbols of the four 
Evangelists, eight pages of the Eusebian canons, and many 



PLATE III 




INTRODUCTORY 17 

initials. The Book of Durham contains four portraits of 
the Evangelists, six initial pages, one ornamental page 
before each Gospel, and before St. Jerome's Epistle, and 
eight pages of the Eusebian canons. The Book of Durrow 
has sixteen illuminated pages : four of the symbols of the 
Evangelists, six pages of initials, one ornamental page at 
the frontispiece, one before the letter of St. Jerome, and 
one before each Gospel. 

The oldest Irish manuscript in existence is probably 
the Domnach Airgrid, or manuscript of the Silver Shrine, 
also called St. Patrick's Gospels. Dr. Petrie believed the 
Domnach to be the identical reliquary given by St. Patrick 
to St. Mac Cairthinn, when the latter was put in charge of 
the see of Clogher, in the fifth century. " As a manuscript 
copy of the Gospels apparently of that early age is found 
with it, there is every reason to believe it to be that identical 
one for which the box was originally made." l But both 
case and manuscript are now held to be somewhat later in 
date. Another very early manuscript is the sixth century 
fragment of fifty-eight leaves of a Latin Psalter, styled the 
Cathach or " Battler." For centuries this fragment has been 
preserved in a beautiful case as a relic of Columba ; as, in- 
deed, the actual cause of the dispute between Columba and 
Finnian of Moville. 

v 

Two features of book-economy, although not peculiar 
to Ireland, are rarely met with outside that country. The 
religious used satchels or wallets to carry their books about 
with them. We are told Patrick once met a party of 
clerics and gillies with books in their girdles ; and he gave 
them the hide he had sat and slept on for twenty years to 

1 Trans. R. I. Acad. t vol. xviii. 1838. 




i8 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

make a wallet. 1 Columba is said to have made satchels, 
and to have blessed them. When these satchels were not 
carried they were hung upon pegs set in the wall of the 
cell or the church or the tower where they were preserved. 2 
We have already noted the legend which tells how all the 
satchels in Ireland slipped off their pegs when Longarad 
died. A modern writer visiting the Abyssinian convent 
of Souriani has seen a room which, when we remember the 
connection between Egyptian and Celtic monachism, we 
cannot help thinking must closely resemble an ancient 
Irish cell. 3 In the room the disposition of the manuscripts 
was very original. " A wooden shelf was carried in the 
Egyptian style round the walls, at the height of the top of 
the door. . . . Underneath the shelf various long wooden pegs 
projected from the wall ; they were each about a foot and 
a half long, and on them hung the Abyssinian manuscripts, 
of which this curious library was entirely composed. The 
books of Abyssinia are . . . enclosed in a case tied up 
with leathern thongs ; to this case is attached a strap for 
the convenience of carrying the volume over the shoulders, 
and by these straps the books were hung to the wooden 
pegs, three or four on a peg, or more if the books were 
small ; their usual size was that of a small, very thick 
quarto. The appearance of the room, fitted up in this style, 
together with the presence of long staves, such as the 

1 Stokes (W.), T. L., 75. The terms used for satchels are sacculi (Lat.), and 
tiag, or tiag liubhair or teig liubair (Ir.). There has been some confusion 
between p6laire and tiag, the former being regarded as a leather case for a single 
book, the latter a satchel for several books. This distinction is made in con- 
nection with the ancient Irish life of Columba, which is therefore made to read 
that the saint used to make cases and satchels for books (polaire ocus tiaga), 
v. Adamnan, 115. Cf. Petrie, Round Towers, 336-7. But the late Dr. 
Whitley Stokes makes pdlaire or goitre, or the corruption folaire, derive from 
pugillares= writing tablets. Stokes (W.), T. L., cliii. and 655. This interpre- 
tation of the word gives us the much more likely reading that Columba made 
tablets, and satchels for books, 

3 Stokes (M.)> 5- 8 Curzon, Monasteries of the Levant, 66. 



INTRODUCTORY 19 

monks of all the Oriental churches lean upon at the time of 
prayer, resembled less a library than a barrack or guard- 
room, where the soldiers had hung their knapsacks and 
cartridge boxes against the wall." The few old Irish 
satchels remaining are black with age, and the characteristic 
decoration of diagonal lines and interlaced markings is 
nearly worn away. Two of them are preserved in England 
and Ireland : those of the Book of Armagh, in Trinity 
College, Dublin, and of the Irish Missal in Corpus Christi 
College, Oxford. The wallet at Oxford looks much like 
a modern schoolboy's satchel ; leather straps are fixed to 
it, by which it was slung round the neck. The Armagh 
wallet is made of one piece of leather, folded to form a case a 
foot long, a little more than a foot broad, and two and a half 
inches thick. The Book of Armagh does not fit it properly. 
Interlaced work and zoomorphs decorate the leather. Re- 
mains of rough straps are still attached to the sides. 

The second special feature of Irish book-economy 
was the preservation of manuscripts in cumdachs or rect- 
angular boxes, made just large enough for the books they 
were intended to enshrine. As in the case of the wallet, 
the cumdach was not peculiar to Ireland, although the 
finest examples which have come down to us were made 
in that country. 1 They are referred to several times in 



1 Mr. Allen, in his admirable volume on Celtic Art, p. 208, in this series, 
says cumdachs were peculiar to Ireland. But they were made and used elsewhere, 
and were variously known as capsae, librorum coopertoria (e.g. . . . librorumque 
coopertoria ; queedam horum nuda, qusedam vero alia auro atque argento gemmis- 
que pretiosis circumtecta. Acta SS., Attg. iii. 659c), and thecae. Some of 
these cases were no doubt as beautifully decorated as the Irish cumdachs. 
William of Malmesbury asserts that twenty pounds and sixty marks of gold were 
used to make the coopertoria librorum Evangelii for King Ina's chapel. At 
the Abbey of St. Riquier was an " Evangelium auro Scriptum unum, cum capsa 
argentea gemmis et lapidibus fabricata. Aliae capsae evangeliorum duae ex auro 
et argento paratae." Maitland, 212. In 1295 St. Paul's Cathedral possessed 
a copy of the Gospels in a case (capsa) adorned with gilding and relics. Putnam, 
i. 105-6. 



20 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

early Irish annals. Bishop Assicus is said to have made 
quadrangular book-covers in honour of Patrick. 1 In the 
Annals of the Four Masters is recorded, under the year 937, 
a reference to the cumdach of the Book of Armagh, or the 
Canon of Patrick. " Canoin Phadraig was covered by 
Donchadh, son of Flann, king of Ireland." In 1006 the 
Annals note that the Book of Kells " the Great Gospel of 
Columb Cille was stolen at night from the western erdomh 
of the Great Church of Ceannanus. This was the principal 
relic of the western world, on account of its singular cover ; 
and it was found after twenty nights and two months, its gold 
having been stolen off it, and a sod over it." 2 These cumdachs 
are now lost ; so also is the jewelled case of the Gospels 
of St. Arnoul at Metz, and that belonging to the Book of 
Durrow. 

By good hap, several cumdachs of the greatest interest 
are still preserved for our inspection. One of them, the 
Silver Shrine of the so-called St. Patrick's Gospels, is a 
very peculiar case. It consists of three covers. The first, 
or inner, is of yew, and was perhaps made in the sixth or 
seventh century. The second, of copper, silver-plated, is 
of later make. The third, or outermost, is of silver, and 
was probably made in the fourteenth century. The 
cumdach of the Stowe Missal (1023) is a much more 
beautiful example. It is of oak, covered with plates of 
silver. The lower or more ancient side bears a cross 
within a rectangular frame. In the centre of the cross is a 
crystal set in an oval mount. The decoration of the four 
panels consists of metal plates, the ornament being a 
chequer-work of squares and triangles. The lid has a 
similar cross and frame, but the cross is set with pearls and 

1 Leborchometa chethrochori, zn.&bibliothecae quadratae. Stokes (W.), 71 Z., 
96 and 313. 

2 Stokes (M.), 90. 



PLATE IV 




CUMDACH OF ST. MOLAISE'S GOSPELS: BOTTOM 




CUMDACH OF ST. MOLAISE'S GOSPELS: FRONT 



INTRODUCTORY 21 

metal bosses, a crystal in the centre, and a large jewel at 
the end of each arm. The panels consist of silver-gilt 
plates embellished with figures of saints. The sides, which 
are decorated with enamelled bosses and open-work designs, 
are imperfect. On the box are inscriptions in Irish, such 
as the following : " Pray for Dunchad, descendant of Taccan, 
of the family of Cluain, who made this " ; "A blessing of 
God on every soul according to its merit " ; " Pray for 
Donchadh, son of Brian, for the king of Ireland " ; " And 
for Mace Raith, descendant of Donnchad, for the king of 
Cashel." * Other cumdachs are those in the Royal Irish 
Academy for Molaise's Gospels (c. 100125), for Columba's 
Psalter (1084), and those in Trinity College, Dublin, for 
Dimma's book (1150) and for the Book of St. Moling. 
There are also the cumdachs for Cairnech's Calendar and 
that of Caillen ; both of late date. The library of St. Gall 
possesses still another silver cumdach, which is probably Irish. 
These are the earliest relics we have of what was 
undoubtedly an old and established method of enshrining 
books, going back as far as Patrick's time, if it be correct 
that Bishop Assicus made them, or if the first case of the 
Silver Shrine is as old as it is believed to be. The 
beautiful lower cover of the Gospels of Lindau, now in 
Mr. Pierpont Morgan's treasure-house, proves that at least 
as early as the seventh century the Irish lavished as much 
art on the outside of their manuscripts as upon the inside. 2 
It is natural to make a beautiful covering for a book which 
is both beautiful and sacred. All the volumes upon which 
the Irish artist exercised his talent were invested with 
sacred attributes. Chroniclers would have us believe they 
were sometimes miraculously produced. In the life of 
Cronan 3 is a story telling how an expert scribe named 

1 Stokes (M.), 92-3. 2 See La Bibliofilia, xi. 165. 

3 Acta SS. Ap., iii. 5810. 



22 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Dimma copied the four Gospels. Dimma could only 
devote a day to the task, whereupon Cronan bade him 
begin at once and continue until sunset. But the sun did 
not set for forty days, and by that time the copy was 
finished. The manuscript written for Cronan is possibly 
the book of Dimma, which bears the inscription : " It is 
finished. A prayer for Dimma, who wrote it for God, and 
a blessing." l 

It was believed such books could not be injured. St. 
Ciaran's copy of the Gospels fell into a lake, but was 
uninjured. St. Cronan's copy fell into Loch Cre, and re- 
mained under water forty days without injury. Even fire 
could not harm St. Cainnech's case of books. 2 Nor is it 
surprising they should be looked upon as sacred. The 
scribes and illuminators who took such loving care to make 
their work perfect, and the craftsmen who wrought beauti- 
ful shrines for the books so made, were animated with the 
feeling and spirit which impels men to erect beautiful 
churches to testify to the glory of their Creator. As 
Dimma says, they " wrote them for God." 

1 Healy, 524. 

2 Other instances are cited in Adamnan, book ii., chap. 8. 



CHAPTER II 
THE ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 

" There are delightful libraries, more aromatic than stores of spicery ; 
there are luxuriant parks of all manner of volumes ; there are Academic 
meads shaken by the tramp of scholars ; there are lounges of Athens ; 
walks of the Peripatetics ; peaks of Parnassus ; and porches of the Stoics. 
There is seen the surveyor of all arts and sciences Aristotle, to whom 
belongs all that is most excellent in doctrine, so far as relates to this 
passing sublunary world ; there Ptolemy measures epicycles and eccentric 
apogees and the nodes of the planets by figures and numbers. . . ." 
Richard De Bury, Philobiblon^ Thomas' ed. 200 

i 

~^HE Benedictine order established monastic study on 
J_ a regular plan. Benedict's forty-eighth rule is clear 
in its directions. " Idleness is hurtful to the soul. 
At certain times, therefore, the brethren must work with 
their hands, and at others give themselves up to holy 
reading." From Easter to the first of October the monks 
were required to work at manual labour from prime until 
the fourth hour. From the fourth hour until nearly the 
sixth hour they were to read. After their meal at the 
sixth hour they were to lie on their beds, and those who 
cared to do so might read, but not aloud. After nones 
work must be resumed until evening. From October the 
first until the beginning of Lent they were to read until 
the ninth hour. At the ninth hour they were to take their 
meal and then read spiritual works or the Psalms. 
Throughout Lent they were required to read until the 



24 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

third hour, then work until the tenth. Every monk was 
to have a book from the library, and to read it through 
during Lent. On Sundays reading was their duty through- 
out the day, except in the case of those having special 
tasks. During reading hours two senior brethren were 
expected to go the rounds to see that the monks were 
actually reading, and not lounging nor gossiping. But 
the brethren were not allowed to have a book or tablets 
or a pen of their own. 

Benedict's inclusion of these directions was of capital 
importance in the advance of monkish learning. Being 
milder and more flexible, communal instead of eremitical, 
and so altogether more humane and attractive, his Rule 
gradually took the place of existing orders. And as the 
change came about, ill-regulated theological study gave 
way to superior methods of learning, solely due to the 
better organisation and greater liberality of the Benedictine 
order. 

Benedictinism came to England with Augustine (597). 
The Rule, however, does not seem to have been strictly or 
consistently observed for a long time. But the studious 
labours of the monks remained just as important a part of 
their lives as they would have been had the monasteries 
closely followed Benedict's directions. Especially would 
this be the case in the seventh century, and afterwards, 
during the time continental monachism was in rivalry 
with the Celtic missionaries. 



" 

From the first we hear of books in connexion with Canter- 
bury. Gregory the Great gave to Augustine, either just 
before his English mission, or sent to him soon afterward, 
nine volumes, which were put in St. Augustine's monastery 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 25 

the monastery of SS. Peter and Paul, beyond the walls. 
Being for church purposes, the books were very beautiful 
and valuable. There was the Gregorian Bible in two 
volumes, with some of its leaves coloured rose and 
purple, which gave a wonderful reflection when held to 
the light ; the Psalter of Augustine ; a copy of the 
Gospels called the Text of St. Mildred, upon which a 
countryman in Thanet swore falsely and, it is said, lost 
his sight ; as well as another copy of the Gospels ; a 
Psalter, with plain silver images of Christ and the four 
Evangelists on the cover ; two martyrologies, one adorned 
with a silver figure of Christ, the other enriched with silver- 
gilt and precious stones ; and an Exposition of the Gospels 
and Epistles, also enriched with gems. 1 Some of these 
books were kept above the altar. Bede also records the 
gift by Gregory to Augustine of " many manuscripts," 
and his authority is unimpeachable, as he derived his 
knowledge of Canterbury affairs from written records and 
information supplied by Albinus, first English abbot of 
Augustine's house. 2 This monastery " was thus the mother- 
school, the mother-university of England, ... at a time when 
Cambridge was a desolate fen, and Oxford a tangled forest 
in a wide waste of waters. They remind us that English 
power and English religion have, as from the very first, so 
ever since, gone along with knowledge, with learning, and 
especially with that learning and that knowledge which 
those old manuscripts give the knowledge and learning 
of the Gospel." 3 Few books would be treasured more 
carefully and treated with greater reverence by English 
churchmen and book lovers than these " first books of the 
English church," if any of them could be found. They are 

1 Hist. man. S. Augustini, Cant., 96-99, " Et haec sunt primitiae librorum 
totius ecclesiae Anglicanae," 99. 

2 //. E., i. 29. 3 Stanley, Hist. Mem. of C. (1868), 42. 



26 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

referred to as existing when William Thorne wrote his 
chronicle (c. I397), 1 and Leland tells us he saw and 
admired them ; but after his time nearly all trace of them 
is lost. 2 

No further hint of books occurs until Theodore became 
Archbishop more than seventy years later. Theodore, who 
had been educated both at Tarsus and Athens, where he 
became a good Greek and Latin scholar, well versed in secular 
and divine literature, began a school at Canterbury for the 
study of Greek, and provided it with some Greek books. 
None of these books has been traced with certainty. Some 
may have existed in Archbishop Parker's time. " The Rev. 
Father Matthew," says Lambarde, in his Perambulation of 
Kent, ..." showed me, not long since, the Psalter of David, 
and sundry homilies in Greek, Homer also, and some other 
Greek authors, beautifully written on thick paper with the 
name of this Theodore prefixed in the front, to whose 
library he reasonably thought (being led thereto by show 
of great antiquity) that they sometime belonged." The 
manuscript of Homer, now in Corpus Christi Library, 
Cambridge, did not belong to Theodore, but to Prior 
Selling, of whom we shall hear later. But possibly the 
famous Graeco-Latin copy of the Acts, now in the Bodleian 
Library, belonged either to Theodore or to his companion, 
Hadrian. 3 

1 Hist. mon. S. Aug., xxv. 

2 B. M. Reg. I. E. vi. may be a part of the Gregorian Bible, or the second 
copy of the Gospels mentioned above, if this second copy is not Corpus Christi, 
Camb. 286. Corpus C. 286 is a seventh century book, certainly from St. Augus- 
tine's ; it was probably brought to England in the time of Theodore, and though it 
may be one of the books referred to above, is, therefore, not Augustinian. 
The Psalter bearing the silver images is "most likely" Cott. Vesp. A. i, an 
eighth century manuscript ; it is, therefore, not Augustinian, although it may be a 
copy of the original Psalter given by Gregory. James, Ixvi. 

3 Known as Codex E, or the Laudian Acts (Laud. Gr. 35). Bede refers to 
a Greek manuscript of the Acts in his Retract ationes ; possibly this is the actual 
copy. The last page of the book bears the signature ' ' Theodore " ; did 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 27 




28 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Theodore, with Hadrian's help, not only started the 
Canterbury School, but encouraged similar foundations in 
other English monasteries. In southern England, however, 
Canterbury remained the centre of learning, and many 
ecclesiastics were attracted to it in consequence. Bede 
amply proves its efficiency as a school. And forasmuch as 
both Theodore and Hadrian were " fully instructed both in 
sacred and in secular letters, they gathered a crowd of 
disciples, and rivers of wholesome knowledge daily flowed 
from them to water the hearts of their hearers ; and, to- 
gether with the books of Holy Scripture, they also taught 
them the metrical art, astronomy, and ecclesiastical arith- 
metic. A testimony whereof is, that there are still living 
at this day some of their scholars, who are as well versed in 
the Greek and Latin tongues as in their own, in which they 
were born." l Elsewhere he mentions some of these scholars 
by name. Albinus, already referred to as the first English 
abbot of St. Augustine's, " was so well instructed in literary 
studies, that he had no small knowledge of the Greek tongue, 
and knew the Latin as well as the English, which was his 
native language." 2 "A most learned man " was another 
disciple, Tobias, bishop of Rochester, who, besides having 
a great knowledge of letters, both ecclesiastical and general, 
learned the Greek and Latin tongues " to such perfection, 
that they were as well known and familiar to him as his 
native language." 3 

Canterbury's most notable scholar was Aldhelm, the 
first bishop of Sherborne. In him were united the 
learning of the Canterbury and the Irish monks, for he 
studied first under Maildulf, the Irish monk and scholar 

Archbishop Theodore bring the volume to England ? " It is at least safe to say 
that the presence of such a book in England in Bede's time can hardly be 
entirely independent of the influence of Theodore or of Abbot Hadrian. "- 
James (M. R.), xxiii. 

1 H. ., iv. 2, tr. Sellar. 2 Ib. v. 20. 3 Ib. v. 23. 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 29 

who founded and gave his name to Malmesbury, and then 
under Hadrian. When he went to be consecrated an incident 
befell him which at once shows his zeal for learning, and casts 
a welcome ray of light on the importation of books. While 
at Canterbury he heard of the arrival of ships at Dover, and 
thither he journeyed to see whether they had brought any- 
thing in his way. He found on board plenty of books, 
among them one containing the complete Testaments. He 
offered to buy it, but his price was too low ; although, after- 
wards, when it was believed his prayers had delivered the 
owner from a storm, he secured it on his own terms. 1 

Aldhelm at length became abbot of Malmesbury 
(c. 675), and under him it grew to much greater eminence, 
and attracted a large number of students. Here, in the 
solitude of the forest tract, he passed his time in singing 
merry ballads to win the ear of the people for his more 
serious words, playing the harp, in teaching, and in reading 
the considerable library he had at hand. Bede describes 
him as a man " of marvellous learning both in liberal and 
ecclesiastical studies." Judging by his writings he was in 
these respects in the forefront of his contemporaries, although 
his learning was heavy and pretentious. From them also 
it is perfectly evident he could make use not only of the 
Bible, but of lives of the saints, of Isidore, of the Recognitions 
of Clement, of the Acts of Sylvester, of writings by Sulpicius 
Severus, Athanasius, Gregory, Eusebius, and Jerome, as well 
as of Terence, Virgil, Horace, Juvenal, Persius, and Prosper, 
and some other authors. 2 

1 This copy was still at Malmesbury in the twelfth century. W. of Malmes- 
bury, Ang. Sacr., ii. 21. 

2 Sandys, i. 466 ; Camb. Eng. Lit., i. 75. 



30 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



HI 

Meanwhile Northumbria had become one of the leading 
centres of learning in Europe, almost entirely through the 
labours and influence of Irish missionaries. St. Aidan, an 
ascetic of lona who journeyed to Northumbria at King 
Oswald's request, founded Lindisfarne, which became the 
monastic and episcopal capital of that kingdom. Aidan 
required all his pupils, whether religious or laymen, to read 
the Scriptures, or to learn the Psalms. The education of 
boys was a part of his system. Wherever a monastery was 
founded it became a school wherein taught the monks who 
had followed him from Scotland. Cedd, the founder and 
abbot of Lastingham, was Aidan's pupil, so was his brother, 
the great bishop Ceadda (Chad), who succeeded him in his 
abbacy. At Lindisfarne was wrought by Eadfrith (d. 72 I ) the 
beautiful manuscript of the Gospels now preserved in the 
British Museum, and a little later the fine cover for it. 
Lastingham, founded on the desolate moorland of North 
Yorkshire, " among steep and distant mountains, which 
looked more like lurking-places for robbers and dens of 
wild beasts, than dwellings of men," upheld the traditions 
of the Columban houses for piety, asceticism, and studious 
occupations. Thither repaired one Owini, not to live idle, 
but to labour, and as he was less capable of studying, he 
applied himself earnestly to manual work, the while better- 
instructed monks were indoors reading. 

In many directions do we observe traces of Aidan's 
good work. Hild, the foundress of Whitby Abbey, was for 
a short time his pupil. Her monastery was famous for hav- 
ing educated five bishops, among them John of Beverley, and 
for giving birth, in Caedmon, to the father of English poetry. 
" Religious poetry, sung to the harp as it passed from hand 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 31 

to hand, must have flourished in the monastery of the abbess 
Hild, and the kernel of Bede's story concerning the birth of 
our earliest poet must be that the brethren and sisters on 
that bleak northern shore spoke * to each other in psalms 
and hymns and spiritual songs.' " 1 Of Melrose, an offshoot 
of Aidan's foundation, the sainted Cuthbert was an inmate. 
At Lindisfarne, where " he speedily learned the Psalms and 
some other books," the great Wilfrid was a novice. Of his 
studies, indeed, we know little : he seems to have sought 
prelatical power rather than learning. But he and his 
followers were responsible for the conversion of the North- 
umbrian church from Columban to Roman usages, and the 
introduction of Benedictinism into the monasteries ; and 
consequently for bringing the studies of the monks into line 
with the rules of Benedict's order. 

Such progress would have been impossible had not the 
rulers of Northumbria from Oswald to Aldfrith been friendly 
to Christianity. Aldfrith had been educated at lona, and 
was a man of studious disposition. His predecessor had 
advanced Northumbria's reputation enormously by giving 
Benedict Biscop (62990) sites for his monasteries of Wear- 
mouth and Jarrow. 2 We know enough of this Benedict to 
wish we knew very much more. He suggests to us enthusiasm 
for his cause, and energy and foresight in labouring for it. 
Naturally, Aldhelm's writings have gained him far more 
attention in literary histories than the Northumbrian has 
received. But the influence of Benedict, a man of much 
learning, wide-travelled, was at least as great and as far- 
reaching. Le"rins, the great centre of monachism in Gaul, 
and Canterbury under Theodore, had been his schools. On 
six occasions he flitted back and forth to Rome, and to go 

1 Camb. Eng. Lit.) i. 45. 

2 These foundations were regarded as one house, the inmates being bound 
together by " a common and perpetual affection and intimacy," 



32 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

to Rome, in those days, was a liberal education, both in 
worldly and spiritual affairs. Not a little of his influence 
was the direct outcome of his book-collecting. From all 
his journeys to Rome he is said to have returned laden 
with books. He certainly came back from his fourth 
journey with a great number of books of all kinds. 1 He 
also obtained books at Vienne. His sixth and last journey 
to Rome was wholly devoted to collecting books, classical 
as well as theological. When he died he left instructions 
for the preservation of the most noble and rich library he had 
gathered together. 2 " If we consider how difficult, fatiguing, 
. . . even dangerous a journey between the British Islands 
and Italy must have been in those days of anarchy and 
barbarism, we can appreciate the intensity of Benedict's 
passion for beautiful and costly volumes." 3 The library he 
formed was worthy of the labour, we cannot doubt : possibly 
was the best then in Britain. It served as the model for 
the still more famous collection at York. The scholarship 
of Bede, who used it in writing his works, proclaims its 
value for literary purposes. 4 Bede tells us he always 
applied himself to Scriptural study, and in the intervals of 
observing monastic discipline and singing daily in the 
church, he took pleasure in learning, or teaching, or writing. 5 
The picture of Bede in his solitary monastery, leading a 

1 " Innumerabilem librorum omnis generis copiam apportavit." Vitae 
Abbatum, 4. 

2 " Copiosissima et nobilissima bibliotheca." Ib. n. 

3 Lanciani, Anc. Rome, 201. 

4 Ceolfrid, Benedict Biscop's successor, added a number of books to the 
library, among them three copies of the Vulgate, and one of the older version. 
One copy of the Vulgate Ceolfrid took with him to Rome (716) to give to the Pope. 
He died on the way. The codex did not go to Rome ; now, it is in the Laurentian 
Library, Florence, where it is known as the Codex Amiatinus. The writing is 
Italian, or at any rate foreign, so it must have been imported, or written at Jarrow 
by foreign scribes. This volume is the chief authority for the text of Jerome's 
translation of the Scriptures. 

* H. ., v. 24. 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 33 

placid life among Benedict's books, poring over the beauti- 
fully-wrought pages with the scholar's tense calm to find 
the material in the Fathers and the historians, and to seek 
the apt quotation from the classics, must always flash to the 
mind at the mere mention of his name. 1 Every fact in 
connexion with his work testifies to the excellent equipment 
of his monastery for writing ecclesiastical history, and to 
the cordial way in which the religious co-operated for the 
advancement of learning and research. 



IV 

Canterbury, Malmesbury, Lindisfarne, Wearmouth and 
Jarrow, and York were like mountain-peaks tipped with gold 
by the first rays of the rising sun, while all below remains 
dark. Yet while not indicative of widespread means of 
instruction, the existence of these centres, and the character 
of the work done in them, suggests that at other places the 
same sort of work, on a smaller and less influential scale, 
soon began. At Lichfield, on the moorland at Ripon, in 
" the dwelling-place in the meadows " at Peterborough, in 
the desolate fenland at Crowland and at Ely, on the banks 
of the Thames at Abingdon, and of the Avon at Evesham, 
in the nunneries of Barking and Wimborne, at Chertsey, 

1 Bede frequently quotes Cicero, Virgil, and Horace ; usually selecting some 
telling phrase, e.g. " caeco carpitur igni" (H. E. ii. 12). In his De Natura 
rerum he owes a good deal to Pliny and Isidore. In his commentaries on the 
Scriptures he displays an extent of reading which we have no space to give any 
idea of. His chronologies were based on Jerome's edition of Eusebius, on 
Augustine and Isidore. In his H. E. he uses " Pliny, Solinus, Orosius, Eutropius, 
Marcellinus Comes, Gildas, probably the Historia Brittonum, a Passion of St. 
Alban, and the Life of Germanus of Auxerre by Constantius " ; while he refers to 
lives of St. Fursa, St. Ethelburg, and to Adamnan's work on the Holy Places. 
Cf. Sandys, i. 468 ; Camb. Lit., i. 80-8 1. Bede also got first-hand knowledge : 
the Lindisfarne records provided him with material on Cuthbert ; information 
came to him from Canterbury about Southern affairs and from Lastingham about 
Mercian affairs. Nothelm got material from the archives at Rome for him. 



34 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Glastonbury, Gloucester, in the far north at Melrose, and 
even perhaps at Coldingham, Christianity was speeding its 
message, and learning such as it was, primitive and preten- 
tious caught pale reflections from more famous places. 
Now and again definite facts are met with hinting at a spread- 
ing enlightenment. Acca, abbot and bishop of Hexham, 
for example "gave all diligence, as he does to this day," 
wrote Bede, " to procure relics of the blessed Apostles and 
martyrs of Christ. . . . Besides which, he industriously gathered 
the histories of their martyrdom, together with other ecclesias- 
tical writings, and erected there a large and noble library." 
Of this library, unfortunately, there is not a wrack left 
behind. A tiny school was carried on at a monastery near 
Exeter, where Boniface was first instructed. At the 
monastery of Nursling he was taught grammar, history, 
poetry, rhetoric, and the Scriptures ; there also manuscripts 
were copied. Books were produced under Abbess Eadburh 
of Minster, a learned woman who corresponded with 
Boniface and taught the metric art. Boniface's letters 
throw interesting light on our subject. Eadburh sent him 
books, money, and other gifts. He also wrote home asking 
his old friend Bishop Daniel of Winchester for a fine manu- 
script of the six major prophets, which had been written 
in a large and clear hand by Winbert : no such book, he 
explains, can be had abroad, and his eyes are no longer 
strong enough to read with ease the small character of 
ordinary manuscripts. In another letter written to 
Ecgberht of York is recorded an exchange of books, and 
a request for a copy of the commentaries of Bede. 

A decree of the Council held at Cloveshoe in 747, 
pointing out the want of instruction among the religious, 
and ordering all bishops, abbots, and abbesses to promote 
and encourage learning, whether it means that monkish 
education was on the wane or that it was not making such 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 35 

quick progress as was desired, at any rate does not mean 
that England was in a bad way in this respect, or that she 
lagged behind the Continent. On the contrary, England 
and Ireland were renowned homes of learning in 
Western Europe. Perhaps a few centres on the mainland 
could show libraries as good as those here ; but certainly 
no country had such scholars. England's pre-eminence was 
recognized by Charles the Great when he invited Alcuin 
to his court (781). 

Alcuin was brought up at York from childhood. In 
company with Albert, who taught the arts and grammar 
at this northern school, Alcuin visited Gaul and Rome to 
scrape together a few more books. On returning later he 
was entrusted with the care of the library : a task for which 
he was well fitted, if enthusiasm, breaking into rime, be a 
qualification : 

" Small is the space which contains the gifts of heavenly Wisdom 
Which you, reader, rejoice piously here to receive ; 
Better than richest gifts of the Kings, this treasure of Wisdom, 
Light, for the seeker of this, shines on the road to the Day." * 

York could not retain Alcuin long. Fortunately, just when 
dissensions among the English kings, and the Danish raids 
began to harass England, and to threaten the coming 
decline of her learning, he was invited to take charge of a 
school established by Charles the Great. Charles had 
undertaken the task of reviving literary study, well-nigh 
extinguished through the neglect of his ancestors ; and he 
bade all his subjects to cultivate the arts. As far as he 
could he accomplished the task, principally owing to the 
aid of the English scholar and of willing helpers from 
Ireland. 

Alcuin was soon at the head of St. Martin's of Tours 

1 Tr. in Morley, Eng. Writers, ii. 1 60. 



*> 

' 



36 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

where he was responsible for the great activity of the 
scribes in his day. He persuaded Charles to send a 
number of copyists to York. " I, your Flavius," he writes, 
" according to your exhortation and wise desire, have been 
busy under the roof of St. Martin, in dispensing to some 
the honey of the Holy Scriptures. Others I strive to 
inebriate with the old wine of ancient studies ; these I 
nourish with the fruit of grammatical knowledge ; in the 
eyes of these again I seek to make bright the courses of 
the stars. . . . But I have need of the most excellent books 
of scholastic learning, which I had procured in my own 
country, either by the devoted care of my master, or by 
my own labours. I therefore beseech your majesty . . . 
to permit me to send certain of our household to bring 
over into France the flowers of Britain, that the garden of 
Paradise may not be confined to York, but may send some 
of its scions to Tours." What the " flowers of Britain " 
were at this time Alcuin has told us in Latin verse. At 
York, " where he sowed the seeds of knowledge in the 
morning of his life," thou shalt find, he rimes : 

" The volumes that contain 
All the ancient fathers who remain ; 
There all the Latin writers make their home 
With those that glorious Greece transferred to Rome, 
The Hebrews draw from their celestial stream, 
And Africa is bright with learning's beam." 

Then, after including in his metrical catalogue the names 
of forty writers, he proceeds : 

"There shalt thou find, O reader, many more 
Famed for their style, the masters of old lore, 
Whose many volumes singly to rehearse 
Were far too tedious for our present verse." 1 

A goodly store indeed in such an age. 

1 Tr. in West, Alcuin, 34-35. 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 37 



v 

Sunlight and shadow follow one another rapidly across 
England's early history. The migration of York's re- 
nowned scholar took place six years before the Viking 
irruptions began, and about twelve years before a heavy 
blow was struck at Northumbrian learning by the ravaging 
and destruction of the monasteries of Lindisfarne, and 
Wearmouth and Jarrow. After this there was but little 
peace for England. Kent was often attacked. In 838 
the marauders fell upon East Anglia. Between 837 and 
845 they made various fierce attacks upon Wessex. In 
851 the pillage of Canterbury and London was a severe 
blow to the English. About fifteen years later, at the 
hands of the Danes, Melrose, Tynemouth, Whitby, and 
Lastingham shared Wearmouth's fate. Of York and its 
library we hear no more. Peterborough and its large 
collection of sacred books perished at the hands of the 
same raiders as those who burnt Crowland (870). So bad 
grew affairs that Alfred the Great, writing to Bishop 
Werfrith, bewailed the small number of people south of the 
Humber who understood the English of their service, or 
could translate from Latin into English. Even beyond 
the Humber there were not many ; not one could he 
remember south of the Thames when he began to reign. 
And he bethought himself of the wise men, both church 
and lay folk, formerly living in England, and how zealous 
they were in teaching and learning, and how men came 
from abroad in search of wisdom and instruction. Ap- 
parently some decline from this standard had been notice- 
able before ruin completely overtook the monasteries. He 
remembered how, before the land had been ravaged and 
burnt, " its churches stood filled with treasures and books, 



38 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

and with a multitude of His servants, but they had very 
little knowledge of the books, and could not understand 
them, for they were not written in their own language. . . . 
When I remembered all this, I much marvelled that the 
good and wise men who were formerly all over England, 
and had perfectly learnt all these books, did not wish to 
translate them into their own tongues." By way of 
remedying this omission, he translated Cura Pastoralis into 
English. " I will send a copy to every bishopric in my 
kingdom; and on each there is a clasp worth 50 mancus. 
And I command in God's name that no man take the clasp 
from the book or the book from the minster ; it is uncertain 
how long there may be such learned bishops as now are, 
thanks be to God, nearly everywhere." * 

This letter, written in 890, marks the revival of interest 
in letters under Alfred. In adding to his own knowledge, 
and in promoting education among his people, he was 
assiduous and determined. During the leisure of one 
period of eight months, Asser seems to have read to him 
all the congenial books at hand, Alfred's custom being to 
read aloud or to listen to others reading. Asser was a 
Welsh bishop, brought to Wessex to help the king in his 
work. For the same purpose Archbishop Plegmund 2 and 
Bishop Werfrith were brought from Mercia. Other scholars 
came from abroad. One named Grimbald, a monk from 
St. Bertin, came to take charge of the abbey of Hyde, Win- 
chester, which Alfred had planned. John, of Old-Saxony, 
a learned monk of the flourishing Westphalian Abbey of 



1 Tr. in King's Letters, ed. Steele (1903), i. Cf. Bodl. MS, Hatton, 20; 
Cott. MS. Otho>2.\ Corpus C. C., Camb. MS. 12. 

2 MS. Cott. Tib. B xi. a copy of Alfred's version of the Cura, or what is left 
of it has been connected with Archbishop Plegmund, the evidence being a Saxon 
inscription on the manuscript. Wanley, however, doubted the conclusiveness of 
this evidence, which, together with most of the text, was lost in the fire of 1731. 
James, xxiii-iv. 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 39 

Corvey where a library existed in this century, 1 was made 
by Alfred abbot of Athelney monastery and school. Per- 
haps John, called the Scot or Erigena, also came, but we do 
not know certainly. Alfred also introduced teachers, both 
English and foreign, into his monasteries, his aim being to 
provide the means of educating every freeborn and well-to- 
do youth. During the whole of the latter part of his reign 
the copying of manuscripts went on, though with only 
moderate activity. 

That Alfred, amid the cares of a troublesome king- 
ship, could find time to devote to this work, and realised 
the importance of vernacular literature, is one of the chief 
signs of his greatness. What he did had a lasting influence 
upon our literature. He tapped the wellspring of English 
prose. Mainly owing to his initiative, from his day till the 
Conquest all the literature of importance was in the 
vernacular, and the impulse so given to the language as a 
literary vehicle was strong enough to preserve it from 
extinction during the Norman domination, when it was 
superseded as the court and official language. But, so far 
as the making and circulation of books is concerned, the 
" revival " under Alfred did not prosper. The necessary 
machinery was almost entirely wanting. The monastic 
schools, the great the only means of disseminating the 
learning of the time, were few in number and not very 
influential. For Athelney, a small monastery, Alfred had 
difficulty in finding monks at all : he had to get them from 
abroad ; while the rule in this house does not seem to have 
been wholly satisfactory. At the time of his death (c. 901) 
monachism was in a bad way. Fifty years later its plight 
would seem to have been worse. Only two houses, 
Abingdon and Glastonbury, could be really called monastic. 
" In the middle of the tenth century the Rule of St. 

1 Sandys, i. 484. 



40 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Benedict, the standard of monasticism in Western 
Christendom, was, according to virtually contemporary 
authority, completely unknown in England. This will not 
appear strange if we consider that it was never very 
generally or strictly carried out here, that the Danish 
invasions had broken the continuity of monastic life, and 
that not many years earlier the very existence of the Rule 
had been forgotten in not a few continental monasteries." 3 
Although England always responded to the slightest effort 
to affect her culture, as the long deer grass waves an 
answer to every breath of the wind, yet the surprising 
eminence of some of the churchmen in the latter half of the 
century and the excellence of their work cannot be 
accounted for if the influence of Alfred's reign had utterly 
died out. But it had not. Only the machinery was 
defective. The driving power remained, latent but ready 
for action. One indication of a surviving interest in these 
matters at this time is the gift of some nine books to 
St. Augustine's Abbey by King Athelstan an interesting 
little collection including Isidore de Natura Rerum, Persius, 
Donatus, Alcuin, Sedulius, and possibly a work by Bede. 
The machinery, however, was soon to be improved. 
Dunstan, Oswald, Edgar, and Ethelwold set matters right 
by reforming and extending the monastic system, and 
by making it the means of encouraging education and 
learning. 

The leaders were Dunstan and Ethelwold. In youth 
the former was renowned for his eagerness in studying, and 
for the wealth and knowledge he acquired. He was a 
" lover of ballads and music," " a hard student, an indefatig- 
able worker, busy at books " ; spending his leisure in read- 
ing sacred authors, and in correcting manuscripts, sometimes 
at daybreak. He was also very skilful at working in metal 

1 Hunt, Hist, of Eng. Church, i. 326. 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 41 

and at drawing and illuminating. Maybe the picture of 
him kneeling before the Saviour which is preserved in the 
Bodleian Library is by his own hand ; this, however, is not 
certain. 1 But some relics of his literary work were pre- 
served at Glastonbury until the Reformation passages 
transcribed from Frank and Roman law books, a pamphlet 
on grammar, a mass of Biblical quotations, a collection of 
canons drawn from Dunstan's Irish teachers, a book on 
the Apocalypse, and other works. 2 He entirely reformed 
Glastonbury and made it a flourishing school, where the 
Scriptures, ecclesiastical writings, and grammar were taught. 
Ethelwold was a Glastonbury scholar and assistant to 
Dunstan. Glastonbury, and Abingdon, where he became 
Abbot, and Winchester, to which see he was consecrated, 
were the centres whence, during the sixty years succeeding 
Edgar's accession, some forty monasteries were founded 
or restored. Winchester became pre-eminent. Ethelwold 
himself was a teacher of grammar. It was his delight to 
teach boys and young men, and to help them in their 
translations ; hence it came to pass that many of his pupils 
became abbots and bishops. 3 A curious story is told in 
illustration of his studious disposition. One night, when 
reading after prolonged watching, sleep overcame him, and 
as he slept the candle fell on the page and remained burn- 
ing there until a brother came along and snatched it up, 
when the book by a miracle was found to be uninjured. 4 
A vignette of pure and true medievalism : the long and 
solitary watching, the saintly pursuit of divine wisdom, the 
wide-open book, with the bold and beautiful text, and the 

1 Strutt, Saxon Antiq., i. 105, pi. xviii. The picture is in a large volume 
containing part of a grammar and certain other pieces used at Glastonbury. 
MS. Auct. F. iv. 32. Over the picture is the inscription : Pictura et scriptura 
hujus paginae subtus visa est de propria manu Set. Dunstani. 

2 Stubbs, Mem. of Dunstan , cx.-cxii. 

3 Chron. Mon. de Abingdon, ii. 263. 4 Ibid., ii. 265. 



42 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

quaint decoration, wrought by loving hands, and the in- 
evitable miracle, the suggestion of a Divine Providence 
watching over and protecting all that is sacred. 

Some beautiful examples of work of this period have been 
preserved. " Winchester " work is a familiar and expressive 
term in illumination, and nobody will ask why this is so if 
they have seen a manuscript executed there towards the 
end of the tenth century. The Benedictional and Missal 
of Archbishop Robert, which is certainly English, and most 
likely an example of New Minster work, is illuminated with 
miniatures, foliated and architectural borders, and capitals 
and letters of gold, in virile workmanship. A still finer 
example the finest example of Old Minster craft is the 
Benedictional of Ethelwold, now in the Duke of Devon- 
shire's library. The versified dedication, inscribed in letters 
of gold, tells us, in substance " The Great Ethelwold . . . 
illustrious, venerable and mild . . . commanded a certain 
monk subject to him to write the present book : he ordered 
also to be made in it many arches elegantly decorated and 
filled up with various ornamented pictures expressed in 
divers beautiful colours, and gold." 1 Godeman, abbot of 
Thorney, was the scribe, but the illuminator is unknown. 
Each full page has nineteen lines of writing, with letters 
nearly a quarter of an inch long. Alternate lines in gold, 
red, and black occur once or twice in the same page. There 
are thirty miniatures and thirteen fully illuminated pages, 
some of these having framed borders, foliated, others columns 
and arches. The figures are remarkably well drawn, the 
drapery being especially good. The whole is in a fine 
state of preservation, especially the gold ornaments ; the 
gold used was leaf upon size, afterwards well burnished. 
Of the rival craftsmanship at New Minster we have a 
splendid example in the Golden Book of Edgar, so called 

1 Archaeologia, xxiv. 19. 



PLATE 




NATIVITY OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, BENEDICTIONAL OF ETHELWOLD 



ENGLISH MONKS AND THEIR BOOKS 43 




44 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

on account of its raised gold text. 1 Work of this grand 
character is the best testimony to the noble spirit of 
monachism in the days of Ethelwold. 

One of Ethelwold's pupils was yElfric, who became 
Archbishop of Canterbury in 995. He was responsible for 
the canon requiring every priest, before ordination, to have 
the Psalter, the Epistles, the Gospels, a Missal, the Book 
of Hymns, the Manual, the Calendar, the Passional, the 
Penitential, and the Lectionary. On his death he be- 
queathed all his books to St. Albans. 2 

Another pupil of the same name is still more famous. 
This scholar's grammar, with its translated passages, his 
glossary the oldest Latin-English dictionary and his 
conversation-manual of questions and answers, with inter- 
linear translations, suggest that he must have done much 
to make the study of Latin easier and more congenial ; 
while his homilies display his art in making knowledge 
popular, and prove him to be the greatest master of 
English prose before the Conquest. 

Several other interesting and suggestive facts belonging 
to this period have been preserved for us. Abbot ^Elfward, 
for example, gave to his abbey of Evesham many sacred 
books and books on grammar (c. 1035) : here, at any rate, 
progress was real. 8 At a manor of the abbey of Bury St. 
Edmunds were thirty volumes, exclusive of church books 
(1044 65 ). 4 Bishop Leofric also obtained over sixty books 
for Exeter Cathedral about sixteen years before the Conquest, 
a collection to which we must refer later. 

1 B. M. Cott. Vesp., A. viii., written 966. 

2 Hook, Archbishops > i. 453 (ist ed.). 

3 Chron. Abb. de ., 83. 4 James 1 , 5-6. 



PLATE VI 







MINIATURE OF THE ASCENSION IN THE BENEDICTIONAL OF ETHELWOLD 



CHAPTER III 

LIBRARIES OF THE GREAT ABBEYS BOOK-LOVERS 
AMONG THE MENDICANTS DISPERSAL OF 
MONKISH LIBRARIES 

1 

^HE Conquest wrought both good and evil to literature 
X evil because the Normans thought books written 
in the vernacular unworthy of preservation ; l good 
because the change brought to the country settled govern- 
ment, and to the church an opportunity for reformation. 
Lanfranc was the moving spirit of reform, both in church 
administration and in the learning of its members. While 
still in Normandy he had built up a reputation for the 
monastic school at Bee, and probably had a share in 
collecting the excellent library that we know the monastery 
possessed in the twelfth century. 2 When he was appointed 
to the see of Canterbury he continued to work for the same 

1 Most old English poems are preserved in unique manuscripts, sometimes 
not complete, but in fragments ; two fragments, for example, were found in the 
bindings of other books. Wart on, ii. 7. In 1248, only four books in English 
were at Glastonbury, and they are described as old and useless. John of G., 435 ; 
Ritson, i. 43. About fifty years later only seventeen such books were in the big 
library at Canterbury. James (M. R.), 51. A striking illustration of the disuse 
of the vernacular among the religious is found in an Anglo-Saxon Gregory's 
Pastoral Care, which is copiously glossed in Latin, in two or three hands. 
This manuscript, now in Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, No. 12, came from 
Worcester Priory. James 17 , 33. 

2 Becker, 199, 257. 

45 



46 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

ends, although his primacy can have left him little leisure. 
A fresh beginning had to be made in Canterbury. In 
1067 a fire destroyed the city, including the cathedral and 
almost the whole of the monastic buildings ; and in this 
disaster many " sacred and profane books " were burned. 
It was Lanfranc's task to repair this loss. He brought 
books with him, 1 and introduced some changes and more 
method in the making and use of them. In the customary 
of the Benedictine order which he drew up to correspond 
with the best monastic practice, he included minute in- 
structions about lending and reading books. He was also 
responsible in the main for the substitution of the continental 
Roman handwriting for the beautiful Hiberno-Saxon hand. 
In another respect his influence was more beneficial. Both 
at Bee and in England he aimed to turn out accurate texts 
of patristic books, and the better to achieve this end he 
himself corrected manuscripts. In the abbey of St. Martin 
de Secz at one time there was a copy of the first ten 
Conferences of Cassian with his corrections ; and in the 
library of Mans is a St. Ambrose which was overlooked by 
him. 2 Happily he was in a position to lend texts to monks 
for transcribing, and his help in this direction was sought 
by Abbot Paul of St. Albans. Recent research by Dr. 
Montagu James suggests that Lanfranc's work for the 
Canterbury library was a good deal more practical and 
influential than has been usually believed. Among the 
survivors of the Canterbury collections at Trinity College, 
Cambridge, and elsewhere, " are some scores of volumes 
undoubtedly from Christ Church, all of one epoch," the 

1 In an eleventh century manuscript in Trinity College Library, Cambridge 
(MS. B. 16, 44), is an inscription, perhaps by Lanfranc himself, recording that he 
brought it from Bee and gave it to Christ Church. 

2 At the end of the manuscript of Cassian is written: "Hucusque ego 
Lanfrancus correxi." Hist. Litt. de la France, vii. 117. At the end of the 
Ambrose (Hexaetneron] the note reads, " Lanfrancus ego correxi." 



LIBRARIES OF THE GREAT ABBEYS 47 

eleventh and twelfth centuries, and all written in hands 
modelled on an Italian style. " Another distinguishing 
mark," writes Dr. James, " in these volumes is the employ- 
ment of a peculiar purple in the decorative initials and 
headings. . . . The nearest approaches I find to it in 
England are in certain manuscripts which were once at 
St. Augustine's Abbey, and in others which belonged to 
Rochester. It can be shown that books did occasionally 
pass from Christ Church to St. Augustine's, and it can also 
be shown that certain of the Rochester books were written 
at Christ Church." All these books, therefore, Dr. James 
believes, were given by Lanfranc or produced under his 
direction. 1 

Lanfranc also encouraged original composition, for 
Osbern, monk of Canterbury, compiled his lives of St. 
Dunstan, St. Alphege, and St. Odo under his eye. 

In this work of bookmaking and collecting Lanfranc 
was supported or his example was followed by other monks 
from Normandy : by Abbot Walter of Evesham, who made 
many books ; 2 by Ernulf of Rochester, who compiled the 
Textus Roffensis ; and by many others. At this time grew 
up the practice of using English houses to supply books 
for Norman abbeys ; this partly explains the number of 
manuscripts of English workmanship now abroad. A 
manuscript preserved in Paris contains a note by a canon 
of Ste-Barbe-en-Auge referring to Beckford in Gloucester- 
shire, an English cell of his house, whence books were sent 
to Normandy. 3 

From Lanfranc to the close of the thirteenth century, 
was the summer-time of the English religious houses. The 

1 James (M. R.), xxx. 2 Chron. Abb. dc Evesham, 97. 

3 Library of Ste. Genevieve, Paris, MS. E. 1. 17, in 40, fol. 61. The note 
reads : Quia autem apud Bequefort victualium copia erat, scriptores etiam ibi 
habebantur quorum opera ad nos in Normaniam mittebantur. Library, v. 2 
(1893). 



LIBRARIES OF THE GREAT ABBEYS 49 

Abbot John of Taunton added to Glastonbury forty volumes, 
a notable gift in those days of costly books, while Adam 
of Domerham tells us he also made a fine, handsome, and 
spacious library. 1 In 1277 a general chapter of the 
Benedictines ordered the monks, according to their capa- 
bilities, to study, write, correct, illuminate, and bind books, 
rather than to labour in the field. 2 

To such facts as these should be added the record of 
the Canterbury, Dover, and Bury libraries, the histories of 
which have been so admirably written by Dr. M. R. James. 3 
Of the library of St. Albans Abbey we have not such a 
fine series of catalogues. Yet no abbey could have a 
nobler record. From Paul (1077) to Whethamstede 
(d. 1465) nearly all its abbots were book-lovers. 4 Paul 
built a writing-room, and put in the aumbries twenty- 
eight fine books (yolumina notabilia^ and eight Psalters, 
a Collectarium, books of the Epistles and Gospels for 
the year, two copies of the Gospels adorned with gold 
and silver and precious stones, without speaking of 
ordinals, customaries, missals, troparies, collectaria, and 
other books. Here, as everywhere, the library began with 
church books : later, easier circumstances made the stream 
of knowledge broader, if shallower. The next abbot also 
added some books. Geoffrey, the sixteenth abbot, was 
the author of a miracle play, an industrious scribe, and 
the donor of some books finely illuminated and bound. 
His successor, at one time the conventual archivist, loved 
books equally well, and got together a fair collection. 
Great Abbot Robert had many books written " too many 

1 Librariam fecit optimum pulcherrimum et copiosum. Holmes, Wells 
and Glastonbury, 229. 

- MS. Twyne, Bodl. L., 8, 272. 3 James, and James 1 . 

4 In the fine MS. Cott. Claud. E. iv. (Gesta Abbatum] is a series of portrait 
miniatures of the abbots, and in most cases they are represented as reading or 
carrying books, or with books about them. 

4 




50 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

to be mentioned." 1 Simon, the next abbot (1167), a 
learned and good-living man who encouraged others to learn, 
was especially fond of books, and had many fine manu- 
scripts written for the painted aumbry in the church. He 
repaired and improved the scriptorium. He also made a 
provision whereby each succeeding abbot should have at 
work one special scribe, called the historiographer, an 
innovation to which we owe the matchless series of 
chronicles of Roger of Wendover, Matthew Paris, William 
Rishanger, and John of Trokelowe. In a Cottonian 
manuscript is a portrait of Abbot Simon at his book-trunk, 
a picture interesting because it illustrates his predominant 
taste for books, as well as one method then the usual method 
of storing them. 

John, worthy follower of Simon, was a man of learning, 
who added many noble and useful books to St. Albans' 
store. William of Trompington (1214) distinguished him- 
self by giving to the abbey books he had taken from his 
prior. Abbot Roger was a better man, and gave many 
books and pieces ; but John III and IV and Hugh are 
barren rocks in our fertile valley, for apparently they did 
nothing for the library. Richard of Wallingford did worse 
than nothing. He bribed Richard de Bury with four 
volumes, and sold to him thirty-two books for fifty pounds 
of silver, retaining one-half of this sum for himself, and 
devoting the other moiety to Epicurus " a deed/' cries the 
chronicler, " infamous to all who agreed to it, so to make 
the only nourishment of the soul serve the belly, and upon 
any account to apply spiritual dainties to the demands of 
the flesh." 2 Abbot Michael de Mentmore, who had been 
educated at Oxford, and became schoolmaster at St. Albans, 
encouraged the educational work of the abbey by making 

1 Fecit etiam scribi libros plurimos, quos longum esset enarrare. 
B Some of the books were restored, others were resold to the abbey. 



PLATE VIII 



Sg| "^r^^p *v* 

5 4t~j4$9** 




ABBOT SIMON OF ST. ALBANS AT HIS BOOK CHEST 



LIBRARIES OF THE GREAT ABBEYS 51 

studies for the scholars. As he also ordered the morning 
mass to be celebrated directly after prime, or six o'clock, 
instead of at tierce, or about nine, to allow the students 
more time, it is safe to assume he was more zealous than 
popular. He also gave books which cost him more than 
,100. His successor, Thomas, enlarged his own study, 
and bought many books for it ; and, with the assistance of 
Thomas of Walsingham, then precentor and master of the 
scriptorium, he built a writing-room at his own expense. 

But Whethamstede was St. Albans' greatest book- 
loving abbot. An ardent book-lover, especially fond of 
finely-illuminated volumes, he indulged his passion for 
manuscripts, and for conventual buildings, vestments, and 
property, until he got the abbey into debt, and was led to 
resign. After the death of his successor, Whethamstede 
was re-elected. In his time no fewer than eighty-seven 
volumes were transcribed. 1 In 1452-53 he built a new 
library at a cost of more than 150. Another library was 
erected for the College of the Black Monks at Oxford, for 
60? It was described as a " new erection of a library joyn- 
ing on the south-side of the chapel, containing on each side 
five or more divisions, as it may be partly seen to this day 
by the windows thereof, to which he gave good quantity of 
his own study, and especially those of his own composition, 
which were not a few, and to deter plagiaries and others 
from abusing of them, prefixt these verses in the front 
of every one of the same books, as he did also to those that 
he gave to the publick library of the University : 

"Fratribus Oxoniae datur in munus liber iste 
Per patrem pecorum prothomartyris Angligenarum ; 
Quern, si quis rapiat raptim, titulumve retractet, 
Vel Judae laqueum, vel furcas sentiat ; Amen 



1 A lot of forty'nine, with prices attached, is given in Annales aj. Amund,, ii. 
268 et seq. 

' 2 Gloucester House, now Worcester College. 



52 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

" In other books which he gave to the said library these : 

"Discior ut docti fieret nova regia plebi 
Culta magisque Deae datur hie liber ara Minervae, 
His qui Diis dictis libant holocausta rftinistris 
Et circa bibulam sitiunt prae nectare limpham 
Estque libriqtie loci, idem dator, actor et unus." l 

This, in brief, is the story of St. Albans' tribute to 
learning. In most monasteries the same kind of work 
went on, in a more circumscribed fashion, and without the 
same distinction of finish, which could probably only be 
attained at the big places where expert scribes and illumin- 
ators could be well trained. 2 



Fortunately, just when the great houses had attained 
the summit of their prosperity, and were beginning the 
slow decline to dissolution, learning and book-culture were 
freshly encouraged by the coming of the Friars. 

The Black Friars settled at Canterbury and in London, 
near the Old Temple in Holborn, in 1221. The Grey Friars 
were at London, Oxford, and Cambridge in 1224, and by 
1256 they were in forty-nine different localities. 3 It is 
strange how the latter order, founded by a man who for- 
bade a novice to own a Psalter, came to be as earnest in 
buying books as the Benedictines were in copying them. 
St. Francis' ideal, however, was impossible. The peripatetic 
nature of their calling, and their duty of tending the sick, 
compelled many friars to learn foreign languages, and to 
acquire some medical knowledge. Books were, therefore, 



1 Dugdale, iv. 405. 

2 For St. Albans see Gesta Abbatum, i. 58, 70, 94, 106, 179, 184 ; ii. 200, 
306, 363 ; iii. 389, 393. 

3 Mon. Fr. t ii. Iviii. 



BOOK-LOVERS AMONG MENDICANTS 53 

useful to them, if not essential ; as indeed St. Francis 
ultimately recognized. However, they could not own books 
themselves, but only in common with other members of the 
convent. If a friar was promoted to a bishopric, he had to 
renounce the use of the books he had had as a friar ; and 
Clement IV forbade the consecration of a bishop until he 
had returned the books to his friary. When a book was 
given to a friar and -this often happened he was in duty 
bound to hand it to his Superior. But if the friar was a 
man of parts the gift was devoted to acquiring books for 
his studies, or to giving him other necessary assistance ; 
the duty, it was held, which the Superior owed him. 1 But 
these principles do not seem to have been strictly observed. 
In little more than thirty years after St. Francis' death it 
was found necessary to draw up rules forbidding the 
brethren to own books except by leave from the chief officer 
of the order, or to keep any books which were not regarded 
as the property of the whole order, or to write books, or 
have them written for sale. 2 

By the end of the thirteenth century the Mendicants 
of Oxford were fairly well provided with books. Michael 
Scot came to Oxford, at the time of the greatest literary 
activity of the brethren, and introduced to them the physical 
and metaphysical works of Aristotle (i23o). 3 Adam de 
Marisco seems to have been responsible for the first con- 
siderable additions to the collection. From his brother, Bishop 
Richard, he had already received a library ; possibly this, 
with his own books, came into possession of the convent 
Then out of love for him, Grosseteste left his writings or 
his library it is not clear which to the Grey Friars. 4 

1 Bryce, i. 440 n. , 29. 2 Clark, 62. 

3 These works would be Latin translations based upon Arabic versions. 
Opus Majus, iii. 66 ; Camb. Lit., i. 199 ; Gasquet 3 , 156. 

4 Close roll, 10 Hen. ill, m. 6 (3rd Sep.) ; Trivet, Annales, 243 ; Mon. Fr., 
i. 185 ; Stevenson, 76 ; O. H. S., Little, 57. 



54 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

This gift may have formed part it is not certain of the 
two valuable hoards existing in the fifteenth century in the 
same friary, one the convent library, open only to graduates, 
the other the Schools library, for seculars living among the 
brethren for the sake of the teaching they could get. In 
these collections were many Hebrew books, which had been 
bought upon the banishment of the Jews from England 
(I29O). 1 Such books were not often found in the abbeys, 
although some got to Ramsey, where Grosseteste's influence 
may be suspected- 

The White Friars also had a library at Oxford, wherein 
they garnered the works of every famous writer of their 
order. They are praised for taking more care of their 
books than the brethren of other colours. 2 In later times, 
at any rate, some cause for the complaint against the Grey 
Friars existed. They appear to have sold many manuscripts 
to Dr. Thomas Gascoigne (c. 1433). He ultimately gave 
them to the libraries of Lincoln, Durham, Balliol, and Oriel 
Colleges. As the friars' mode of life grew easier and the 
love of learning less keen, they got rid of many more books. 
In Leland's time the library had melted away. After 
much difficulty he was allowed to see the book-room, 
but he found in it nothing but dust and dirt, cobwebs 
and moths, and some books not worth a threepenny 
piece. 3 

Roger de Thoris, afterwards Dean of Exeter, presented 
a library to the Grey Friars of his city in 1 266. 4 What 
became of it we do not know. About the same time, in 
1253 to be exact, the will of Richard de Wyche, Bishop 
of Chichester, is notable for its bequests to the friars ; thus 
he left books to various friaries of the Grey Brethren at 

1 Wood, Hist. Ant. U. Ox. (1792), i. 329. 

2 There is an imperfect catalogue of their library in Leland, iii. 57. 

3 Leland 3 , 286. 4 Oliver, Mon. Dioc. Exon., 332, 333. 



PLATE IX 





BOOK-LOVERS AMONG MENDICANTS 55 

Chichester his glossed Psalter, at Lewes the Gospels of St. 
Luke and St. John, at Winchelsea the Gospels of St. 
Matthew and St. Mark, at Canterbury Isaiah glossed, at 
London the Epistles of St. Paul glossed, and at Winchester 
the twelve Prophets glossed ; as well as some volumes to 
the Black Friars at Arundel the Book of Sentences, at 
Canterbury Hosea glossed, at London the Books of Job, 
the Acts, the Apocalypse, with the canonical epistles, and 
at Winchester the Summa of William of Auxerre. 1 Such 
friendliness for the Mendicants was far from common 
among the secular clergy. Besides the southern places 
mentioned in this bequest, friaries in the east, at Norwich 
and Ipswich, and in the west, at Hereford and Bristol, had 
goodly libraries. 

The friary collections in London seem to have been 
important, especially that given to the Grey Friars in 
I225, 2 just when they had settled near Newgate. The 
Austin Friars may have owned a library before 1364, when 
two of their number left the London house, taking with 
them books and other goods. 3 Early in the fifteenth 
century a library was built and a large addition was made 
to the books of this house by Prior Lowe, a friar 
afterwards occupying the sees of St. Asaph and of 
Rochester. 4 At this time the friars of London were 
specially fortunate. The White Friars enjoyed a good 
library, to which Thomas Walden, a learned brother of 
the order, presented many foreign manuscripts of some 
age and rarity. 5 The Grey Friars' library was founded or 
re founded by Dick Whittington (i42i). 6 The room "was 
in length one hundred twentie nine foote, and in breadth 



1 Sussex Archaeol. Collections, i. (1848), 168-187. 

2 Man. Fr., ii. 18. 3 Cat. of Pap. Letters, iv. 42-43. 
4 Leland, iii. 53. 5 Camb. Mod. Hist., i., 597. 

6 For date see Stow (Kingsford's ed.), i. 108 ; i. 318 ; Man. Fr. t i. 519. 



56 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

thirtie one : all seeled with Wainscot, having twentie eight 
desks, and eight double setles of Wainscot. Which in the 
next yeare following was altogither finished in building, and 
within three yeares after, furnished with Bookes, to the 
charges of" over 556, "whereof Richard Whittington 
bare foure hundred pound, the rest was borne by Doctor 
Thomas Winchelsey, a Frier there." 1 On this occasion 
one hundred marks were paid for transcribing the works 
of Nicholas de Lyra, a Grey Friar highly esteemed for his 
knowledge of Hebrew, and " the greatest exponent of the 
literal sense of Scripture whom the medieval world can 
show." 2 

Of few of the friary libraries have we definite knowledge 
of their size and character. But in the case of the Austin 
Friars of York, a catalogue of their library is extant. The 
collection was a notable one. The inventory was made in 
1372, and the items in it, forming the bulk of the whole, 
with some later additions, amounted to 646. One member 
of the society named John Erghome was a remarkable 
man. He was a doctor of Oxford, where he had studied 
logic, natural philosophy, and theology. More than 220 
books were his contribution to this splendid library, and he 
it was who added the Psalter and Canticles in Greek and a 
Hebrew book, rarities indeed at that date. Classical 
literature is fairly well represented in the collection as a 
whole, but theology, and especially logic and philosophy, 
make up the bulk. 3 

In Scotland, too, the Grey Friars were busy library- 
making. We find the convent at Stirling buying five 
dozen parchments (1502). Fifty pounds were paid for 
books sent to them this year by the Cistercians of Culross, 

1 Stow, i. 318. 2 Camb. Mod. Hist., \. 591. 

3 The catalogue is edited by Dr. M. R. James in Fasciculus loanni Willis 
Clark dicatus, 2-96. 



BOOK-LOVERS AMONG MENDICANTS 57 

and to the Austin Canons of Cambuskenneth in the following 
year about half as much was paid ; and similar records 
appear in the accounts. 1 

Other interesting testimony to the bookcraft and collect- 
ing habits of the friars is not wanting. Adam de Marisco 
writes to the Friar Warden of Cambridge asking for vellum 
for scribes. 2 Or he expresses the hope that Richard of 
Cornwall may be prevailed upon to stay in England, 
but if he goes he will be supplied with books and every- 
thing necessary for his departure. 3 From this letter, it 
'was evidently usual for friars to seek and obtain per- 
mission to carry away books with them when going abroad, 
or going from one custody to another. 4 Then again Adam 
writes asking Grosseteste to send Aristotle's Ethics to the 
Grey Friars' convent in London. 5 In getting books the 
friars were sometimes unscrupulous. A royal writ was 
issued commanding the Warden of the Grey Friars at 
Oxford and another friar, Walter de Chatton, to return 
two books worth forty shillings which they were keeping 
from the rightful owner (i33o). 6 More striking testimony 
to the book-collecting habits of the friars is the complaint 
to the Pope of their buying so many books that the monks 
and clergy had difficulty in obtaining them. In every 
convent, it was urged, was a grand and noble library, and 
every friar of eminence in the University had a fine 
collection of books. 7 Archbishop Fitzralph, who made 
this statement, detested the friars, and was besides prone 
to exaggerate ; but he was not wholly wrong in this 

1 Bryce, i. 369. 2 Mon. Fr., i. 391. 3 Ibid. i. 366. 

4 But see 0. If. S., Little, 56; Mon. Fr., ii. 91 Libri fratrum deceden- 
tium. . . . 

5 Mon. Fr., i. 114. 

6 Bodl. MS. Twyne, xxiii. 488 ; O. H. S., Little, 60. 

7 R. Armachanus, Defensorium Curatorum ; cf. Wyclif English Works, ed. 
Matthew, 128, 221. 



58 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

instance, as De Bury tells a similar tale. " Whenever it 
happened," he says, " that we turned aside to the cities and 
places where the mendicants . . . had their convents, we 
did not disdain to visit their libraries . . . ; there we found 
heaped up amid the utmost poverty the utmost riches of 
wisdom. These men are as ants. . . . They have added 
more in this brief [eleventh] hour to the stock of the sacred 
books than all the other vine-dressers." x Instead of de- 
claiming against the hawks, De Bury trained them to prey 
for him, and was well rewarded for his pains. Nor is it 
beyond the bounds of probability that he enriched his own 
collection at the expense of the Grey Friars' library at 
Oxford. 2 

The friars were not merely collectors. The scholar- 
ship of Bacon and other brethren does not concern us. 
But their correction of the texts of Scripture, and their 
bibliographical work, are germane to our subject. In mid- 
thirteenth century some Black Friars of Paris laboured to 
correct the text of the Latin Bible ; and to enable copyists 
to restore the true text when transcribing, they drew up 
manuals, called Correctoria. One such manual, now known 
as the Correctorium Vaticanum, was prepared by William de 
la Mare, a Grey brother of Oxford, in the course of forty 
years' labour ; and it is " a work which before all others 
laid down sound principles of true scientific criticism upon 
which to base a correction of the Vulgate text." 3 

Another special work of the Grey brethren, the Registrum 
Librorum Angliae? was less important, although it more 
clearly illustrates their high regard for books. Some time 
in the fourteenth century, by seeking information from 
about one hundred and sixty monasteries, some friars drew 

1 R. de /?., Thomas' ed. 203. 2 Stevenson, 87. 

3 Gasquet 3 , 140, q.v. for full description of these Correctoria. 

4 MS. Bodl. Tanner, 165. 




THE GREY FRIARS' CATALOGUE OF CONVENTUAL LIBRARIES 

BODL. MS. TANNER 165, F. IIQ 



DISPERSAL OF MONKISH LIBRARIES 59 

up a list of libraries under the heads of the seven custodies 
or wardenships of their order in England, and catalogued 
the writings of some eighty-five authors represented in these 
collections. In this way was formed a combined biblio- 
graphy and co-operative catalogue. Of this catalogue we 
are able to reproduce a page on which are indexed five 
authors, with numerical references to the libraries containing 
each work. Early in the fifteenth century a monk of Bury 
St. Edmunds, John Boston by name possibly the librarian 
of that house expanded the register by increasing to 
nearly seven hundred the number of authors, and by adding 
a score of names to the list of libraries. He also provided 
a short biographical sketch of each author " drawn from 
the best sources at his disposal ; so that the book in its 
completed form might claim to be called a dictionary of 
literature." l 



HI 

We would fain fill in the outline we have given, for the 
friars and their book-loving ways are interesting. But 
enough has been written to show the origin and growth of 
libraries among the religious both of the abbeys and the 
friaries. Of the later days of monachism it is not so 
pleasant to write. The story has been well told many 
times, but no two writers, even in a broad and general way, 
let alone in detail, have read the facts alike. On the one 
hand it is urged that monachism became degenerate, both 
in reverence for spiritual affairs and in love of learning. 
Many monks, we are told, came to find more enjoyment in 
easy living than in ascetic and religious observances. 
Apart from the savage onslaughts in Piers Plowman, and 
the yarns of Layton and Legh, now quite discredited, we 

1 Camb. Mod. Hist., i. 592 ; James, xlix. 



6o OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

have the most credible evidence in Chaucer's gentle 
satire : 

" A monk ther was, a fair for the maistrye, 
An out-rydere, that lovede venerye ; [hunting] 

A manly man, to been an abbot able, 
Ful many a deyntee hors hadde he in stable : 

He was a lord ful fat and in good point [well-equipped] 

His eyen stepe, and rollinge in his heed." [eyes bright] 

The friars, too, were sometimes " merye and wantoun," and 

"knew the tavernes wel in every toun, 
And everich hostiler or gay tappestere." 

And an indictment of some force might be based on the 
fact that the general chapter of the Benedictine order at 
Coventry in 1516 found it necessary to make regulations 
against immoderate and illicit eating and drinking, and 
against hunting and hawking. 1 

No doubt also many a monk would argue with him- 
self : 

" What sholde he studie, and make him-selven wood [mad] 

Upon a book in cloistre alwey to poure 

Or swinken with his handes, and laboure [toil] 

As Austin bit?" [As St. Augustine bids] 

De Bury declaimed against the monks' neglect of books. 
" Now slothful Thersites," he cries, " handles the arms of 
Achilles and the choice trappings of war-horses are spread 
upon lazy asses, winking owls lord it in the eagle's nest, 
and the cowardly kite sits upon the perch of the hawk. 

" Liber Bacchus is ever loved, 
And is into their bellies shoved, 

By day and by night. 
Liber Codex is neglected, 
And with scornful hand rejected 

Far out of their sight." 

1 Hist, et Cart. Man. Glouc., iii. Ixxiv. 



DISPERSAL OF MONKISH LIBRARIES 61 

" And as if the simple monastic folk of modern times 
were deceived by a confusion of names, while Liber Pater 
is preferred to Liber Patrum, the study of the monks 
nowadays is in the emptying of cups and not the 
emending of books ; to which they do not hesitate to add 
the wanton music of Timotheus, jealous of chastity, and 
thus the song of the merrymaker and not the chant of the 
mourner is become the office of the monks. Flocks and 
fleeces, crops and granaries, leeks and potherbs, drink and 
goblets, are nowadays the reading and study of the monks, 
except a few elect ones, in whom lingers not the image 
but some slight vestige of the fathers that preceded them." 1 
Specific instances of neglect and worse are recorded. We 
have already mentioned the giving and selling of books 
by the monks of St. Albans to Richard de Bury. From 
the account books of Bolton Abbey it would appear that 
three books only were bought during forty years of the 
fourteenth century. 2 At St. Werburgh's, Chester, discipline 
was very lax. Two monks robbed the abbot of a book 
valued at 20, and of property valued at 100 or more, 
and stole from two of their brethren books and money 
(1409). About four years later one of the thieves was 
elected abbot, and his respect for learning may be gauged 
from the fact that in 1422 he was charged with not 
having maintained a scholar at Oxford or Cambridge for 
twelve years, although it was his duty to do so by the rules 
of his order. 3 

At Bury books were going astray in the first half of 
the fifteenth century. Abbot William Curteys (1429-45) 
issued an ordinance in which he declares books given out 



1 . de B., c. v. 183. 

2 Whitaker, Hist, of Craven, (1805), 330; another computus, discovered 
later, does not refer to books (ed. i878). 

3 Morris, Chester during Plantagenet and Tudor Reigns > 128-129. 



62 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

by the precentor to the brethren for purposes of study had 
been lent, pledged, and even stolen by them. Some of them 
he had recovered, and he hoped to secure more, but the 
process of recovery had been expensive and troublesome, 
both to himself and the people he found in possession of 
the books. He therefore sternly forbade the brethren to 
alienate books, and decrees certain punishments if his 
order was disobeyed. Brethren studying at the University 
seem to have been not immune from such faults. 1 The 
prior of Michelham sold books, papers, horses, and timber 
for his own personal profit (1478). A visitation of 
Wigmore showed that books were not " studied in the 
cloister because the seats were uncomfortable." 2 Bishop 
Goldwell's visitation of his diocese of Norwich in 1492 
showed that at Norwich Priory no scholars were sent to 
study at Oxford, and at Wymondham Abbey the monks 
" refused to apply themselves to their books." At Battle 
Abbey, in 1530, the one time fine library was in a sad 
state of neglect ; no doubt books had been parted with. 
And as the last years of the monasteries coincided with a 
renewed interest among seculars in learning and with a 
revival of book-collecting, the monks of all houses must 
have been sorely tempted to sell books which laymen 
coveted, as the monks of Mount Athos have been 
bartering away their libraries ever since the seventeenth 
century. 

But among so many houses some were bound to be ill- 
conducted. And it is important to remember that irregu- 
larities would be recorded oftener than more favourable 
facts. What had been usual would go unnoted ; what was 
strange, and a departure from the highest standard of 
monachism, would be observed with regret by friends 
and dwelt on with spite by enemies. Although human 

1 James, M. R. 1 , 109-110. ~ Bateson, Meet. Eng., 339. 



DISPERSAL OF MONKISH LIBRARIES 63 

memory is apt to register evil acts with more assiduity and 
fidelity than good, yet a contrary view of the last state of 
monachism may be argued with as much reason and with 
the support of equally reliable evidence. The great 
majority of the houses were not under lax control. The 
general organisation was not defective ; nor was every 
monk a " lorel, a loller, and a ' spille-tyme.' " Setting aside 
the question of general conduct, with which we have little 
to do, plenty of evidence may be collected to show that the 
work of the earlier periods was not only continued in the 
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, but that some of the 
monks enjoyed special distinction among their contempor- 
aries. Writing was encouraged by directions of chapters 
in 1343, 1388, and I444. 1 The early part of the fifteenth 
century was an age of library building, in the monasteries, 
as at the Universities. Special rooms for books were put 
up at Gloucester, Christ Church (Canterbury), Durham, 
Bury St. Edmunds, and other houses. Large and growing 
monastic libraries were in existence at St. Albans and 
Peterborough, two at Canterbury of nearly two thousand 
volumes each, two thousand volumes at Bury, a thousand 
and more at Durham, six hundred at Ramsey, three hundred 
and fifty at Meaux. When John Leland crossed the thres- 
hold of the library at Glastonbury he stood stock still for a 
moment, awestruck and bewildered at the sight of books of 
the greatest antiquity. In 1482, the abbess of Syon 
monastery, Isleworth, entered into a regular contract for 
writing and binding books. 2 Some forty years later this 
abbey had at least fourteen hundred and twenty-one 
printed and manuscript volumes in its library. 3 More 
facts of similar character will be noted in the next 
chapter. Here we will content ourselves with noting a 
few of the most conspicuous instances of monkish 

1 Gasquet 4 , 49. 2 E. H. R.> xxv. 122. 3 Bateson, vii. 



64 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

scholarship in these later days. At Glastonbury, Abbot 
John Selwood was familiar with John Free's work ; 
indeed, presents a monk with one of that scholar's trans- 
lations from the Greek. 1 His successor, Bere, was a pilgrim 
to Italy, and was in correspondence with Erasmus, who 
desired him to examine his translation of the New Testa- 
ment from the Greek. A monk of Westminster, who 
became abbot of his house in 1465, was a diligent student, 
noted for his knowledge of Greek. 2 At Christ Church, 
Canterbury, Prior Selling was particularly zealous on 
behalf of the library, and was one of the first to import 
Greek books into England in any considerable quantity. 3 
Two manuscripts now in the library of Corpus Christi 
College, Oxford, and one in New College, were transcribed 
by a Greek living at Reading Abbey (1497 1 500).* 
These few references to the study of Greek are especially 
significant, as the revival of Greek studies had only just 
begun. 

IV 

The whole truth about the later days of the monasteries 
will never be known. Many of the original sources of our 
knowledge are tainted with partisanship and religious 
rancour and flagrant dishonesty. What does seem to be 
true is that in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries monastic 
influence grew slowly weaker, although the system may not 
have been degenerate in itself. The cause is to be found 
in the very prosperity of monachism, which brought to the 
religious houses wealth and all its responsibilities. Wealth 
always imposes fetters, as every rich man, from Seneca 
downwards, has declared with unctuous lamentation. But 

1 Synesius de laude Calvitii, MS. Bodl. 80. 2 Gasquet 2 , 36-37. 

3 Sandys,, ii. 225 ; and see/<w/, p. 195. 

4 Gasquet 3 , 37 ; Rashdall and Rait, New Coll. (1901), 251. 



PL A TE XI 




B,| > 3 



E : < 



8- * 



& h 





I! 

H o 



s y 



5S S 



DISPERSAL OF MONKISH LIBRARIES 65 

what first strikes the student who compares early English 
monachism with the later is, that whereas the monks of the 
first period were most concerned with their monastic duties, 
their religious observances, and their scribing and illuminat- 
ing, the monks of the later period, and especially during 
the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, were immersed in 
business, in the management of their wealth, the control 
of large estates. The possession of wealth led in one 
direction to excessive display, and to purchasing land and 
building beyond their means ; a course which monks might 
easily persuade themselves was progressive and exemplary 
of true religious fervour, but which attracted to them 
envious eyes. Heavy subsidies to the Crown and the Pope 
oppressed them. Then again, many houses indulged in 
unwise and excessive almsgiving, which the monks might 
well believe to be right, but which brought them only the 
interested friendship of the needy. And in the manage- 
ment of their estates much litigation obstinately pursued 
caused internal dissension, was costly, and gained them 
only bitter enemies. Had the monasteries been allowed to 
exist, probably these evils would have cured themselves. 
But, owing to these evils, to the decline of monastic 
influence of which they were the cause, the Dissolution, 
once decided upon, could be carried out with terrible swift- 
ness and completeness ; no influence nor power which the 
religious could wield was able to delay or avert the blow 
struck by the king. Within a few years over one thousand 
houses were closed and their lands and property confiscated. 
In the hastiness of the overthrow some conventual 
books were destroyed, or stolen, or sold off at low prices. 
In a few places damage was done even before the actual 
dissolution. At Christ Church, Canterbury, for example, 
the drunken servants of a royal commission carelessly 
brought about a fire, almost entirely destroying the 

5 




66 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

library of Prior Selling, 1 which he probably designed to 
add to the collection of his monastery. But when the 
houses were suppressed, we are told, " whole libraries were 
destroyed, or made waste paper of, or consumed for the 
vilest uses. The splendid and magnificent Abbey of 
Malmesbury, which possessed some of the finest manuscripts 
in the kingdom, was ransacked, and its treasures either 
sold or burnt to serve the commonest purposes of life. An 
antiquary who travelled through that town, many years 
after the Dissolution, relates that he saw broken windows 
patched up with remnants of the most valuable manuscripts 
on vellum, and that the bakers had not even then consumed 
the stores they had accumulated, in heating their ovens." 2 
John Bale tells us the loss of the libraries had not mattered 
so much, " beynge so many in nombre, and in so desolate 
places for the more parte, yf the chiefe monumentes and 
most notable workes of our excellent wryters had been 
reserved. If there had been in every shy re of Englande 
but one solempne lybrary to the preservacyon of those 
noble workes, and preferrement of good lernynges in oure 
posteryte, it had bene yet sumwhat. But to destroye all 
without consyderacyon, is and wyll be unto Englande for 
ever, a most horryble infamy amonge the grave senyours 
of other nacyons. A great nombre of them whych purchased 
these superstycyouse mansyons reserved of those lybrary 
bokes, some to serve theyr jakes, some to scoure theyr 
candlestycks, and some to rubbe theyr bootes. Some they 
sold to the grossers and sopesellers, and some they sent 
over see to the bokebynders, not in small nombre, but at 

1 A few volumes escaped : a copy of Basil's Commentary on Isaiah, presum- 
ably in Greek, and some others. "Among them must in all probability be 
reckoned the first copy of Homer whose presence can be definitely traced in 
England since the days of Theodore of Tarsus." Camb. Mod. Hist., i. 598. 
Cp. James, li. 

2 Aubrey, Lett, of Em. Per. from the Bod., i. 278. 



DISPERSAL OF MONKISH LIBRARIES 67 

tymes whole shyppes full, to the wonderynge of the foren 
nacyons. Yea, the unyversytees of this realme are not all 
clere in this detestable fact. ... I know a merchant man 
which shall at thys tyme be namelesse, that boughte the 
contentes of two noble lybraryes for xl shyllynges pryce, a 
shame it is to be spoken. Thys stuffe hath he occupyed 
in the stede of graye paper by the space of more than these 
x years, and yet he hath store ynough for many yeares 
to come." l To some extent Bale's account of the con- 
temptuous treatment of books is confirmed by records of 
sales : as, for example, the following : 

Item, sold to Robert Doryngton, old boke, and a cofer in 

the library ........ ijs. 

Item, old bokes in the vestry, sold to the same Robert . viiid. 

Item, sold to Robert Whytgreve, a missale . . . viijd. 

Fyrst, sold to Mr. Whytgreve, a masse boke . . . xijd. 

Item, old bokes in the quyer ...... vjd. 

Item, a fryers masse boke, solde to Marke Wyrley . . iiijd. 2 

Bale's statement is sadly borne out by the fate of the 
library of the Austin Friars of York. At one time this 
friary owned between six and seven hundred books. Now 
but five are known to remain. 3 " It is hardly open to 
doubt," writes Dr. James, "that nine-tenths of the books 
have ceased to exist. To be sure, it is no news to us that 
thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, of manuscripts 
were destroyed in the first half of the sixteenth century ; 
but the truth comes heavily home when we are confronted 
with the actual figures of the loss sustained in one small 
corner of the field. We may fairly reckon that what 

1 Laboryouse Journey and Sere he ofjohann Leylandefor Englandes Antiquitees, 
by Bale, 1549. Cf. Strype, Parker (1711), 528. 

2 Accounts of John Scudamore (king's receiver), detailing proceeds of sale of 
goods from Bordesley Abbey, and other monasteries. Cam. Soc., xxvi. 269, 271, 

275- 

3 Fasciculus I. W. Clark dicatus, 16, and cf. 96. 



68 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

happened in the case of the Austin Friars at York happened 
to many another house situated like it, in a populous centre, 
and thus enjoying good opportunities for acquiring books." 1 

But the loss may be and has been exaggerated. 
In some instances a good part of a library was preserved. 
The Prior of Lanthony, a house in the outskirts of 
Gloucester, saved the books of his little community. From 
him they passed into the hands of one Theyer ; later, 
possibly through Archbishop Bancroft, they found an 
ultimate resting-place in Lambeth Palace. During this 
interval many of them were perhaps lost or sold, but to-day 
some one hundred and thirty are known certainly to have 
come from Lanthony, or may be credited to that place 
on reasonably safe evidence. 2 

Then again Henry's myrmidons to use the classic 
word would be unlikely to carry their vandalism too far. 
To do so, in view of the great value of books, would bring 
them no profit. Knowing their character, may we not 
reasonably assume that they sold as many books as they 
could to make illicit gains ? 3 Sometimes they fell in love 
with their finds, as was natural. " Please it you to under- 
stand," writes Thomas Bedyll, one of Henry vill's com- 
missioners, " that in the reding of the muniments and 
charters of the house of Ramesey, I found a charter of King 
Edgar, writen in a very antiq Romane hand, hard to be red 
at the first sight, and light inowghe after that a man found 
out vj or vij words and after compar letter to letter. I am 
suer ye wold delight to see the same for the straingnes and 
antiquite thereof ... I have seen also there a charter of 
King Edward writen affor the Conquest." 4 

1 Fascicuhis I. W. Clark dicattts, 16, 17. 

2 C. A. S. 8vo. PubL, No. 33 (1900), Dr. James on MSS. in the Library 
of Lambeth Palace, pp. I, 2, 6. 

3 See Dr. James' view of the dispersion of Bury Abbey Library. James 1 , 9-10. 

4 Monasticon, Dugdale, ii. 586-587. 



PL A TK XII 




WESTMINSTER " I LLUM 1 NATION 

THIRTEENTH CENTURY 



DISPERSAL OF MONKISH LIBRARIES 69 

John Leland was one of those who saved books. 
Already he had been commissioned to examine the libraries 
of cathedrals, abbeys, priories, colleges, and other places 
wherein the records of antiquity were kept, when, observing 
with dismay the threatened loss of monastic treasures, he 
asked Cromwell to extend the commission to collecting 
books for the king's library. The Germans, he says, per- 
ceiving our " desidiousness " and negligence, were daily 
sending young scholars hither, who spoiled the books, and 
cut them out of libraries, and returned home and put them 
abroad as monuments of their own country. 1 

His request was granted in part, and he tells us he sent 
to London for the royal library the choicest volumes in 
St. Augustine's Abbey ; but very few of these books now 
remain. 2 He had, he said, " conservid many good autors, 
the which otherwise had beene like to have perischid to no 
smaul incommodite of good letters, of the whiche parte 
remayne yn the moste magnificent libraries of yowr royal 
Palacis. Parte also remayne yn my custodye. Wherby I 
truste right shortely so to describe your most noble reaulme, 
and to publische the Majeste and the excellent actes of 
yowr progenitors." 3 

Robert Talbot, rector of Haversham, Berkshire 
(d. 155 8), collected monastic manuscripts : the choicest of 
them he left to New College. A portreeve of Ipswich, 
named William Smart, came into possession of some hundred 
volumes from Bury Abbey library. In 1599 he gave them 
to Pembroke College, where they are now. 4 John Twyne, 
(d. 1581), schoolmaster and mayor of Canterbury, cer- 
tainly once owned the fifteenth-century catalogue of the 
St. Augustine's Abbey library, and seems to have possessed 
many manuscripts. Both catalogue and manuscripts were 

1 Ath. Ox. (1721), i. 82, 83. 2 James (M. R.), Ixxxi. 

3 Leland, Itinerary (1907), i. xxxviii. 4 James (M. R.) 1 , II. 



70 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

transferred to Dr. John Dee, the famous alchemist. The 
catalogue, with some other books belonging to the doctor, 
got to the library of Trinity College, Dublin. But the 
manuscripts passed into the hands of Brian Twyne, John's 
grandson, who bequeathed them to Corpus Christi College, 
Oxford ; they are still there. 1 John Stow, whose gatherings 
form part of the Harleian collection, saved some books 
which once reposed in claustral aumbries, mainly owing to 
the protection and help of Archbishop Parker. 

Archbishop Parker himself was assiduous in garnering 
books. " I have within my house, in wages," he writes 
to Lord Burleigh, in I 573, " drawers and cutters, painters, 
limners, writers and bookbinders." Again, " I toy out my 
time, partly with copying of books." He made a strenuous 
endeavour to recover as many of the monks' books as 
possible, using money and influence to this end ; and 
accumulated an unusually large library, quite priceless in 
character. 2 Most of his choice books were presented to 
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and twenty-five of them 
to Cambridge University Library (1574). Dr. Montagu 
James, the leading authority on the provenance of Western 
manuscripts, has discovered or made suggestions as to the 
origin of nearly two hundred out of about three hundred and 
eighty. 3 Forty-seven are traced to Christ Church, Canter- 
bury; twenty-six to St. Augustine's Abbey. Later Dr. 
James extended his work to identifying the manuscripts 
which were once in the Canterbury abbeys and in the 
priory of St. Martin at Dover. From the fragmentary 
Christ Church catalogue of 1170, Dr. James has identified 
two, and possibly six, manuscripts ; from Henry Eastry's 
catalogue (14 cent.) of Christ Church books, he has identified 

1 Notes and Q., 2. i. 485 ; James (M. R.), Ivii, Ixxxii. 

2 Strype, Parker (1711), 528. 

3 James (M. R.), Sources of Archbishop Parker's MSS. (Camb. Antiq. Soc.). 



DISPERSAL OF MONKISH LIBRARIES 71 

either certainly or with much probability about one hundred 
and eighty ; from the catalogue of St. Augustine's Abbey 
library (c. 1497) over one hundred and seventy-five; as well 
as twenty from the Dover catalogue (1389). In addition, 
Dr. James has identified about one hundred and fifty manu- 
scripts still extant which are certainly or probably attribut- 
able to Christ Church monastic library, but which are not 
in the catalogues handed down to us ; and over sixty which 
are likewise attributable to St. Augustine's monastery. 1 
There are therefore about five hundred and seventy Canter- 
bury manuscripts now remaining to us. 

By making a similarly thorough investigation Dr. James 
has traced about three hundred and twenty-two manuscripts 
from Bury St. Edmunds. 2 Of the Westminster Abbey 
manuscripts it is difficult to say how many are extant, as 
the common medieval press marks are absent from the 
books of this house. But the presence of eleven manuscripts 
in the British Museum ; two in Lambeth Palace ; one at 
Sion College ; three at the Bodleian, and five more in 
Oxford colleges ; two at the Cambridge University Library, 
and two more in the colleges there ; one at the Chetham 
Library, Manchester ; and two at Trinity College, Dublin, 
well illustrate how the monastic books have been scattered 
since the Dissolution. 3 To these special examinations 
Dr. James has gradually added vastly to our knowledge of 
the provenance of manuscripts by his masterly series of 
catalogues of the ancient treasures of the Cambridge 
colleges, and he has proved to us that a considerable 
number of monastic books still survive. 4 Much more work 
of the same kind remains to be done ; other labourers are 

1 James (M. R.), 505-534. 

2 James (M. R.) 1 , 42 ; ibid. xciv. But later Dr. James was less certain of 
some of his identifications. See James (M. R.) 10 , viii. 

3 Robinson. 

4 See also Macray's Annals of the Bodleian. 



72 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

needed ; but the men of parts who are able and content 
to labour at a task without remuneration and with small 
thanks are few and far between ; while fewer still are the 
publishers who can be persuaded to produce the results of 
these researches. 



CHAPTER IV 

BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING IN THE 
RELIGIOUS HOUSES 

" For if hevene be on this erthe . and ese to any soule, 
It is in cloistere or in scole . be many skilles I fynde ; 
For in cloistre cometh no man . to chide ne to fighte, 
But alle is buxomnesse there and bokes . to rede and to lerne." 

Piers Plowman^ B. x. 300 

i 

BEFORE leaving the subject of monastic libraries, 
it is desirable to say something about their 
economy. 

They were built up partly by importing books, partly 
by bequests from wealthy ecclesiastics, but largely and 
in some cases wholly by the labours of scribes. The 
scene of the scribe's craft was the scriptorium or writing- 
room, which was usually a screened-off portion of the 
cloister, or a room beside the church and below the library, 
as at St. Gall, or a chamber over the chapter-house, as at St. 
Albans under Abbot Paul, at Cockersand Abbey and Birken- 
head Priory. As a rule the monk was not allowed to write 
outside the scriptorium, although in some houses he could 
read elsewhere as at Durham, where a desk to support 
books was fitted in the window of each dormitory cubicle. 
But brothers whose work was highly valued were allowed 
a small writing-room or scriptoriolum. Nicholas, Bernard's 
secretary, had a room on the right of the cloister with its 

73 



74 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 




BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 75 

door opening into the novices' room a cell, he says, " not 
to be despised ; for it is ... pleasant to look upon, and 
comfortable for retirement. It is filled with most choice 
and divine books ... is assigned to me for reading, and 
writing, and composing, and meditating, and praying, and 
adoring the Lord of Majesty." l Perhaps Nicholas's room 
was like that shown in one manuscript, where we see a 
monk seated on a stool before a reading-stand of odd shape. 
The table, which is the top of a hexagonal receptacle for 
parchment and writing materials, or books, can be moved 
up and down on the screw. Above the screw is a book- 
rest ; at the foot a pedestal, with the ink-bottle upon it. 
Apparently the room also contains cupboards for storing 
books. Nicholas, however, was favoured, for in the same 
passage he refers to the older monks reading the " books 
of divine eloquence in the cloister." In Cistercian monas- 
teries certain monks were so favoured, although they were 
not allowed to use their studies during the time the monks 
were supposed to be in the cloister. 2 At Oxford, after 
mid-fourteenth century, every student friar had set apart 
for him a place fitted with a combined desk and bookcase, 
or studium, of the kind commonly depicted in medieval 
illuminations. Grants of timber for making these studia 
are recorded : to the Black Friars of Oxford, for example, 
of seven oaks to repair their studies. 8 

The arrangements in the cloister are carefully Described 
in the Durham Rites. At Durham " in the north syde of 
the cloister, from the corner over against the church dour 
to the corner over againste the Dortor dour, was all 
fynely glased, from the hight to the sole within a litle 



1 Maitland, 404-405. 

2 Stat. selecta Cap. Gen. O. Cisterc., A.D. 1278, Martene, iv. 1462; Mait- 
land, 406. 

3 0. H. S., Little, 55. 



76 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

of the grownd into the cloister garth. And in every 
wyndowe iij pewes or carrells, where every one of the old 
Monks had his carrell, severall by himselfe, that, when 
they had dyned, they dyd resorte to that place of Cloister 
and there studyed upon there books, every one in his 
carrell, all the after nonne, unto evensong time. This was 
there exercise every daie. All there pewes or carrells was 
all fynely wainscotted and verie close, all but the forepart, 
which had carved wourke that gave light in at ther carrell 
doures of wainscott. And in every carrell was a deske to 
lye there books on. And the carrells was no greater 
then from one stanchell of the wyndowe to another." 1 
There were carrells at Evesham in the fourteenth century. 2 
In 1485 Prior Selling constructed in the south walk at 
Christ Church, Canterbury, " the new framed contriv- 
ances called carrells " for the comfort of the monks at 
study. 3 Such recesses are to be found at Worcester and 
Gloucester ; remains of some exist at the south end of the 
west walk of the cloisters at Chester, and others were in 
the destroyed south walk. 4 At Gloucester Cathedral, 
which was formerly the Benedictine Abbey of St. Peter, 
are twenty beautiful carrells in the south cloister. They 
project below the ten main windows, two in each, and are 
arched, with battlemented tops or cornices. Except for 
the small double window which lights them, they look like 
recesses for statuary. 

The Carthusian Rule records that few monks of the 
order could not write. 5 But this was by no means invari- 
ably the case. In early monastic times writing was usually 
the occupation of the weaker brethren : for example, 

1 Surtees Soc., xv., Durham Rites, 70-71. 

2 Chron. abb. de Evesham, 301. 

3 James (M. R.), li.; Cox, Canterbury, 199. 

4 Windle, Chester, 171-172 ; Library, ii. 285. 

5 Geraud, Essai sur les livres, 181. 



PLATE XIH 




THE CLOISTERS, GLOUCESTER, SHEWING CARRELLS 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 77 




ANCIENT STALL, OR CARRELL, IN BISHOPS CANNINGS CHURCH, WILTS 



78 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Ferreolus, in his rules (c. 550), deems reading and copying 
fit occupations for monks too weak for severer work. 1 
Later, in some monasteries, less labour in the field and 
more writing was done. At Tours, Alcuin took the monks 
away from field labour, telling them study and writing 
were far nobler pursuits. 2 But it was not commonly the 
case to find in monasteries " ech man a scriveyn able." 

When books were not otherwise obtainable, or not 
obtainable quickly enough, it was the practice to hire 
scribes from outside the house. Abbot Gerbert, in a letter 
to the abbot of Tours, mentions that he had been paying 
scribes in Rome and various parts of Italy, in Belgium, 
and Germany, to make copies of books for his library 
" at great expense." 3 At Abingdon hired scribes were 
sometimes employed, and the rule was for the abbot to 
find the food, and the armarius, or librarian, to pay for 
the labour. 4 This was commonly done when libraries 
were first formed. When Abbot Paul began to collect a 
library at St. Albans none of his brethren could write well 
enough to suit him, and he was obliged to fill his writing- 
room with hired scribes. He supplied them with daily 
rations out of the brethren's and cellarer's alms-food ; such 
provision was always handy, and the scribes were not 
retarded by leaving their work. 5 Sometimes scribes were 
employed merely to save the monks trouble. At Corbie, 
in the fourteenth century, the religious neglected to work 
in the writing-room themselves, but allowed benefactors to 
engage professional scribes in Paris to swell the number 
of books. The Gilbertine order forbade hired scribes 
altogether, perhaps wisely. 

1 Sandys, i. 266. 

2 Cp. Du Cange, Gloss, art. Scriptores ; citation from Const, of Carthusians. 

3 Maitland, 56. 

4 Chron. mon. de Abingd., ii. 37 1- 

5 Gesta abb. m. S. Albani, i. 57-58. 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 79 

The scribe's method of work was simple. First he 
took a metal stylus or a pencil and drew perpendicular 
lines in the side margins of his parchment, and horizontal 
lines at equal distances from top to bottom of the page. 
Then the task of copying was straightforward. If the 
book was to be embellished he left spaces for the illumi- 
nator to fill in. When the illuminator took the book 
over, he carefully sketched in his designs for the capitals 
and miniatures, and then worked over them in colour, 
applying one colour to a number of sketches at a time. 
Anybody who is curious as to medieval methods of illu- 
minating should read a little fifteenth-century treatise which 
describes " the crafte of lymnynge of bokys." " Who so 
kane wyesly considere the nature of his colours, and 
kyndely make his commixtions with naturalle proportions, 
and mentalle indagacions connectynge fro dyvers recepcions 
by resone of theyre naturys, he schalle make curius 
colourys." Thereafter follow recipes to " temper vermelone 
to wryte therewith " ; " to temper asure, roset, ceruse, rede 
lede," and other pigments ; " to make asure to schyne 
bry3t," " to make letterys of gold," " blewe lethyre," and 
" whyte lethyre " ; with other curious information. 1 

In monasteries where the rule was strict the scribe 
wrought at his task for six hours daily. 2 All work was 
done by daylight, artificial light not being allowed. Lewis, 
a monk of Wessobrunn in Bavaria, in a copy of Jerome's 
Commentary on Daniel, speaks of writing when he was 
stiff with cold, and of finishing by the light of night what 
he could not copy by day. 3 Such diligence was not usual. 

In summer-time work in the cloister may well have 



1 From the Porkington MS. ; this treatise has been printed in Early English 
Miscellanies, ed. J. O. Halliwell, for the Warton Club (1855), p. 72. Other 
treatises are in Mrs. Merrifield's Arts of Painting (1849}. 

2 Madan, 37. 3 Fez, Thesaurus t i. xx. 



8o OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

been pleasant ; in winter quite the contrary, even when the 
cloister and carrells were screened, as at Durham and 
Christ Church, Canterbury. Imagine the poor scribe 
rubbing his hands to restore the sluggish circulation, and 
being at last compelled to forgo his labour because they 
were too numbed to write. Cuthbert, the eighth-century 
abbot of Wearmouth and Jarrow, writes to a correspondent 
telling him he had not been able to send all Bede's works 
which were required, because the cold weather of the pre- 
ceding winter had paralysed the scribes' hands. 1 Again, 
Ordericus Vitalis winds up the fourth book of his ecclesias- 
tical history by saying nunc hyemali frigore rigens he 
must break his narrative here, and take up other occupa- 
tions for the winter. 2 Jacob, abbot of Brabant (1276), 
built scriptoria, or possibly carrells, round the calefactory, or 
warming-room, where the common fire was kept burning, 
and the lot of the scribe was made somewhat easier to bear. 
A scribe could only write what the abbot or precentor 
set him. When his portion had been given out he could 
not change it for another. 3 If he were set to copy 
Virgil or Ovid or some lives of the saints the task would 
conceivably be pleasant. But such was seldom the scribe's 
fortune. The continual transcription of Psalters and 
Missals and other service books must have been infinitely 
wearisome, at any rate, to the less devout members of the 
community. In some large and enterprising houses a 
scribe copied only a fragment of a book. Several brethren 
worked upon the same book at once, each beginning upon 
a skin at the point where another scribe was to leave off. 4 
Or the book to be transcribed was dictated to the scribes, 
as at Tours under Alcuin. Both methods had the advant- 
age of " publishing " a book quickly, but the work was as 

1 Bede, Works , ed. Plummer, xx. 2 O. V., pars n. lib. iv. 

3 Hardy, iii. xiii. 4 Surtees Soc. } vii. xxv. 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 81 

mechanical as is that of the compositor to-day. Under 
Abbot Trithemius of Sponheim, subdivision of labour was 
carried to its extreme limit. One monk cut the parchment, 
another polished it, the third ruled the lines to guide the 
scribe. After the scribe had finished his copying, another 
monk corrected, still another punctuated. In decorating, 
one artist rubricated, another painted the miniatures. Then 
the bookbinder collated the leaves and bound them in 
wooden covers. Even in the case of waxed tablets, one 
monk prepared the boards, another spread the wax. The 
whole process was designed to expedite production. 

When a manuscript was fully written the scribe wrote 
his colophon or " explicit," a short form of the phrase " ex- 
plicitus est liber." Sometimes the scribe plays upon words, 
thus : " Explicit iste liber ; sit scriptor crimine liber " ; 
or he exultantly praises : " Deo gratias. Ego, in Dei 
nomine, Warembertus scripsi. Deo gratias " ; or he is 
modest : " Nomen scriptoris non pono, quia ipsum laudare 
nolo " ; 1 or he feels querulous : " Be careful with your 
fingers ; don't put them on my writing. You do not know 
what it is to write. It is excessive drudgery : it crooks 
your back, dims your sight, twists your stomach and sides. 
Pray then, my brother, you who read this book, pray for 
poor Raoul, God's servant, who has copied it entirely with 
his own hand in the cloister of St. Aignan." Another 
inscription, in a manuscript at Worcester Cathedral, 
suggests that books were not read : why, argues this monk, 
write them ? nobody is profited ; books are for the edifica- 
tion of readers, not of scribes. Note also the following : 

Finite libro sit laus et gloria Christo 

Vinum scriptori debetur de meliori 

Hie liber est scriptus qui scripsit sit benedictus. Amen. 2 

1 Lecoq de la Marche, 103. 

2 In a MS. of Job, Andreas, Super Decretales, Peterhouse, Camb. James 3 , 29, 

6 



82 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

And this : 

Here end]? ]?e firste boke of all maner sores ]?e 
whyche fallen moste commune and withe ]?e grace of gode I 
will writte J>e ij Boke }>Q whyche ys cleped the Antitodarie 

Explicit quod scripcit Thomas Rosse. 1 

To a poor Raoul of mechanical ability the rule of 
silence must have been very irksome ; the student would 
be grateful for it. Alcuin forbade gossip to prevent mis- 
takes in copying. Among the Cluniacs the rule was strictly 
enforced in the church, refectory, cloister, and dormitory. 
A chapter of the Cistercian order (1134) enjoined silence 
in all rooms where the brethren were in the habit of 
writing. 2 The better to maintain silence nobody was per- 
mitted to enter the scriptorium save the abbot, the prior 
and sub-prior, and the precentor. When necessary it was 
permissible to speak in a low voice in the ear. But 
among the Cluniacs whispering was avoided as far as 
possible. Watch the monks communicating with the 
librarian. One wants a Missal, and he pretends, as the 
children say, to turn over leaves, thereby making the 
general sign for a book ; then he makes the sign of the 
Cross to indicate that he wants a Missal book. Another 
wants the Gospels, and he makes the sign of the Cross 
on the forehead. This brother wants a pagan book, 
and, after making the general sign, he scratches his ear 
with his finger as an itching dog would with his feet ; 
infidel writers were not unfairly compared with such 
creatures. 3 If such sign-language were really maintained, 
it must have been extensively supplemented as the library 
grew in size, for although striking the thumb and little 

1 MS. on surgery, Peterhouse, Camb. James 3 , 137. 

2 Du Cange, Gloss. , art., Scriptorium. 

3 Martene, De Ant. Mon. Rttibtts, v. c. 18, 4. 



PL A TE XI 



" 




A SCRIBE AND HIS TOOLS 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 83 

finger together would describe an Antiphonary, or making 
the sign of the Cross and kissing the finger would indicate 
a Gradual, yet some additions to the signs for a pagan 
book and a tract were necessary to signify what particular 
tract or book was wanted. But probably if this rule was 
observed at all and we do not think it likely the signs 
were used only for church books, and most often in church. 
In nearly every monastery the rule of silence was made. 
In the Brigittine house of Syon " silence after some con- 
venience is to be kepte in the lybrary, whyls any suster is 
there alone in recordyng of her redynge." l But it was at 
all times difficult to enforce, as the monks, in experience 
and habits, were but children. 

For notes, exercises, brief letters, bills, first drafts, daily 
services of the church, the names of officiating brethren, 
for all temporary purposes waxed tablets were used. They 
were in common use from classic times : some Greek and 
many Latin tablets are still preserved ; 2 they were much 
used in ancient Ireland, as we have seen ; and they con- 
tinued to be of service until the late Middle Ages. Anselm 
habitually wrote his first drafts upon them. At St. 
Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury, the monks were supplied 
with tablets, for a novice's outfit included, after profession, 
a stylus, tablets, and a knife. 3 The writing was scratched 
on the wax with a stylus, a sharp instrument of bone or 
metal. The other end of it was usually flattened for 
pressing out an incorrect letter ; among the Romans the 
term " vetere stylum " became common in the sense of 
correcting a work. 

1 E. H. R., xxv. 121. 

2 Thompson, pp. 19 ff., 322. 

3 Ctistomary of St. A. (H. Brads. Soc.), i. 401. These tablets were called 
ceratae tabellae^ tabellae cerae, or simply cerae* The name of a book, caudex, 
codex, was first given to these tabellae when they were strung together to form a 
square "book." V. Antiquary, xii. 277. 



8 4 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



For all permanent purposes " boc-fel," or book-skin, 
was used; either vellum or " parchemyn smothe, whyte 
and scribable." Vellum and parchment were interchange- 
able terms in medieval times ; but parchment was commonly 
used. In early monastic days it was prepared by the 
monks themselves, being rubbed smooth with pumice-stone ; 




TABLET CASE AND WAXED TABLET 

later it was bought from manufacturers ready-made. It 
was not so expensive as vellum : the average price being 
two shillings per dozen skins as compared with eight 
shillings per dozen skins of vellum. For a Bible presented 
to Bury St. Edmunds Abbey, finest Irish (or Scottish) vellum 
was procured (c. 1121-48). This special material was 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 85 

used for the paintings, which seem to have been pasted 
down on the leaves of inferior vellum. This manuscript is 
now in Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. 1 

The pens used for writing were either made of reeds 
(calami) or of quills (pennae). The quill was introduced 
after the reed, and largely, though not entirely, superseded 
it. Other implements of the expert scribe were a pencil, 
compasses, scissors, an awl, a knife for erasures, a ruler, and 
a weight to keep down the vellum. 

Numerous passages might be dug out of old records 
warning scribes against errors in transcribing. ^Elfric, in 
the preface to his homilies, adjures the copyist, by our Lord 
Jesus Christ and by His glorious coming, to transcribe 
correctly. Chaucer, in a well-known verse, expresses his wish 
that Adam the scrivener shall copy Boethius and Troilus 
" trewe " and not write it " newe." 2 In copying, however, 
especially when it is mechanically done, it is almost as 
difficult to write " trewe " as it is to write " newe " : the imp 
of the perverse makes his home at the elbow of the scribe, 
ever ready to profit by drowsiness or trifling inattention. 
But, as a rule, monkish scribes were exceedingly careful, 
and their work was invariably corrected by another hand. 
More than this : they endeavoured to get accurate texts to 
copy. Lanfranc's care in this respect, and the Grey Friars' 
work in compiling correctoria, have already been noted. 
Reculfus expected his clergy to have books corrected 
and pointed by those in the " holy mother church " ; Adam 
de Marisco sent a manuscript to be corrected in Paris, 
begging to have it back as soon as done ; 3 and Servatus 
Lupus, the great abbot of Ferrieres, frequently borrowed 
from his friends books which he might collate with his own 
copies, and rectify errors and insert omissions. 4 

1 James 1 , 7 ; ibid., 3. 2 Works, ed. Skeat, i. 379. 

3 Mon. Fr., i. 359. 4 Epp. t 8. 69 ; Sandys, i. 487-488. 



86 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Before work could be started in the writing-room, books 
for copying had to be obtained. Usually a few books 
were bought or borrowed ; then several copies were made 
of each, the superfluous volumes being sold or exchanged 
for fresh manuscripts to transcribe. Benedict Biscop, as 
we have seen, obtained his books from Rome and Vienne. 
Cuthwin, bishop of the East Angles (c. 750) was of those 
who went to Rome, and brought back with him a life of 
St. Paul, " full of pictures." Herbert " Losinga," abbot of 
Ramsey and afterwards bishop of Norwich, was a zealous 
book-collector ; asks for a Josephus on loan from a brother 
abbot, a request not granted because the binding needed 
repair ; and sends abroad for a copy of Suetonius. Robert 
Grosseteste got a rare book, Basil's Hexaemeron, from Bury 
St. Edmunds in exchange for a MS. of Postillae. 1 At Ely, 
in the fourteenth century, when the scribes there were very 
active, the precentor was always on the look-out for " copy." 
On one occasion he was paid 6s. /d. for going to Balsham 
to inquire for books (I32Q). 2 Abbot Henry of Hyde 
Abbey exchanged a volume containing Terence, Boethius, 
Suetonius, and Claudian for four Missals, the Legend of 
St. Christopher, and Gregory's Pastoral Care? On one 
occasion Adam de Marisco tries to get from a brother of 
Nottingham the Moralia of St. Gregory, and Rabanus 
Maurus. He sends from Oxford to an abbot at Vercelli 
an exposition of the Angelic Salutation, and begs for the 
abbot's writings in exchange. 4 Adam had studied at 
Vercelli, 5 a new Italian centre with a close English 
connexion. About 1217 Cardinal Guala Bicchieri, after- 
wards bishop of Vercelli, was granted the church of 



1 James (M. R.) 10 . 

2 Stevenson, SuppL to Benthairi's Ch. of Ely. 

3 Warton, i. 213. 4 Mon. Fr., i. 206. 
5 O. H. S., Little, 135 ; best account of Adam in this book. 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 87 

Chesterton, near Cambridge, and when he died ten years 
later he left all his estate, including the church, and a 
number of books which had been collected at Chesterton 
or in England, to Vercelli Abbey. Among the gifts were 
two service books in English, and the famous Codex 
Vercellensis, which is only less valuable than the Exeter 
Book as a first source of Anglo-Saxon poetry. The 
Vercelli Book is in Italy to this day. 1 

In some abbeys the purchase of books, and the copying 
of them for sale, became just as much a business as the 
manufacture of Chartreuse. In 1446 Exeter College, 
Oxford, paid ten shillings and a penny for twelve quires 
and two skins of parchment bought at Abingdon to send to 
the monastery of Plympton in Devonshire, where a book 
was being written for the College. 2 A part and by no 
means a negligible part of the income of Carthusian 
houses came from copying books. Two continental abbots, 
Abbot Gerbert of Bobio and Servatus Lupus of Ferrieres, 
were book-makers and sellers on a commercial scale. Lupus, 
in particular, betrays the commercial spirit by refusing to 
give more than he was obliged in return for what he 
received. He will not send a book to a monk at Sens 
because his messenger must go afoot and the way was 
perilous : let us hope he thought more of the messenger 
than of the manuscript. On another occasion he refuses to 
lend a book because it is too large to be hidden in the vest 
or wallet, and, besides, its beauty might tempt robbers to 
steal it. These were good excuses to cover his general un- 
willingness to lend. For the loan of one manuscript he 

1 C. A. S. (N.S.), 8vo ser. vii. 187 (1909). The story of the connexion between 
Chesterton and Vercelli is most interesting. A list of the books is in Lampugnani, 
Sulla Vita di Guala Bicchieri, Vercelli (1842), 125 et seq. ; but I have not been 
able to see the book. See further Bekyn ton's Correspondence, ii. 344 (Rolls Ser. ) ; 
and Kennedy, Poems of Cynewulf (1910), 6. 

- 0. H. S., 27 Boase, xxxvii n, 



88 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

was so bothered that he thought of putting it away in a 
secure place, lest he should lose it altogether. 1 

As a rule the expenses of the writing-room formed a 
part of the general expenses of the house, but sometimes 
particular portions of the monastic income and endowments 
were available to meet them. To St. Albans certain tithes 
were assigned by a Norman leader for making books 
(c. io8o). 2 The precentor of Abingdon obtained tithes 
worth thirty shillings for buying parchment. 3 St. Augustine's 
Abbey, Canterbury, got three marks from the rentals of 
Milton Church for making books (ii44). 4 The monks of 
Ely ( 1 1 60), of Westminster (c. 115 9), of the cathedral 
convent of St. Swithin's, Winchester (1171), of Bury St. 
Edmunds, and of Whitby, received tithes and rents for a 
like purpose. 5 The prior of Evesham received the tithes of 
Bengworth to pay for parchment and for the maintenance 
of scribes ; while the precentor was to receive five shillings 
annually from the manor of Hampton, and ten shillings 
and eightpence from the tithes of Stoke and Alcester for 
buying ink, colours for illuminating, and what was 
necessary for binding books and the necessaries for the 
organ. 

In some houses a rate was levied for the support of the 
scriptorium, but we have not met with any instance of this 
practice in English monasteries. At the great Benedictine 
Abbey of Fleury a rate was levied in 1103 on the officers 
and dependent priories for the support of the library ; forty- 
three years later it was extended, and it remained in force 



1 Sandys, i. 486-489, q.v. for other interesting facts about this abbot. 

2 Gesta Abbatum, i. 57. 

8 Chron. mon. de Abingd., ii. 153. A list of the precentor's rents, applied to 
expenses of the writing-room and the organ, will be found in ii. 328. 

4 H. Mon. S. A., 392. 

5 Stewart, Ely Cath., 280; Surtees Soc., Ixix. 15-20; Robinson, i. 
u Chron. abb. de Evesham, 208-210. 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 89 

until I562. 1 Besides this impost every student in the 
abbey was bound to give two books to the library. At 
Corbie, in Picardy, a rate was levied to pay the salary of 
the librarian, and to cover part of the cost of bookbinding. 
Here also each novice, on the day of his profession, had to 
present a book to the library ; at Corvey, in Northern 
Germany, the same rule was observed at the end of the 
eleventh century. As all the monasteries of an order were 
conducted much on the same lines, it is difficult to believe 
that similar rates were not levied by some of the larger 
houses in England. 

The libraries were also augmented by gifts and bequests, 
as well as by purchase and by transcription in the scriptorium. 
In most abbeys it was customary for the brethren to give 
or bequeath their books to their house. A long list of such 
benefactors to Ramsey Abbey is extant, and one of the 
brothers, Walter de Lilleford, prior of St. Ives, gave what 
was in those days a considerable library in itself. 2 Much 
longer still are the lists of presents given to Christ Church 
and St. Augustine's, Canterbury. Dr. James has indexed 
nearly two hundred donors to Christ Church alone. In 
most cases the gifts are of one or a few books, but 
occasionally collections of respectable size were received, as 
when T. Sturey, senior, enriched the library with nearly sixty 
books, when Thomas a Becket left over seventy, and when 
Prior Henry Eastry left eighty volumes at his death. As 
many or more donors to St. Augustine's are indexed. Here 
also some of the donations were fairly large : for example, 
Henry Belham and Henry Cokeryng gave nineteen books 
each, a prior twenty-seven, a certain John of London eighty- 
two, J. Mankael thirty - nine, Abbot Nicholaus sixteen, 
Michael de Northgate twenty-four, Abbot Poucyn sixteen, 

1 Full document in Edwards, i. 283. 

2 Chron. abb. Rameseiensis, 356. 



90 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

J. Preston twenty-three, a certain Abbot Thomas over a 
hundred, and T. Wyvelesberghe thirty-one. Some sixty 
persons are also indexed as donors to St. Martin's Priory, 
Dover. 1 

William de Carilef, bishop of Durham, endowed his 
church with books and bequeathed some more at his death 
( I0 95)- John, bishop of Bath, bequeathed to the abbey 
church his whole library and his decorated copies of the 
Gospels (i 1 60). Another bishop of Durham, Hugh Pudsey, 
bequeathed many books to his church (i 195). Thomas de 
Marleberge (d. 1236), when he became prior of Evesham, 
gave a large collection of books in law, medicine, philosophy, 
poetry, theology, and grammar. 2 Simon Langham be- 
queathed seven chests of books to Westminster Abbey 
(I376). 3 William Slade (d. 1384) left to the Abbey of 
Buckfast, of which he was abbot, thirteen books of his own 
writing. 4 Cardinal Adam Easton (d. 1397) sent from Rome 
" six barrells of books " to his convent of Norwich, where 
he had been a monk. 5 One of these books, a fourteenth- 
century manuscript in an Italian hand, is now preserved in 
the library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge : the in- 
scription attesting this reads " Liber ecclesie norwycen per 
magistrum Adam de Eston monachum dicti loci." Nor did 
the poor priest forget to add his mite to the general hoard : 
" I beqweth to the monastery of Seynt Edmund forseid," 
willed a priest named Place, " my book of the dowtes of 
Holy Scryptur, to ly and remayn in the cloister of the seid 
monastery as long as yt wyll ther indure." 6 Such gifts 
were always highly valued, and in Lent the librarian was 

1 James, 535-544. 2 Chron. abb. de Eveskam, 267. 

3 Robinson, 4. 4 O. H. S., 27, Boase, 19. 

5 Rymer, Foedera^ viii. 501 ; cf. James 17 , 153. 

6 Cam. Soc., Bury Wills (1850), 105. Many of the gifts to Syon monastery 
came from priests. Bateson, xxiii-xxvii. Cf. also lists of donors in James 
(M. R.), S 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 91 

expected to remind the brethren of those who had given 
books, and to request that a mass should be said for them. 1 



Some miniatures in early manuscripts give us a good 
idea of the way books were stored in the Middle Ages. 
They are shown lying flat on sloping shelves which extend 
part- way round the room. Curtains are occasionally shown 
hanging in front of the shelves to protect the books from 
dust. Or a sloping shelf was fitted to serve as a reading- 
desk, and a second flat shelf ran beneath it to take books 
lying on their sides one above the other. In several 
miniatures lecterns of very curious design are often de- 
picted ; some of them stood on a cupboard or cupboards 
wherein books were stowed away. 

In the monasteries books were stored in various places, 
in chests, cupboards, or recesses in the wall. When the 
collection was small, a chest served ; a receptacle of this 
kind is illustrated at p. 50. Cassiodorus had the books 
of his monastery stored in presses, or armaria. The 
manuscripts of Abbot Simon of St. Albans were preserved 
in ''the painted aumbry in the church." An aumbry was 
a recess in the wall well lined inside with wood so that the 
damp of the masonry should not spoil the books. It was 
divided vertically and horizontally by shelves in such a 
way that it was possible to arrange the books separately 
one from arother, and so to avoid injury from close 
packing, and delay in consulting them. 2 The same term 
was applied to a detached closet or cupboard. At Durham 
the monks distributed their books keeping some in the 
spendimentum or cancellary, some near the refectory, and 

1 Cf. James (M. R.), Ixxiin. 

2 Customary of Barn-well (Kail. MS. 3061). 



92 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

the bulk in the cloister. Two classes of books were in 
the cancellary : one stored in a large closet with folding 
doors, called an armariolum, and used by all the monks ; 
the other kept in an inner room, and apparently reserved 
for special uses. The books assigned to the reader in 
the refectory were stored by the doorway leading to the 
infirmary, and not in the refectory itself, as we should 
expect : maybe this arrangement was exceptional, and was 
adopted for special reasons of convenience. Probably 
two places were reserved for books in the cloister. One 
case or chest contained the books of the novices, whose 
place of study was in that part of the cloister facing the 
treasury. The main store was on the north side of the 
cloister. " And over against the carrells against the church 
wall did stande sertaine great almeries of waynscott all full 
of bookes, wherein dyd lye as well the old auncyent written 
Doctors of the church as other prophane authors, with 
dyverse other holie mens wourks, so that every one dyd 
studye what Doctor pleased them best, havinge the librarie 
at all tymes to goe studie in besydes there carrells." * 
Dr. J. W. Clark, the leading authority on early library 
fittings, has tried to show, from evidences of a similar 
arrangement at Westminster, that this part of the cloister 
formed a long room, with glazed windows and carrells on 
the one hand, bookcases on the other, and screens at each 
end shutting off the library and writing-place from the rest 
of the cloister. 2 

Along the south wall of the cloister a*. Chester is a 
series of recesses which are believed to have been used for 
bookcases. Two recesses for aumbries are still to be seen 
in the cloister at Worcester : it is recorded that one book, 

1 Surtees Soc. xv., Durham Rites, 70-71. The library would be that built by 
Wessington in 1446. 

2 But see Robinson, 3. 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 93 

the Speculum Spiritualium, was to be delivered " to ye 
cloyster awmery." At Beaulieu the arched recesses in the 
south wall of the church may have been put to a similar 
use. These recesses are shown on the plan here reproduced ; 



SOUTH 
TRANSEPT 

OF 
CHURCH 




CLOISTER 



PLAN SHOWING DISPOSITION OF BOOKS IN CISTERCIAN HOUSES 

so also is the common aumbry in the wall of the south 
transept. 

In large continental houses a bookroom was sometimes 
needed very early. One of the monasteries of Cassiodorus 
included a special room for the library, with at least nine 



94 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

presses in it. 1 At St. Gall, a special bookroom was 
planned, if not actually built, as early as the ninth century. 
According to the old drawing still preserved at St. Gall, 
this room was to be on the north side of the presbytery, 
symmetrically with the sacristy on the south side. It was 
in two stories. The ground floor was to be arranged as a 
writing-room, infra sedes scribentium, the furniture being 
a large table in the centre, and seven writing-desks against 
the walls. The upper story was the library. 2 In England 
we hear of bookrooms oftenest in the fifteenth century, 
They were a usual feature in later Cistercian houses. The 
plan just given shows the position of this room between 
the church and the chapter-house, and not far from the 
common claustral aumbry. At Whalley Abbey, also a 
Cistercian house, there was evidently a separate library 
room, because an inventory of the house's goods taken 
in 1537 refers to the " litle Revestry next unto the 
lebrary." 3 Kirkstall and Furness also had bookrooms. 
On each side of the massive arch of the Chapter House 
at Furness Abbey is a similar arch leading to a small 
square room, most likely used for books. The illustrations 
facing this show the position of these rooms on either 
side of the Chapter House doorway. An extant 
catalogue of another Cistercian house, that of Meaux 
in Yorkshire, clearly indicates the whereabouts of the 
conventual books. Some church books were before 
the great altar, others were in the choir, a few in the 
infirmary chapel, and in the common press and other 
presses of the church. The bulk of them was in the 
common aumbry, not apparently in the open cloister, but 
in a room off the cloister. Over the door, on a shelf or in 
a cupboard, were four Psalters ; thirty-six books were on 

1 Sandys, i. 266, 2 Archeol. Jour. (1848), v. 85. 

3 Lanes, and Ches. Hist. Soc., xix. 106. 



PLATE XV 




FURNESS ABBEY : CLOISTERS 




FURNESS ABBEY: CHAPTER-HOUSE, INTERIOR 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 95 

the top shelf on the other side of the room ; the remainder, 
to the number of about 270, were on other shelves marked 
by letters of the alphabet. 1 

At the Premonstratensian Abbey of Titchfield the 
books were stored in a small room, in four cases, each 
having eight shelves. We do not positively know that 
a separate room existed at the Benedictine house of 
Christ Church, Canterbury, before the fifteenth century, 
" yet," as Dr. James says, " the form of Prior Eastry's 
catalogue, with its division into Demonstrations and 
Distinctions, irresistibly suggests that the collection must 
in his time [12841331] have occupied a special room, 
of which the two Demonstrations represent the two sides. 
The Distinctions would be narrow vertical divisions of 
these, and each of them would have its numerous sub- 
divisions into Gradus. As the best English equivalent 
of Demonstratio I would suggest the word ' Display/ 
which fairly gives the idea of a wall-surface covered with 
books ; and I figure the building to myself as an enlarged 
example of those Cistercian bookrooms with which 
Dr. J. W. Clark's researches have familiarized us. It 
would thus be no place for study, such as the later 
libraries were, but merely a storeroom whence books were 
fetched to be read at leisure in the cloister." 2 Between 
1414 and 1443 a library was built over the Prior's Chapel 
by Archbishop Chichele : it was about sixty-two feet long 
on the north side, fifty-four on the south side, and twenty- 
two feet broad. This was the room which Prior Selling 
fitted up with wainscot, and put books in for the benefit 
of the studious. 3 At St. Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury, 
there was a bookroom in 1340, for the manuscript of the 
Ayenbite of Inivyt contains a note that it belongs to the 

1 Chron. man. de Melsa, iii. Ixxxiii, 2 James (M. R.), xliv. 

3 Anglia Sacra, i. 145-6 ; James (M. R), 1-li. 



96 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

" bochouse." l The form of the catalogue of c. 1497 also 
suggests that a bookroom was then in use. 

At Gloucester a special room was built, probably in 
the fourteenth century. Durham apparently did without 
a room until early in the fifteenth century. " There ys a 
lybrarie in the south angle of the lantren, whiche is nowe 
above the clocke, standinge betwixt the Chapter- House 
and the Te Deum wyndowe, being well replenished with 
ould written Docters and other histories and ecclesiasticall 
writers." 2 To this room the books were transferred gradually 
from the cloister and chancellary : the words " in libraria," 
or " Ponitur in libraria," being written in the margin of the 
catalogue opposite to the book upon its removal. 

The Benedictine houses of Winchester, Worcester, Bury 
St. Edmunds, 3 and St. Albans also had special bookrooms. 

For the safe keeping of the conventual books the 
precentor was responsible. 4 As he had charge of the 
armarium or press for storing books, he was also sometimes 
styled " armarius." He was required to keep clean all the 
boys' and novices' presses and other receptacles for books ; 
when necessary he was to have these fittings repaired. To 
provide coverings for the books ; to see that they were 
marked with their proper titles ; to arrange them on the 
shelves in suitable order, so that they might be quickly 
found, were all duties within his province. 5 He had to keep 
them in repair : in some houses he was expected to 



1 MS. Arundel 57, Brit. Mus. See James (M. R.), Ixxvii. "This boc is dan 
Michelis of Northgate, y- write an englis of his ozene hand, thet hatte : Ayenbyte 
of Inwyt. And is of the bochouse of Saynt Austines of Canterberi . mid the 
lettres CC." " Ymende, thet this boc is volveld ine the eve of the holy apostles 
Symon an Judas, of ane brother of the cloystre of Sauynt Austin of Canterberi, 
ine theyeare of oure Ihordes beringe (birth) 1340." 

2 Surtees Soc., xv. , Durham Rites, 26. 

3 C. 1429-45. Most likely over the cloister. The books seem to have been 
arranged flat on sloping desks, to which they were chained. James (M. R.) 1 , 41. 

4 Chron. mon. de Abingd., ii. 373. 5 Hardy, iii. xiii. 









BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 97 

examine all of them carefully several times a year, and to 
check, if possible, the ravages of bookworms and damp. 
If necessary, he could call in skilled labour to keep his 
library and books in order ; but usually several brethren 
were trained in the necessary arts, as at Sponheim. The 
Abingdon regulations, which are in the usual form, forbade 
him to sell, give away, or pledge books. All the materials 
for the use of the scribes and the manuscripts for copying 
were to be provided by him. 1 He made the ink, and could 
dole it out not only to the brethren but to lay folk if they 
asked for it civilly. 2 He also controlled the work in the 
scriptorium : setting the scribes their tasks, preventing 
them from idling or talking ; walking round the cloister 
when the bell sounded to collect the books which had been 
forgotten by careless monks. 

As a rule the monks so highly prized their books 
saving them first, for example, in time of danger, as when 
the Lombards attacked Monte Cassino and the Huns 
St. Gall that rules for the care of them would seem almost 
superfluous. Still, such rules were made. When reading, 
the monks of some houses were required to wrap handker- 
chiefs round the books, or to hold them with the sleeve of 
their robe. Coverings, perhaps washable, were put upon 
books much in use. 3 The Carthusian brethren were ex- 
horted in their statutes to take all possible care to keep 
the books they were reading clean and free from dust. 4 
Elsewhere we have referred to an " explicit " urging readers 
to have a care for the scribe's writing : in another manu- 
script once belonging to Corbie, the kind reader is bidden 
to keep his fingers off the pages lest he should mar the 



1 Chron. mon. de Abingd.^ ii. 371; Customary of St. August., Cant. (H. 
Brads. Soc.), introd. 

2 Customary of St. August., i. 96 ; ii. 36. 

3 Panni, camisiae librorum. 4 Stat. ant. ord. Carthus., c. xvi. 9. 




98 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

writing on them a man who knows nothing of the scribe's 
business cannot realize how heavy it is, for though only 
three fingers hold the pen, the whole body toils. 1 



in 

One of the precentor's chief duties was to regulate 
lending books. At Abingdon he could only lend to out- 
siders upon a pledge of equal or greater value than the 
book required, and even so could only lend to churches 
near by and to persons of good standing. It was deemed 
preferable to confiscate the pledge than to proceed against 
a defaulting borrower. In some houses more than a pledge 
was demanded if the book were lent for transcription, the 
borrower being required to send a copy when he returned 
the manuscript. " Make haste to copy these quickly," 
wrote St. Bernard's secretary, " and send them to me ; and, 
according to my bargain, cause a copy to be made for me. 
And both these which I have sent you, and the copies, as 
I have said, return them to me, and take care that I do 
not lose a single tittle." 2 The extra copy was demanded, 
not so much for purposes of gain as to put a check upon 
borrowing, a practice which many abbots did not encourage, 
on account of the danger of loss. Books, like gloves, are 
soon lost. We can well understand how uncommonly easy 
it was to forget to return a coveted manuscript. To help 
borrowers to overcome the insidious temptation, the scribe 
sometimes wrote upon the manuscript the name of the 
monastery it belonged to, and threatened a defaulter with 
anathema. In some of the St. Albans' books is the 
following note in Latin : " This book is St. Alban's book : 
he who takes it from him or destroys the title be anathema." 3 

1 MS. Lat. 12296, Bibl. Nat., Paris. 

2 Bibl. Cluniacensis, lib. i. ; Maitland, 440. 3 James (M. R.) 10 , 171. 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 99 

The prior and convent of Rochester threatened to pro- 
nounce sentence of damnation on anyone who stole or 
hid the Latin translation of Aristotle's Physics, or even 
obliterated the title. 1 Apparently no fate was too bad for 
the thief who took the Vulgate Bible : let him die the 
death ; let him be frizzled in a pan ; the falling sickness 
and fever should rage in him ; he should be broken on the 
wheel and hanged ; Amen. 2 Two curious notes are to be 
found in a manuscript of the works of Augustine and 
Ambrose in the Bodleian Library. " This book belongs to 
St. Mary of Robert's Bridge : whoever steals it, or sells it, 
or takes it away from this house in any way, or injures it, 
let him be anathema-maranatha." Underneath, another 
hand has written : " I, John, bishop of Exeter, do not know 
where the said house is : I did not steal this book, but got 
it lawfully." 3 In a beautiful manuscript of Chaucer's 
Troilus, not perhaps a conventual book, occurs the 
following : 

"he that thys Boke rentt or stelle 
God send hym sekenysse swart (?) of helle." 4 

All the same, losses were common. About 1290 William 
of Pershore, once a Benedictine monk, and at the time 
a Grey Friar, returned to his old order at Westminster, 
and took with him some books. A big dispute arose over 
this apostate, and one of the items of the subsequent settle- 
ment was that the Westminster monks should return the 
books. 5 

A similar thing took place in Scotland (1331). A 
friar of Roxburgh forsook his grey habit for the Cistercian 
white by entering Kelso Abbey. He made his new associates 

1 B. M. MS. Reg. 12 G. ii. ; Warton, i. 182. 2 Harl. MS. 2798. 

3 See anathema in Trin. Coll. Camb. MS. B. S. 17. 

4 James 17 , 126. 5 Man. Fr., ii. 41. 



TOO OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

envious with an account of the goods of the friaries at 
Roxburgh and Berwick. They persuaded him and two other 
apostate friars to rob these convents of the " Bibles, chalices, 
and other sacred books," and, with the aid of night, the 
enterprise met with more success than they deserved. 1 

The prior and convent of Ely traced some of their 
books to Paris. They wrote to Edward III (1332): 
" Because a robber has taken out of our church four books 
of great value, viz. The Decretum, Decretals, the Bible 
and Concordance, of which the first three are now at Paris, 
arrested and detained under sequestration by the officer of 
the Bishop of Paris, whom our proctor has often prayed in 
form of law to deliver them, but he behaves so strangely 
that we shall find in him neither right, grace, nor favour : 
We ask you to write to the Bishop of Paris to intermeddle 
favourably and tell his official to do right, so that we may 
get our things back." 2 In 1396-7 William, prior of New- 
stead, and a brother canon, proceeded against John 
Ravensfield for the return of a book by Richard of 
Hampole, entitled Pricke of Conscience, " and now the 
parties aforesaid are agreed by the licence of the court, 
and the said John is in * misericordia ' ; he paid the 
amercement in the hall." 3 Another record tells us of two 
monks of Christ Church, Canterbury, being sent into 
Cambridgeshire to recover a book. 

The risk of loss owing to the practice of lending books 
was great how great may be judged from the fact that 
of the equal portions of the Peterhouse College library of 
1418, 199 volumes of the chained portion remain, but 
only ten of all those assigned to the Fellows are left. 4 
In spite of the risk, lending was extensively carried on. 

1 Bryce, i. 27. 2 Hist. MSS., 6th Kept. 296^. 

3 Records of the Borough of Nottingham, i. 335. 
' C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 397- 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 101 

In one year (1343), for example, the unimportant priory 
of Hinton lent no fewer than twenty books to another 
monastery. 1 Then again, it was thought to be only 
common charity to lend books to poor students, and in 
121 2 a council at Paris actually forbade monks to refuse 
to lend books to the poor, and requested them to divide 
their libraries into two divisions one for the use of the 
brothers, the other for lending. 2 Whether this ever 
became a practice in England is more than doubtful. 
But seculars of position or influence appear to have been 
able to borrow monastic books. For example, in 1320, 
the prior and convent of Ely acknowledge receiving ten 
books from the executors of a rector of Balsham, who had 
borrowed them. 3 Some years later, at an audit of books 
of Christ Church, Canterbury, seventeen manuscripts 
thirteen of them on law were noted as in the hands of 
seculars, among whom was Edward II. 4 

Lending books to brethren in the monastery was con- 
ducted according to strict rules, of which those of Lanfranc, 
based on the Cluniac observances, afford a good example. 
Before the brethren went into chapter on the Monday 
after the first Sunday in Lent, the librarian laid out on a 
carpet in the chapter-house all the books which were not 
on loan. After the assembly of the brethren, the librarian 
read his register of the books lent to the monks. Each 
brother, on hearing his name, returned the book which 
had been entrusted to him. If he had not made good use 
of the book, he was expected to prostrate himself, confess 
his neglect, and beg forgiveness. When all books were 
returned, others were issued, and a n^,y record made. In 
some monasteries the abbot would question the monks on 

1 See particularly James (M. R.), xlv-xlvi, 146-149. 

2 Delisle, Bibl. de PEcole des chartes^ iii e ser. i. 225. 

3 Hist. MSS. 6th Kept. 296*1. * Literae Cantuarienscs, ii. 146. 



102 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

the books they had read, to test their knowledge of them, 
and whenever the answers were unsatisfactory would lend 
the same books again instead of fresh ones. As a rule 
only one book was issued at a time, so that the monk had 
plenty of time to digest its contents. In Carthusian houses 
two books were lent at a time. Sick brethren were freely 
permitted to borrow books for their solace, but such books 
were returned to the library nightly, at lighting-up time. 

Among the Cluniacs it was the custom to take stock of 
the books given out to the monks once a year ; while the 
Franciscans kept a register of their books, and every year 
it was read and corrected before the convent in assembly. 1 

An excellent example of a stocktaking record made 
at Christ Church, Canterbury, has been preserved. The 
inspection took place in 1337. First are recorded the 
books missing from the two " demonstrations," as recorded 
" in magnis tabulis," e.g., 

Primo : deficit liber Transfiguratus in Crucifixum, ad 
quern est in nota Frater W. de Coventre. 

Nineteen books were missing from the two " demonstra- 
tions," or displays. Nineteen service books were missing 
" in parvis tabulis." No less than thirty-eight books, 
twenty-eight of them for service, either of the large or the 
small tables, were wanting : for these deceased brethren 
had been responsible. 2 

The " large tables " are believed to be boards whereon 
the borrowers of books had their names and borrowings 
noted. " I find," writes Dr. James, " in a St. Augustine's 
manuscript a note written on the fly-leaf by a monk, of 
the books * pro quibus scribor in tabula ' ' for which I am 
down on the board.' " 3 Large tables were in use at 

1 Mon. Fr., ii. 91. 2 Liter ae Cantuarienses, ii. 146 ; James (M. R.), 146. 
3 James (M. R.), xlv, 502-503 ; Camb. Univ. Lib. MS., Ff. 4. 40, last fol. 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 103 

Pembroke College, Cambridge ; probably they were of a 
similar kind. " And let the said keeper," so the statute 
runs " have ready large pieces of board (tabulas magnets), 
covered with wax and parchment, that the titles of the 
books may be written on the parchment, and the names 
of the Fellows who hold them on the wax beside it." 1 
Monastic catalogues were sometimes written on such 
boards. At Cluni, Mabillon and Martene found the 
catalogue inscribed on parchment-covered boards three 
feet and a half long and a foot and a half wide great 
tablets which closed together like a book. 

Besides the example of an audit at Canterbury we have 
one belonging to Durham, a little later in date (1416). 
The list of books assigned to the Spendement was evidently 
read over, and a tick or point was put against every 
volume found in its place. On a second check certain 
books were accounted for, and notes of their whereabouts 
were added to the inventory. Some were found in the 
cloister, others were in the library ; the prior of Finchale 
had a number ; many had been sent to Oxford. In one 
case a book is noted as given to Bishop Kempe of London. 2 

The catalogue was usually a simple inventory. Some- 
times the entries were classified, as in the case of a 
catalogue of the York library of the Friars Eremites of 
the Augustinian order. The fifteenth-century catalogue 
of St. Augustine's, Canterbury, is classified under sixteen 
headings, but it is probably incomplete. 3 As a rule the 
entries were only just sufficient to identify the books : all 
the treatises in a volume were not often recorded, but only 
the title of the first. This is an entry from a Durham 
catalogue : 

F. Legenda Sanctorum, sive Passionarum pro mensibus 
Februaria et Marcii. n. fo., non surrexerunt. 

1 Clark, 133. 2 Surtees Soc\, vii. 85. 3 See also Bateson, vi-vii. 



104 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

The letter F was employed as a distinctive mark. The 
note "ii. fo., non surrexerunt " signifies that the second 
folio began with these words, and was used as the most 
convenient method of distinguishing two copies of the 
same book, for it would rarely happen that one scribe 
would begin the second sheet with the same word as 
another. In some houses the practice was extended to 
printed books in the sixteenth century ; and consequently 
no fewer that nearly four hundred editions have been 
named in the catalogue of Syon monastery. 1 In some 
other catalogues the information given was fuller. The 
catalogue of Syon notes first the press-mark in a bold 
hand ; then on the left side the donor's name, and on the 
opposite side the words of the second folio ; and beneath 
the description of the bookT 

GRAUNTE P l m indutum est 

Biblia perpulcra et completa cum interpretacionibus. 
IF Tabula sentencialis super eandem per totum. 11 Item 
alia tabula expositoria vocabulorum difficilium eiusdem 
Biblie. 

WOODE P 2 osee 2 

Concordancie cum textu expresso. 

The catalogue of St. Augustine's, already referred to, 
recorded the general title of the volume, or of the first 
treatise in it ; the name of the donor ; the other contents 
of the volume ; the first words of the second leaf, and 
the press-mark. Where necessary, cross-references were 
supplied. The press-marks used for monastic books are 
generally of two kinds : press-marks properly so called, or 
class-marks. At St. Augustine's, Canterbury, the dis- 
tinctions or tiers were numbered, as 03; and the 
gradus or shelves of each distinction were numbered, as 

1 Bateson, vii. 



PL A TE 



y 

ti| 



(5 



f A J 



-5,6?. 



i 



iiii 




BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 105 

04. A similar method seems to have been adopted for 
St. Albans ; in one book from that abbey is this mark : 
" de armariolo i et quarto gradu liber quartus." l But 
such a mark assigned a book to one particular place and 
fixed its relation to other books. Consequently, if any 
large accession were made to the library, the classification 
of the books in broad subject-divisions could only be 
maintained by the alteration of many press-marks, both 
on the books and in the catalogue. At Titchfield each 
class was marked with a letter of the alphabet, and the 
shelves bearing it were numbered : thus a book might be 
assigned to G 2, or class G, shelf 2. 2 This method of 
marking was more flexible. But at Syon Monastery the 
books were arranged quite independently of the presses 
and shelves ; each volume receiving a different number, as 
well as a class-letter. 

The most elaborate example of monkish cataloguing 
comes from Dover Priory, a cell belonging to Canterbury. 
One John Whytefield compiled it in 1389. The note 
preceding the catalogue tells of unbounded enthusiasm for 
the library and a meticulous regard for order. No better 
proof of the care taken of books by most monks could be 
found. The catalogue is in three parts. First there is 
a brief inventory of the books as they are arranged on the 
shelves. This is a shelf-list designed for the use of the 
precentor ; just the sort of record modern librarians regard 
as indispensable in the administration of their libraries. 
Secondly, our industrious monk has provided a catalogue, 
a repetition of the shelf-list, but with all the contents 
of each volume set out. His chief aim in making this 
compilation is to show up fully the resources of his 
collection, and to lead studious brethren to read zealously 
and frequently. Lastly, an analytical index to the 

1 Pemb. Coll., Camb., MS. 180. 2 Madan, 7, 8. 



1 06 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



catalogue is supplied : it is in alphabetical order, and is 
intended to point out to the user the whereabouts in a 
volume of any individual treatise. A similar index, by 
the way, is appended to the catalogue of Syon monastery. 1 
The library seems to have been spread over nine tiers 
(distinctions) of book-casing, each marked with a letter of 
the alphabet. A tier had seven shelves (gradus) marked 
by Roman numeral figures, the numbers beginning from 
the bottom of the tier. Each book bore a small Arabic 
figure which fixed its order on the shelf. The full press- 
mark of a book was therefore A. V. 4. Such marks were 
written inside the books and on their bindings. On the 
second, third, or fourth leaf of a book, or thereabouts, the 
title was written on the bottom margin, with the press- 
mark and the first words of that leaf. All these marks 
were copied in the inventory or shelf-list : first the tier 
letter, then the shelf number, afterwards the book number ; 
followed by the title, the number of the leaf whence the 
identifying words were taken, then the identifying words, 
with the number of leaves in the volume, and finally the 
number of tracts it contains. Here are some entries : 

A. v. 







S 






. P 


Ordo 

locacionis 


Nomina 
voluminum. 


Loca 

robacionu 


Dicciones 
probatorie. 


Summa 
ftbliorum 


Numerus 
Dntentoru 






& 






CJ 


, 


Psalterium vetus glosa- 


6 


apprehendite disci 


105 


I 




tum 










2 


Prima pars psalterii 


4 


cument que il lait 


195 


2 




glosata gallice 










3 


Close super spalterio 


6 


nullas habebunt veri 


104 


2 



1 Bateson, 202. Ut scilicet prima particula de numero et perfecta voluminum 
cognicione loci precentorem informet, secunda ad solicitam leccionis frequenciam 
ffratres studiosos provocet, et tercia de singulorum tractatuum repercione festina 
scolaribus itinera manifestet. James, 407. 



BOOK-MAKING AND COLLECTING 107 

In the second part, or catalogue following the shelf-list, are 
set out the tier letter, shelf number, book number, short 
title ; then the number of the folio on which each tract in 
a volume begins, and finally the first words of the tract 
itself. 1 

Most books were bound by the monks themselves. 
The commonest materials used for ordinary manuscripts 
were wooden boards, covered with deerskin and calfskin, 
either coloured red or used in its natural tint, and 
parchment usually stained or painted red or purple. 
Charles the Great authorised the Abbot of St. Bertin to 
enjoy hunting rights so that the monks could get skins for 
binding. In mid-ninth century, Geoffroi Martel, Count of 
Anjou, commanded that the tithe of the roeskins captured 
in the island of Oleron should be used to bind the books in 
an abbey of his foundation. Few monastic bindings have 
been preserved, because many great collectors have had 
their manuscripts rebound. Several examples of Winchester 
work remain. Mr. Yates Thompson has a mid-twelfth 
century manuscript bound in the monastic style, the leather 
being stamped with cold irons of many curious rectangular 
shapes. The manuscript of the Winton Domesday has a 
binding with stamps exactly like those on Mr. Thompson's 
book. " At Durham in the last half of the twelfth century 
there was an equally important school of binding, with 
some one hundred and fourteen different stamps. The 
binding for Hugh Pudsey's Bible has nearly five hundred 
impressions." 2 In Pembroke College library an excellent 
specimen of twelfth century stamped binding remains on 
MS. 147. Such stamps were small, and frequently of 
geometrical or floral design, always rudimentary ; but 

1 James (M. R.), 410. For further information on monastic catalogues consult 
Surtees Soc., vii ; Becker; James (M. R.) ; Bateson ; Zentralblatt ; Gottlieb. 

2 Bateson, Mtd. Eng., 86. 



io8 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

animals of the quaintest form grotesque birds and dragons 
were also introduced. A hammer or mallet was employed 
to obtain an impression from the stamp. Sometimes the 
oak boards were not covered with skin but were painted. 

If a book was specially prized the binding was often 
rich. The covers of the Gospels of Lindau, a superb 
example of Carolingian art, bear nearly five hundred gems 
encrusted in gold. 1 Abbot Paul of St. Albans gave to his 
church two books adorned with gold and silver and gems. 
Abbot Godfrey of Malmesbury, partly to meet a heavy tax 
imposed by William Rufus, stripped twelve Gospels of their 
decorations. " Books are clothed with precious stones," cried 
St. Jerome, " whilst Christ's poor die in nakedness at the 
door." 2 In spite of the many references to jewelled 
monastic bindings in medieval records, very few are extant. 



1 Now in Mr. Pierpont Morgan's library. Illustrated in La 
xi. 169. 

2 Cf. Register of S. Osmund, ii. 127. Textus unus aureus magnus continens 
saphiros xx., et smaragdos [emeralds] vi., et thopasios viii., et alemandinas 
[? carbuncle or ruby] xviii., et gernettas [garnets] viii., et perlas xii. Also i. 276 ; 
ii. 43. Jerome, Ad Eitstoch, Ep. 18. 



PLATE XV) I 




MEDIEVAL BINDING: MR. YATES THOMPSON'S HEGESIPPUS 



CHAPTER V 
CATHEDRAL AND CHURCH LIBRARIES 

1 

TO the books of the monastery some human interest 
clings : we can at once conjure up a picture of the 
cloister and the scribe at his work ; the handling of 
an old manuscript, the turning over of finely-written and 
quaintly-illuminated yellow pages, throws the mind flashing 
back centuries to the silent writer in his carrell. But the 
church library is not rich in associations. It was a small 
" working " collection : one part for the use of the clergy, 
the other part consisting of a few chained books for 
the use of the people. These chained books, which now 
suggest a scarcely conceivable restriction upon the circula- 
tion of literature even theological literature were, in fact, 
the sign of a glimmer of liberal thought in the church. 
During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, not only 
were monastic books issued to lay people more freely, but 
many more books were chained in places of worship than 
in the sixteenth century, when the proclamation for the 
" setting-up " of Bibles in churches was granted unwillingly. 
Some collections which later were distinctively church 
libraries were at first claustral. For convenience' sake we 
shall treat all of them as church libraries. The amount of 
information on medieval church libraries is surprisingly 
extensive, albeit a great deal more must remain hidden 



no OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

still, for all our cathedral libraries have not been subjects 
of such loving scholarship as Canon Church has bestowed 
upon the ancient treasure-house at Wells. Still the material 
is extensive, and our difficulty in making a selection for 
such a compendious book as the present is complicated, 
because we often do not find it possible to say whether the 
books referred to in the available records are merely service 
books, or books of an ordinary character. To evade this 
difficulty we must ignore all material relating to unnamed 
books, which we cannot reasonably suppose to have been 
the nucleus of a more general collection, or an addition to it. 
Exeter Cathedral Library was a monastic hoard. It 
originated with Bishop Leofric, who got together over sixty 
books about sixteen years before the Conquest. His books 
were a curious collection : among copies of the classics and 
ecclesiastical works were books of night songs, summer and 
winter reading books, a precious book of blessings, and a 
" Mycel Englisc boc " a large English book, on all sorts 
of things, wrought in verse. The last is the famous Exeter 
book, still preserved in the library. A small folio of 130 
leaves of vellum, it is remarkable to the student of 
manuscripts for its bold, clear, and graceful calligraphy, and 
priceless to the student of literature as the only source of 
much of our small store of Anglo-Saxon poetry. Some 
other Leofrican books remain. In the library of Corpus 
Christi College, Cambridge, is an eleventh century copy 
of Bede's history in Anglo-Saxon, which was given to 
Exeter by Leofric, although it is not mentioned in the list 
of his gifts in the Bodleian manuscript. The inscription in 
it reads : Hunc librum dat leofricus episcopus ecclesie sancti 
petri apostoli in exonia ubi sedes episcopalis est ad utilitatem 
successorum suorum. Si quis ilium abstulerit inde, subiaceat 
maledictioni. Fiat. Fiat. Fiat} A manuscript of Bede on 

1 MS., 41; James 17 , 81. 



PL A TE XVUl 




ANCIENT BOOK-BOX IN EXETER CATHEDRAL 



CHURCH LIBRARIES in 

the Apocalypse, now at Lambeth Palace, seems almost 
certainly to have come from St. Mary's Church, Crediton, 
and it bears the inscription : " A : in nomine domini. 
Amen. Leofricz^ Pater." 1 Another book given by Leofric, 
a missal dating from 969, is preserved in the Bodleian 
Library. 2 

Although the age of these books suggests that the 
collection has existed continuously since the eleventh 
century, after Leofric's time no important reference to 
the library occurs until 1327, when an inventory of the 
books was drawn up. Then about 230 volumes (excluding 
service books) were in the possession of the Chapter. 3 In 
this same year a breviary and a missal were chained up in 
the choir for the use of the people. 4 Twelve months later 
John Grandisson arrived at Exeter to take charge of his 
diocese. A book-loving bishop, he was a benefactor to 
the library, maybe to a very praiseworthy extent; but a 
few words will record what is definitely known about this 
part of his work. In 1366 he gave two folio volumes, 
still extant. One contains Lessons from the Bible, and 
the homilies appointed to be read, and the other is the 
Legends of the Saints. 5 In his will he gave two other 
books, perhaps Pontificals of his own compilation, to his 
successors. 6 He himself owned an extensive library, which 
he divided principally between his chapter and the collegiate 
churches of Ottery, Crediton, and Boseham, and Exeter 



1 C. A. S., 8vo. publ. No. 33 (1900), 25. 

2 MS. BodL, Auct. D. 2. 16 fo. i a ; Dugdale, ii. 527; Oxford PhiloL Soc. 
Trans. , 1881-83, p. 2. 

3 Full inventory in Oliver, Lives of the Bps., 301-310. 

4 C. A. S. (N.S.), 8vo. ser. iv. 311. 

5 Ego I. de G. Exon.,do Eccle. Exon librum istum cum pan suo, in festo 
Annuntiationis Dominice. Manu mea, anno consecrationis mee xxxix. Oliver, 
Lives oj the Bps., 85. 

6 Lego eisdem libros meos episcopales, majorem et minorem, quos ego 
compilavi. Ibid* 86. 



ii2 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

College, Oxford. 1 All St. Thomas Aquinas' works he 
bequeathed to the Black Friars' convent at Exeter. To 
Simon Islip, Archbishop of Canterbury, he gave a fine 
copy of St. Anselm's letters, now by good fortune in the 
British Museum. A Hebrew Pentateuch once belonging 
to him is in the capitular library of Westminster : is it 
possible that the bishop was a Hebrew scholar ? 2 Among 
the books of Windsor College was a volume, De Legendis 
et Missis de B. V. Maria, which had been given by him. 

A library room was built over the east cloister in 
1412 I 3. 3 Probably the building was found necessary on 
account of a considerable accession of books, and we hazard 
a guess that Grandisson's bequest, received in 1370, formed 
the bulk of the accretion. At all events, among the 
accounts for the building are charges for 191 chains for 
books not secured before. No fewer than 67 books 
were also sewed or bound on this same occasion, the 
master binder being paid 6 and his man 363. 8d. Thus 
at the beginning of the fifteenth century the age of 
library building the capitular hoard at Exeter was furbished 
up, newly housed, and arranged. But the interest in the 
collection seems to have waned. Another chain was 
bought for sixteenpence in 14303 I for a copy of Rationale 
Divinorum, which was given by one Rolder ; but such gifts 
were few and far between. In 1506 the Chapter owned 

1 In 1329 he wrote to Richard de Ratforde from Chudleigh : " Regraciamur 
vobis quod Librum Sermonum Beati Augustini pro nobis, prout Magister Ricardus 
filius Radulphi, ex parte nostra, vos rogavit, retinuistis, nobisque et condiciones 
ejusdem significastis et precium. Et, quia ipsum Librum habere volumus, Ix 
solidos sterlingorum Magistro Johanni de Sovenaisshe [Sevenashe], Magistro 
Scolarum nostre Civitatis Exoniensis, pro ipso Libro tradi fecimus, ut nobis 
eundem, quamcicius nuncii securitas affuerit, transmittatis. Libros, eciam, 
Theologicos Originales, veteres saltern et raros, ac Sermones antiques, eciam 
sine Divisionibus Thematum, pro nostris usibus exploretis ; scribentes nobis 
condiciones et precium eorundem." O.H.S., 27 Boase, 2. 

2 Robinson, 63. 

3 Building accounts in C. A. S, (N.S.), 8vo. ser. iv. 296. 



CHURCH LIBRARIES 113 

363 volumes, but 133 more than in I327, 1 so that few 
additions besides Grandisson's were made in nearly two 
centuries, or many books were lost. 2 According to this 
second inventory the books were arranged in eleven desks ; 
eight books were chained opposite the west door; twenty- 
eight were not chained ; seven were chained behind the 
treasurer's stall (a Bible in three volumes, Lyra also in 
three, and a Concordance) ; and fourteen volumes of canon 
and civil law behind the succentor's stall. 3 The Dean and 
Chapter were in a strangely generous mood at the end of 
this century. In 1566 they gave one of Leofric's books to 
Archbishop Parker : it is now in Corpus Christi College, 
Cambridge. The collection was despoiled of eighty-one 
of its finest books to enrich Bodley's foundation at Oxford, 
i6o2. 4 Although the book-lover does not like to see 
treasures torn from their associations, yet in this instance 
the alienation was fortunate. By 1752 only twenty 
volumes noted in the inventory of 1506 were left at 
Exeter. 5 

Besides the Exeter Book, one other very ancient and 
valuable manuscript is preserved in the Cathedral : this is 
the part of the Domesday Book referring to Devon, Corn- 
wall, and Somerset, which is probably not much later in 
date than the Exchequer record. Two ancient book-boxes 
are also to be found there. These are fixed in a sloping 
position by means of iron supports embedded in the pillars. 
The late Dr. J. W. Clark was led to believe them to be 
intended for books by finding a wooden bookboard nailed to 
the inside bottom of one of the boxes. For the protection 

1 Oliver, 366-375. 

2 Between 1385 and 1425 the bishops were giving books to Exeter College, 
Oxford. 

3 Oliver, 359, 360, 366-375. 

4 List in Oliver, Lives, 376 ; C. A. S. (N.S.), iv. 306 (8vo. ser.). 

5 Oliver, 376. 



ii4 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

of the book each box has a cover, which does not seem ever 
to have been fastened : a reader would raise the lid when 
he wanted to use the manuscript, and close it before he 
went away. 1 Erasmus seems to have seen similar boxes 
fixed to the pillars in the nave at Canterbury. 2 



When gifts or bequests were received by a church or 
monastery, it was a beautiful custom to lay them, or some- 
thing to represent them, upon the altar : " a book, or turf, 
or, in fact, almost any portable object, was offered for 
property such as land ; or a bough or twig of a tree, if 
the gift were a forest." King Offa's gift of churches to 
Worcester monastery in 780 was accompanied by a great 
book with golden clasps, with every probability a Bible. 3 
A gift was made under similar circumstances in c. 1057, 
about the time Bishop Leofric was founding the library at 
Exeter, when Lady Godiva, the wife of another Leofric, 
restored some manors to Worcester, and with them gave 
a Bible in two parts. Before this, Bishop Werfrith, to 
whom we have referred before as a helper of King Alfred, 
had sent to Worcester the Anglo-Saxon version of Gregory's 
Cura Pastoralis ; the very copy of it is now in the Bodleian 
Library. 

Such were perhaps the beginnings of the library of 
Worcester Cathedral. We cannot but think that a collec- 
tion of books was formed slowly and steadily here, as in 

1 C. A. S. (N.S.), iv. 312. 

2 I have to thank my friend Mr. Tapley Soper, F.R.Hist.S., for his willing 
help in sending me information about this library. 

Our account of church libraries will appear inadequate if it is not borne in 
mind that we do not propose to go beyond the manuscript age. An excellent 
account of modern church libraries is given in English Chiirch Furniture, in this 
series, Also see Clark, 257. 

8 Reliquary , vii. II (Floyer). 



CHURCH LIBRARIES 115 

other foundations of the same kind, although actual records 
are scanty and meagre. In over forty of the manuscripts 
now at Worcester are inscriptions on fly-leaves stating where 
they were procured : sometimes the price is given. The 
dates of these inscriptions run from about 1283 to 1462, 
or later. 1 " In 1464," writes the Rev. J. K. Floyer, in his 
article entitled A Thousand Years of a Cathedral Library ', 
" we first hear of a regular endowment for the acquisition of 
books. Bishop Carpenter made a library in the charnel 
house chantry, and endowed it with 10 for a librarian. 
The charnel house was near the north porch of the 
Cathedral, and stood on or near the site of the present 
Precentor's house. It was a separate institution from the 
monastery, and had its own endowments and priests. 
Bishop Carpenter's foundation was probably entirely 
separate from the collection of books kept for 
the use of the monks in the cloister." 2 At the 
same time, the bishop made regulations for the use 
of the library. The keeper was to be a graduate in 
theology, and a good preacher. He was to live in the 
chantry, where a dwelling had been erected for him at the 
end of the library. Among other duties he had to take 
care of the books. The library was to be open to the 
public every week day for two hours before Nones (or nine), 
and for two hours after Nones. This alone was a most 
liberal regulation, for making which Bishop Carpenter 
deserves all honour. But he went still further. When 
asked to do so the keeper was to explain difficult passages 
of Scripture, and once a week was to deliver a public 
lecture in the library. The Bishop's idea of a library is 
precisely that embodied in the modern town library : a 
collection of good books, for the free use of the public, with 
some personal help to the proper use of them when 

1 Reliquary, vii. 14 (Floyer). 2 Ibid., 17. 



n6 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

necessary. Three lists of the books were to be drawn up, 
one to be kept by the Bishop, the second by the sacrist, 
and the third by the keeper. Once a year stock was 
taken, and if a book were missing through the keeper's 
neglect, he was to forfeit its value within a month, or in 
default was to pay forty-shillings more than the value of 
it, one half of the sum to go to the Bishop, the other 
half to the sacrist Unfortunately these and other regula- 
tions were not observed with care, and within forty years 
the Bishop's work was completely neglected and forgotten. 

At the Dissolution the Priory was deprived of much of 
its church plate, service books and vestments, and probably 
of many of its books. But the library there suffered a good 
deal less than those of other houses, and the Cathedral now 
has in its possession some respectable remains of its ancient 
collection of books. 1 



The history of an old library can only be traced inter- 
mittently, the facts playing hide and seek like a distant 
lantern carried over broken ground. Little is known of the 
early history of Hereford's cathedral library. An ancient 
copy of the Gospels, said to have been bequeathed by the 
last Saxon bishop, Athelstan (1012), is one of the earliest 
gifts. In 1 1 86 Bishop Robert Folliott gave " multa bona 
in terris et libris." Bishop Hugh Folliott also left ornaments 
and books. Another bishop, R. de Maidstone, although " vir 
magnae literaturae, et in theologia nominatissimus," only 
seems to have given the church two antiphonaries, some 
psalters, and a Legenda. Bishop Charleton ( I 369) left a Bible, 
a concordance, a glossary, Nicholas de Lyra, and five Books 
of Moses, all to be chained in the cathedral. Very shortly 

1 The best account of Worcester Cathedral Library is in Reliquary, vii. II, 
by the Rev. J. K. Floyer, M.A. 



PLA TE XIX 





.,* m, 

I THt 



CHURCH LIBRARIES 117 

afterwards we hear of fittings, for in 1395 Walter of 
Ramsbury gave 10 for making the desks. Probably a 
book-room, which was over the west cloister, was then put 
up. A long interval elapsed, during which little seems to 
have been done for the library. But between c. 151635 
Bishop Booth and Dean Frowcester left many fine volumes. 
In 1589 the book-room was abandoned and the contents 
shifted to the Lady Chapel. 

A new library was built in 1897. Herein are to be 
seen what are almost certainly the original bookcases, albeit 
they have been taken to pieces and somewhat altered before 
being fitted together again. One of the bookcases still has 
all the old chains and fittings for the books, and it presents 
a very curious appearance. Every chain is from three to 
four feet long, with a ring at each end, and a swivel in the 
middle. One ring is strung on to an iron rod, which is 
secured at one end of the bookcase by metal work, with 
lock and key. For convenience in using the book on the 
reading slope which was attached to the case, the ring at 
the other end of the chain was fixed to the fore edge of the 
book-cover instead of to the back ; when standing on 
the shelves the books therefore present their fore edges to 
the reader. The cases are roughly finished, but very solid 
in make. 1 

IV 

At Old Sarum Church, Bishop Osmund (1078-99) 
collected, wrote, and bound books. 2 In his time, too, the 
chancellor used to superintend the schools and correct 
books : either books used in the school or service books. 3 
The income from a virgate of land was assigned to correct- 

1 Havergal, Fasti Heref. (1869), 181-182. 

2 W. of Malmesbury, Gesta Pont., 184. 
8 Register of St. Osmund, i. 8, 214. 



ii8 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

ing books towards the end of the twelfth century (i 175-So). 1 
The new Salisbury Cathedral was erected in the thirteenth 
century ; but apparently a special library room was not 
used until shortly after 1444, when it was put up to cover 
the whole eastern cloister. This room was altered and 
reduced in size in 1758. About the time the room was 
completed one of the canons gave some books, on the 
inside covers of two of which is a note in a fifteenth century 
hand bidding they should be chained in the new library. 2 
Nearly two hundred manuscripts, of various date from the 
ninth to the fourteenth century, are now in the library. 
Among them several notable volumes are to be found : a 
Psalter with curious illuminations ; another Psalter, with the 
Gallican and Hebrew of Jerome's translation in parallel 
columns, also illuminated ; Chaucer's translation of Boethius ; 
Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain of 
the twelfth century ; a thirteenth century Lectionary, with 
golden and coloured initials ; a Tonale according to Sarum 
use, bound with a fourteenth century Ordinal ; and a 
fifteenth century Processional containing some notes on local 
customs. 

V 

Books were given to Lincoln Cathedral about 1 150 by 
Hugh of Leicester ; one of them bears the inscription, Ex 
dono Hugonis Archidiaconi Leycestriae. They may still be 
seen at Lincoln. Forty-two volumes and a map came into the 
charge of Hamo when he became chancellor in 1 1 5O. 3 During 
his chancellorship thirty-one volumes were added by gift, so 
making the total seventy-three volumes : Bishops Alexander 
and Chesney were among the benefactors. But here, as at 

1 Register of St. Osmund, \. 224. 

2 Cox and Harvey, English Church Ftirniture, 331. 

3 See list in Giraldus Cambrensis, vii. 165-166. 



PL A TE XX 




CHURCH LIBRARIES 119 

Salisbury, not until the fifteenth century was a separate 
library room built. Two gifts " to the new library " by 
Bishop Repyngton who also befriended Oxford University 
Library and Chancellor Duffield in 1419 and 1426, fix 
the date. It was put up over the north half of the eastern 
cloisters, relatively the same position as at Salisbury and 
Wells. Originally it had five bays, but in 1789 the two 
southernmost bays were pulled down: In this room the 
fine fifteenth century oaken roof, with its carved ornaments, 
has been preserved, but at Salisbury the roof is modern, with 
a plaster ceiling. Lincoln's new library, designed by Wren 
and erected in 1674, is next to this old room. According 
to a 1450 catalogue now preserved at Lincoln the library 
contained one hundred and seven works, more than seventy 
of which now remain. Among the most important manu- 
scripts are a mid-fifteenth century copy of old English 
romances of great literary value, collected by Robert de 
Thornton, archdeacon of Bedford (c. 1430); and a con- 
temporary copy of Magna Carta. 

VI 

In an inventory of St. Paul's Cathedral, taken in 1245, 
mention is made of thirty-five volumes. 1 Before this, in 
Ralph of Diceto's time, a binder of books was an officer 
of the church. As at Salisbury, the chancellor's duties 
included taking charge of the school books. In 1283 a 
writer of books was included among the ministers. The 
two offices were combined in the beginning of the next 
century. When Dean Ralph Baldock made a visitation 
of St. Paul's treasury in 1295, he found thirteen Gospels 
adorned with precious metals and stones ; some other 
parts of the Scriptures ; and a commentary of Thomas 

1 Archaeologia, 1. 496. 



120 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Aquinas. In 1313 Baldock, who died Bishop of London, 
bequeathed fifteen volumes, chiefly theological books. 1 
To Baldock's time probably belongs the reference to 
twelve scribes, no doubt retained for business purposes 
as well as for book-making. They were bound by an 
oath to be faithful to the church and to write without 
fraud or malice. ^Eneas Sylvius tells us he saw a Latin 
translation of Thucydides in the sacristy of the cathedral 

(I435). 2 

A library room was erected in the fifteenth century. " Ouer 
the East Quadrant of this Cloyster, was a fayre Librarie, 
builded at the costes and charges of Waltar Sherington, 
Chancellor of the Duchie of Lancaster, in the raigne of 
Henrie the 6 which hath beene well furnished with faire 
written books in Vellem." 3 The catalogue of 1 45 8 bears out 
Stow's description of the library as well-furnished. Some one 
hundred and seventy volumes were in the Chapter's posses- 
sion ; they were of the usual kind, grammatical books, Bibles 
and commentaries, works of the fathers ; books on medicine 
by Galen, Hippocrates, Avicenna, and Egidius ; Ralph de 
Diceto's chronicles ; and some works of Seneca, Cicero, 
Suetonius, and Virgil. 4 In 1486, however, only fifty-two 
volumes were found after the death of John Grimston the 
sacrist. 5 Leland gives a list of only twenty-one manuscripts, 
but it was not his habit to make full inventories. In Stow's 
time, however, few books remained. 6 Three volumes only 
can be traced now (i) a manuscript of Avicenna, (2) the 
Chronicle of Ralph de Diceto in the Lambeth Palace 
Library, and (3) the Miracles of the Virgin, in the Aberdeen 
University Library. 7 

1 Hist. MSS., gth Kept., App. 463. 

2 Ep., 126; Creighton, Papacy ', iii. 5311. 

3 Stow, i. 328. 4 Dugdale, Hist, of St. Paul's, 392-398. 
5 Ibid., 399. 6 Stow, i. 328. 

7 Ibid., ii. 346 ; Simpson, Reg. S. Pauli, 13, 78, 133, 173, 227. 



CHURCH LIBRARIES 121 



VII 

Although neither a monastic nor a collegiate church, 
Wells was already in the thirteenth century a place with 
some equipment for educational work. Besides the 
choristers' school, a schola grammaticalis of a higher 
grade was in existence. After 1240 the Chancellor's 
duties included lecturing on theology. Not improbably, 
therefore, a collection of books was formed very early. 
And indeed the Dean and Chapter in 1291 received from 
the Dean of Sarum books lent by the Chapter, and some 
others bequeathed to them. Hugo of St. Victor, Speculum 
de Sanrn.mentis, and Bede, De Temporibus^ were the books 
returned from Sarum ; among those bequeathed were 
Augustine's Epistles and De Civitate Dei, Gregory the 
Great's Speculum^ and John Damascenus. We know 
nothing of the character and size of the library at this 
time, although it seems to have been preserved in a special 
room. In 1297, the Chapter ordered the two side doors 
of the choir screen in the aisles to be shut at night. One 
door near the library (versus librarium) and the Chapter 
was only to be open from the first stroke of matins until 
the proper choir door was opened at the third bell. At 
other times during the day it was always to be closed, 
so that people could not injure the books in the library, 
or overhear the conferences of the Chapter (secreta capituli). 
This library was most likely on the north side of the 
church, with the Chapter House beside it, in the north 
transept, as shown conjecturally in the plan given in 
Canon Church's admirable Chapters in the Early History of 
the Church of Wells}- That so early, in a church neither 
monastic nor collegiate, a school was at work, and a 
1 Pp. i, 325-327. 



122 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



library had been formed, is a specially significant fact in 
the study of our subject. 

In this position the library remained until the fifteenth 




century. Two notices occur of it, one in 1340 and 
another in 1406, in both cases in connection with an 
image of the Holy Saviour, " near the library." 

But in the fifteenth century a new library was built 



PL A. TE XXI 




CHURCH LIBRARIES 123 

over the eastern cloister. Bishop Nicholas of Bubwith, 
in his will of 1424, bequeathed one thousand marks to 
be faithfully applied and disposed for the construction and 
new building of a certain library to be newly erected upon 
the eastern space of the cloister, situate between the south 
door of the church next the chamber of the escheator of 
the church and the gate which leads directly from the 
church by the cloister into the palace of the bishop. 1 The 
work was begun by his executors, but certain signs of 
break in the building suggest some delay in finishing it. 
This room is probably the only cathedral library built over 
a cloister which remains in its original completeness. It 
is 165 feet by 12 feet; now only about two- thirds of it 
are devoted to the library. When this room was first 
fitted up as a library no one knows ; but tradition fixes 
the date at 1472. The present fittings were put in during 
Bishop Creighton's time (1670-72). 

Shortly after the date of Bubwith's will Bishop Stafford 
(142543) gave ten books not an inspiriting collection 
but he desired to retain possession of them during his 
lifetime. 2 In 1452 Richard Browne (alias Cordone), 
Archdeacon of Rochester, left to the library of Wells, 
Petrus de Crescentiis De Agricultura^ and two other books, 
Jerome's Epistles^ and Lathbury Super libruni Trenorum, 
which were to be kept in the church in wooden cases. 3 
Were these cases to resemble the boxes still remaining 
in Exeter Cathedral ? The same will ordered the Decretales 
of Clement, which had been borrowed for copying, to be re- 
stored to this library ; two other books were also given back ; 

1 In the fifteenth century the bishops of Wells were good friends of learning : 
Skirlaw gave books to University College, Oxford ; Bowet left a large library ; 
Stafford gave books ; Bekynton was the companion of the most cultivated men 
of his time. Dean Gunthorpe is well known as a pilgrim to Italy, who returned 
laden with manuscripts (see p. 192). 

2 Hist. MSS. Kept. 3, App. 363*. * Mtm. Acad., 649. 



124 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

and the will further notes that there are several books 
belonging to the library in a certain great bag in the inner 
room of the treasury at Wells. 1 

Leland only mentions forty-six books in the library 
in his time. " I went into the library, which 
whilome had been magnificently furnished with a con- 
siderable number of books by its bishops and canons, 
and I found great treasures of high antiquity." Among 
the books he found were sermons by Gregory and ^Elfric 
in Anglo-Saxon, Terence, and " Dantes translatus in 
carmen Latinum." Very few books belonging to the 
old library before the Dissolution have survived. Some 
are in the British Museum, the Bodleian, and certain 
collegiate libraries ; and several manuscripts remain in the 
hands of the Dean and Chapter. Among them are three 
manuscripts known as Liber albus I, Liber ruber II, and 
Liber albus III, which contain an extremely valuable series 
of documents. 2 

VIII 

In the York fabric rolls appear from time to time 
expenses for writing, illuminating, and binding church 
books ; but we know little or nothing about the Chapter 
library, if such existed. William de Feriby, a canon, 
bequeathed his books in 1379. Between 1418 and 1422, 
a library was built at the south-west corner of the south 
transept. The building is in two floors, and the upper 
appears to have been the book-room ; it is still in existence. 
In the rolls are several references to the building. 

1419. Etde 26/. 135-. 4^. de elemosina domini Thomae Haxey ad 
cooperturam novi librarii cum plumbo. 

1 Mun. Acad., 652-653. 

2 L. A. /?., viii. 372 ; Canon Church's account of the library, in Archaeologia, 
Ivii. pt. 2, is very full and interesting. 



CHURCH LIBRARIES 125 

Haxey was a good friend to the cathedral ; and he gave 
handsomely toward the library. His arms were put up in 
one of the new library windows. 

1419. In sarracione iiij arborum datarum novo librario per Abbatem 

de Selby, 6/8. 
1419. Et Johanni Grene, joynor, pro joynacione tabularum pro 

libraria et planacione et gropyng de waynscott, per annum, 

17.$-. Sd. 
In operacione cc ferri in boltes pro nova libraria per Johannem 

Harpham, fabrum, 8s. 1 

In 1418 John de Newton, the church treasurer, 
bequeathed to the Chapter a number of books, including 
Bibles, commentaries, and patristical and historical works, 
as well as Petrarch's De remediis utriusque fortunae? 
They were chained to the library desks, and were guarded 
with horn and studs, to protect them from the conse- 
quences of careless use by readers. 

1421. Johanni Upton pro superscriptura librorum nuper magistri 
Johannis Neuton thesaurarii istius ecclesiae legatorum librario, 
2s. Thomae Hornar de Petergate pro hornyng et naillyng 
superscriptorum librorum, zs. 6d. Radulpho Lorymar de 
Conyngstrete pro factura et emendacione xl cathenanim pro 
eisdem libris annexis in librario predicto, 23^. id. B 

From time to time a few other bequests were made : 
thus, Archdeacon Stephen Scrope bequeathed some books 
on canon law, after a beneficiary had had them in use 
during his life (1418). Robert Ragenhill, advocate of the 
court of York, enriched the church with a small collection 
(1430); and Robert Wolveden, treasurer of the church, 
left to the library his theological books (1432).* 

1 Surtees Soc. , xxxv. 36-40. 

2 Hunter, Notes of Wills in Registers of York, 15. 

3 Surtees Soc., xxxv., 45-46. 4 Ibid., iv. 385 ; xlv. 89, 91. 



126 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



ix 

The Sacrist's Roll of Lichfield Cathedral, under date 
1345, contains an inventory of the books then in possession 
of the church. All of them were service books, excepting 
only a De Gestis Anglorum. 1 Thereafter we cannot discover 
a notice of the library until 1489, when Dean Thomas 
Heywood gave 40 towards building a home for the books. 
Dean Yotton assisted in the good work. By 1493 the 
building was finished. It stood on the north side of the 
Cathedral, west of the north door, or " ex parte boreali in 
cimeterio." 2 The Dean and Chapter had it pulled down 
in 1758. 

Nearly all the books of the early collection perished 
during the Civil War ; but the finest manuscript, known as 
St. Chad's Gospels, was saved by the precentor. Among 
the other manuscripts in the possession of the Chapter are 
a fine vellum copy of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales y with 
beautiful initials, and the Taxatio Ecclesiastica, a tithe book 
showing the value of church property in Edward I's time. 3 

x 

Many other churches, some of them small and unim- 
portant, owned books, and received them as gifts or 
bequests. In the time of Richard II the Royal collegiate 
chapel of Windsor Castle had, besides service books, 
thirty-four volumes on different subjects chained in the 
church, among them a Bible and a Concordance, and two 
books of French romance, one of which was the Liber de Rose* 

1 W. Salt Arch. Sot:., vi. pt. 2, 211. 2 Capit. Acts, v. 3. 

B Harwood, Hist, and Antiq. of the Ch. . . . of Lichfield (1806), 109. 
4 Viet. County Hist* of Berkshire, ii. 109. 



CHURCH LIBRARIES 127 

The library of St. Mary's Church, Warwick, was first 
formed by the celebrated antiquary, John Rous. Before 
his time we hear only of one or two books. In 1407 
there was a collection of fifty service books, and a 
Catholicon, the latter being perhaps the nucleus of a 
library. 1 " At my lorde's auter," that is, at the Earl of 
Warwick's altar, were to be found among other goods and 
books, the Bible, the fourth book of the Sentences, Pupilla 
Oculi, a work by Reymond de Pennaforte, Isidore, and 
some canon law. 2 John Rous seems to have inherited the 
bookish tastes of his relative, William Rous. William had 
bequeathed his books to the Dean, charging him to allow 
John to read them when he came of age and had received 
priest's orders. 

Among the Harleian MSS. in the British Museum is 
a small volume written on parchment by Humphrey Wanley, 
which includes a copy of a curious inventory of vestments, 
plate, books, and other goods made in the time of John 
Rous, 1464. A portion of this inventory has been printed 
in Notices of the Churches of Warwickshire, i. 15-16. " It. 
v bokes beynge in the handes of Maister John Rous now 
priest whuche were Sir William Rous and bequath hem to 
the Dean and Chapitre of the forseide Chirche Collegiall 
under condicon that the seid maister John beynge priest 
shulde have hem for his special edificacon duryng his lief. 
And after his decees to remayne and to be for ever to the 
seide Dean and Chapitre as it appereth by endentures 
thereof made whereof one party leveth with the Dean and 
Chapitre. That is to say i book quern composuit ffrater 
Antoninus Rampologus de Janis 2 fo Chorinth 14. It. 
i book cald pars dextera et pars sinistra 2 fo non ft carere. 
It. i bible versefied cald patris in Aurora 2 fo huic opifex. 
It. i book of powles epistoles glosed 2 fo de Jhu qui dr 

1 Viet. Hist. Warwickshire, ii. layb. 2 Ibid., ii. 128 a. 



128 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Xtus. It. i book cald pharetra 2 fo hora est jam nos de 
sompno surgere. It. I quayer in the whuche is conteyned 
the exposicon of the masse 2 fo cois offerim." 

John also seems to have given books as well as a room 
to house them. 1 An old view of the church, taken before 
the great fire which destroyed the town in 1694, shows 
the south porch surmounted with his library, as then 
standing ; but this room was destroyed in the fire, and it 
seems certain the books were burnt. The present library 
was founded in 1701, and includes no part of the original 
collection. 2 

Bequests to churches of service books, such as that to 
the church of St. Mary, Castle-gate, York (1394), were 
numerous ; they may be set apart with bequests of vest- 
ments, plate, and money. Some bequests have a different 
character. A chancellor of York, Thomas de Farnylaw, 
leaves books, bound and unbound, to the Vicar of Waghen ; 
a volume of sermons and a " quire " to the church of 
Embleton ; and a Bible and Concordance to be chained in 
the north porch of St. Nicholas' Church, Newcastle, " for 
common use, for the good of the soul of his lord William 
of Middleton " (1378). A chaplain leaves service books, 
Speculum Ecclesiae, and the Gospels in English to Holy 
Trinity Church, Goodramgate, York (1394). A Bristol 
merchant bequeaths two books on canon law to St. Mary 
RedclifTe Church, there to be preserved for the use of the 
vicar and chaplains (1416). In the same year a Canon of 
York enriches Beverley Church with all his books of canon 



1 Johannes Rous, capellanus Cantariae de Guy-Cliffe, qui super porticum 
australem librarian! construxit, et libris ornavit. Gentleman's Magazine (N.S.), 
xxv. 37. The chapel of Guy's Cliffe was erected by Richard Beauchamp 
for the repose of the soul of his "ancestor," Guy of Warwick, the hero of 
romance. 

2 Mr. W. T. Carter, of the Warwick Public Library, has kindly given me 
much information about St. Mary's Church library. 



CHURCH LIBRARIES 129 

and civil law. Books were also chained in the church of 
St. Mary of Oxford. Bishop Lyndwood of St. David's 
bequeaths a copy of his digest of the synodal constitutions 
of the province of Canterbury for chaining in St. Stephen's 
Chapel," to serve as a standard for future editions " (1443). 
Richard Browne, or Cordone, who has left books to Wells, 
reserves for the parish church of Naas in Ireland a Catholicon 
and other manuscripts (1452). To Boston Church a 
rector of Kirkby Ravensworth bequeaths several books, 
but one named John Bosbery was to have the use of them 
for life: among the gifts was Polichronicon (1457). Canon 
Nicholas Holme leaves Pupilla Oculi to the parish church 
of Redmarshall (1458). A chaplain bequeaths one book 
to St. Mary's Church, Bolton, another to St. Wilfrid's 
Church, Brensall in Craven, and a third to All Saints' 
Church, Peseholme, York (1466). Sir Richard Willoughby 
orders church books and a Crede mihi to be given to 
Woollaton Parish Church (1469). Robert Est, possibly 
a chantry-priest in York Minster, enriches the parish 
church of his native Lincoln village, Brigsley, with a copy 
of Legends of the Saints, Speculum Christiani, Gesta 
Romanorum cum aliis fabulis Isopi et multis narrationibus, 
and a Psalter (147475). To the church of St. Mary's, 
Nottingham, the vicar leaves a Golden Legend, a Poli- 
chronicon, besides Pupilla Oculi, and a portiforium to Wragby 
Church, and a missal to Snenton Church (1476). Sir 
Thomas Lyttleton befriends King's Norton Church by 
leaving it a Latin-English dictionary, and that of Halesowen 
in Worcestershire by leaving a Catholicon, the Constitutiones 
Provinciates (possibly Lyndwood's digest, the Provinciate), 
and the Gesta Romanorum (1481). A man of Leicester 
was sued by the church wardens of the parish church of 
Welford, in the county of Leicester, on a charge of having 
taken away certain books belonging to the church and 
9 



130 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

sold them (1490). The vicar of Ruddington bequeaths 
three books, " ad tenendum et ligandum cum cathena ferrea 
in quadam sede in capella B. M. de Rodington " (1491). 
Thomas Rotherham, benefactor of Cambridge University 
Library, gave to the church of Rochester ten pounds for 
building a library (1500). To Wetheringsett Church a 
chaplain of Bury carefully reserves " a book called 
Fasiculus Mors [Fasciculus morum], to lye in the chauncell, 
for priests to occupye ther tyme when it shall please them, 
praying them to have my soule in remembraunce as it shall 
please them of their charite " (i 5 I9). 1 

A very little research would add considerably to our 
list ; while, apart from records of gifts and bequests, are 
numberless references to books in churches. For example : 
in the churchwarden's account book (c. 1525) of All Saints, 
Derby, occurs an entry beginning : " These be the bokes in 
our lady Chapell tyed with chenes yt were gyffen to 
Alhaloes church in Derby 

In primis one Boke called summa summarum. 

Item A boke called Summa Raumundi [Summa poenitentia et 

matrimonio of Reymond de Pennaforte of Barcelona]. 
Item Anoyer called pupilla occuli [Pupilla oculi, by J. de 

Burgo]. 

Item Anoyer called the Sexte [Liber Sextus Decretalium]. 
Item A boke called Hugucyon [see pp. 223-4]. 
Item A boke called Vitas Patrum. 
Item Anoyer boke called pauls pistols. 
Item A boke called Januensis super evangeliis domimcalibus 

[Sermons of Jacobus de Voragine, Abp. of Genoa, on the 

Gospels for the Sundays throughout the year]. 
Item a grette portuose [a large breviary]. 

1 Arch. Inst. City of York (1846), 10-11 ; Surtees Soc., iv. 102-103, J 9 6 '> xlv - 
57~59> J 59> I 7 I 220-222, 22in. ; xxvi. 2-3; xxx. 219, 275 ; Cox and Harvey, 
English Church Furniture, 331 ; Mun. Acad., 648-649 ; Library, i. 411 ; Cam. 
Soc., Bury Wills, 253. 



CHURCH LIBRARIES 131 

Item Anoyer boke called Legenda Aurea [Legenda sanctorum 
aurea of Jacobus de Voragine]. 1 

This is a respectable list for such a church. Some 
sixty years before there were apparently only service 
books (i465). 2 

From 1456 to 1475 charges occur in the accounts of 
St. Michael's Church, Cornhill, for chains to fix psalters, 
and for writing. 3 At St. Peter's upon Cornhill there would 
appear to have been a good library. " True it is," writes 
Stow, " that a library there was pertaining to this Parrish 
Church, of olde time builded of stone, and of late repayred 
with bricke by the executors of Sir John Crosby Alderman, 
as his Armes on the south end doth witnes. This library 
hath beene of late time, to wit, within these fifty yeares, 
well furnished of bookes : John Leyland viewed and com- 
mended them, but now those bookes be gone, and the place 
is occupied by a schoolemaister." 4 In 1483 the Church of 
St. Christopher-le- Stocks, London, seems to have had a 
collection only of service books ; but five years later 
mention is made of " a grete librarie." " On the south side 
of the vestrarie standeth a grete librarie with ii longe 
lecturnalles thereon to lay on the bookes."' About the 
middle of the sixteenth century certain inhabitants of 
Rayleigh held a meeting one Sunday, after service, and, 
without the consent of the churchwardens, sold fifteen 
service books, and " four other manuscript volumes," as 
well as some other church goods, for forty shillings. 6 

But we might continue for a long time to bring to- 

^ox, J. C., and Hope, W. H. St. John, Chronicles of the Colleg. Ch. o 
All Saints, Derby (1881), 175-177. 

2 Ibid., 157. 3 Library, i. 417. 

4 Stow, i. 194. Leland, iv. 48, has a note of four MSS. " in bibliotheca Petrina 
Londini." Possibly this library was formed by Rector Hugh Damlet, who was 
a learned man, and gave sqveral books to Pembroke College, Cambridge. 
James 10 , 184. 

5 Archaeologia, xlv. 118, 1 20. G JR. H. S., vi. 205. 



CHAPTER VI 
ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 

" Ingenia hominum rem publicam fecerunt." 

1 

PROBABLY a few scribes plied their craft in Oxford 
in early days long before the students began to 
make a settlement, for the town had been a flourish- 
ing borough, one of the largest in England. But until the 
end of the twelfth century we hear nothing about books 
and their makers or users in Oxford. Then we find illu- 
minators, bookbinders, parchmenters, and a scribe referred 
to in a document relating to the sale of land in Cat Street. 
This record is very significant, as it suggests the active 
employment of book-makers in the centre of Oxford's 
student life. St. Mary's Church was the hub. Cat Street, 
School Street running parallel with it from High Street 
to the north boundary, and Schydyard Street, the continua- 
tion of School Street on the southern side of High Street, 
alleys of the usual medieval narrowness and mean appear- 
ance, the buildings on either hand almost touching one 
another, and the way dark were the haunts of masters 
and scholars and all those depending on them. Students, 
old and young, of high station and low, are crowded in 
lodging-houses, many of which are shabby, dirty, and 
disreputable. Hence they come forth to play their games 
or carry on their feuds. Some haunt taverns and worse 



133 



134 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

places. Others eke out their means by begging at street 
corners. All get their teaching by gathering round masters 
whose rostrum is the church doorstep or the threshold of 
the lodging-house. Amid the manifold distractions of this 
queerly-ordered life the maker and seller of books earns 
what living he can; his chief patrons being indigent 
masters, who often must starve themselves to get books, and 
students so poor that pawning becomes a custom regulated 
by the University itself. 

Not till the University became firmly established as a 
corporate body could a common library be formed. The 
beginning was simple. The first books reserved for 
common use had their home in St. Mary's Church : some 
lay in chests, and were lent in exchange for a suitable 
pledge ; others were chained to desks so that students 
could readily refer to them. These books were almost 
certainly theological in character, and all were no doubt 
given by benefactors, now unknown. Such a gift was 
received early in the thirteenth century from Roger de 
L'Isle, Dean of York, who gave a Bible, divided into four 
parts for the convenience of copyists, and the Book of 
Exodus, glossed, but old and of little value. 1 Possibly 
some books remained in the church even after an in- 
dependent library was founded, for as late as 1414 a copy 
of Nicholas de Lyra was chained in the chancel for public 
use, where it was inspected by the Chancellor and proctors 
every year. 2 

To a " good clerk " who had gathered his learning at 
three Universities the arts at Paris, canon law at Oxford, 
and theology at Cambridge the University library appro- 
priately owes its origin. Bishop Cobham left his books 

1 N. Bishop's Collectanea, now at Cambridge ; Wood, Hist, and Aniiq. 
U. of O., ed. Gutch, I796 2 , vol. ii. pt. 2, 910. 
2 Mun. Acad., 270. 



PL A TE XXI II 




ILLUMINATOR OF ST. ALBANS 




- : - 



^ '. .;t^.A 

T" ; . .. ::'^^i\^, 

,.^^i^r;v, 

; ".- 'L'" - ' ' ^ : ! , - * ,- ^^A ^ *. '-*J * ' _^ f* ' "" f f * 







I 




DOCUMENT TRANSFERRING LAND IN OXFORD, 
BEARING THE NAMES OF SEVEN MEMBERS OF 
THE BOOK TRADE, C. 1180 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 135 

and three hundred and fifty marks for this purpose in 
1327. He had proposed to build a two-storied building, 
the lower chamber to be the Congregation House, and the 
upper a library ; or perhaps the Congregation House was 
already standing, and he had the idea of adding another 
story, for use as an oratory and library. Therein his 
books would bide when he died. 1 Not till long after his 
death was the building completed. His books did not 
come to the University without much trouble. Bequests 
were elusive in the Middle Ages, for people sometimes 
dreamed of projects they could not realize while they lived, 
and sanguinely hoped their executors would win prayers 
for the dead by successfully stretching poor means to a 
good end. Cobham died in debt. His books were pawned 
to settle his estate and pay for his funeral. Adam de 
Brome redeemed the pledges, and handed them over, not 
to the University, but to his newly-founded college of 
Oriel. 2 In peace the books were enjoyed at Oriel until 
four years after de Brome's death. The Fellows claimed 
them, it appears, not only because he redeemed them, but 
because, as impropriating rectors of the church, both 
building and library were theirs, they argued, by right. 
The University was equally persistent in its claim. At 
last, ten years after Cobham's death, the Commissary, 
taking mean advantage of the small number of Fellows in 
residence in autumn, went to Oriel with " a multitude of 
others," and brought the books away by force. Thereafter 
the University held them, but it took nearly seventy years 
to settle the dispute about them, and to decide the owner- 
ship of the Congregation House (i4io). 3 

Long before 1410 the "good clerk's" books had been 
made of real service to students. Fittings were put up in 

1 Clark, 144; Pietas O., 5 ; Lyte, 97 ; Oriel document. 

2 O.H.S. 5 Collect., i. 62-65. a Univ. Arch. W. P. G., 4-6. 



136 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

the library room (1365). Then regulations for managing 
the library were drawn up (1367). The books were to be 
put in the chamber over the Congregation House, marshalled 
in convenient order and chained. There, at certain times, 
scholars were to have access to them. Now first appeared 
upon the scene a University librarian. The University's 
means were slender, and 40 worth of the books were sold 
to provide a stipend for a chaplain-librarian : in place of 
these books others of less value were bought ; probably 
some of Cobham's books were finely illuminated, and the 
intention was to purchase less costly copies in their stead. 
The chaplain was to pray for the souls of Cobham and of 
University benefactors ; and to have the charge of the 
bishop's books, of the books in the chests, and of any books 
coming to the University afterwards. 1 

We can easily imagine what the library was like. The 
chamber over the Congregation House is small, scarcely 
larger than the average class-room of to-day ; lighted by 
seven windows on each side. Between some, if not all, of 
the windows bookcases would stand at right angles to the 
wall, forming little alcoves, fit for the quiet pursuit of 
knowledge. Learning itself was shackled. Chains from a 
bar running the length of each case secured the books, 
which could only be read on the slope fixed a few feet 
above the floor. In each alcove was a bench for readers 
to sit upon. A large and conspicuous board, with titles 
and names of benefactors written upon it in a fair hand, 
hung up in the room. 2 Here then would come the flower 
of Oxford scholarship to study, any time after eight in the 
morning. Every student is welcome if he does not enter 
in wet clothing, or bring in ink, or a knife, or dagger. We 
like to picture this small room, fitted with solid, rude 
furniture, monastic in its austerity of appearance ; full of 

1 Mun. Acad., 226-228. 2 Ibid., 267. 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 137 

students working eagerly in their quest for knowledge 
making extracts in pencil, or with styles on their tablets, 
amid a silence broken only by the crackle of vellum leaves, 
and the rattle of a chain. 

Such a picture would perhaps be overdrawn. Young 
Oxford was not always quiet, or whole-heartedly studious. 
The liberal regulations seem to have been liable to abuse. 
Students soiled and damaged the books. The little room 
was more than full : it was overcrowded with scholars, and 
with " throngs of visitors " who disturbed the readers. 
After 1412 only graduates and religious who had studied 
philosophy for eight years could enter the library, and 
while there they must be robed. Even such mature 
students had to make solemn oath, in the Chancellor's 
presence, to use the books properly : make no erasures or 
blots, or otherwise spoil the precious writing. 1 Under these 
regulations the library was open from nine to eleven in the 
morning, and from one to four in the afternoon, Sundays 
and mass days excepted. Strangers of eminence and the 
Chancellor could pay a visit at any time by daylight. The 
chaplain, who was to be a man of parts, of proved 
morality and uprightness, now received io6s. 8d. a year. 
The Proctors were bound to pay this stipend half-yearly, 
with punctuality, or be fined the heavy sum of forty 
shillings : the chaplain, it is explained, must have no 
grievance to nurse no ground for carrying out his duties 
in a slovenly or perfunctory manner. He, indeed, was an 
important officer. For health's sake he must have a 
month's holiday during the long vacation. As it was 
absurd for him to have fewer perquisites than those below 
him in station, every beneficed graduate, at graduation, was 
required to give him robes. 2 The finicking character of 
these regulations suggests that the University statute- 

1 Mun. Acad., 265. 2 Ibid., 261 et seq. 



138 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

maker had as great a dislike for "understandings" as 
Dr. Newman. 

Thus was established firmly, in the early years of the 
fifteenth century, a University Library, an important resort 
of students ; the proper place, as the common rendezvous 
of members of the University, for publishing the Lollard 
doctrines condemned at London in 1411. No town in 
England was better supplied with libraries than Oxford, 
for besides the collections of the University, the monastic 
colleges and the convents, libraries were already formed at 
Merton, University, Oriel and New Colleges. Such progress 
in providing scholars' armouries is remarkable, the greater 
part of it being accomplished during a period of great 
social and religious unrest not the unrest of a wind-fretted 
surface, but of a grim and far-sweeping underswell a 
period when pestilence, violent tempests and earthquakes, 
seemed bodeful of Divine displeasure; not a time surely 
when the studious life would be attractive, or when much 
care would be taken to establish libraries, unless indeed 
controversy made recourse to books more necessary or the 
signs of the times gave birth to a greater number of 
benefactors. 1 

But the University library was to become the richest 
and most considerable in the town. Benefactors were well 
greeted. Besides praying for their souls and some of 
them, like Bishop Reed, were pathetically anxious about 
the prayers the University showed every reasonable sign 
of its gratitude : posted up donors' names in the library 
itself; submitted each gift to congregation three days after 
receiving it, and within twelve days later had it chained 

1 After the Black Death, Trinity Hall, Cambridge, possibly Corpus Christi, 
Cambridge, Canterbury College and New College, Oxford, were founded, and 
University (Clare) Hall, Cambridge, was enlarged, partly, at any rate, to repair 
the ravages the plague had made among the clergy. Camb, Lit., ii. 354 ; cf. 
Hist. MSS., 5th Rep., 450. 



PL A TE XXIV 




DUKE HUMFREY AND ELEANOR OF GLOUCESTER 
JOINING THE CONFRATERNITY OF ST. ALBANS 




ANCIENT ROOF OF DUKE HUMFREY'S LIBRARY, 
SHOWING THE ARMS OF THE UNIVERSITY AND 
OF SIR THOMAS BODLEY 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 139 

up. 1 Many gifts of books were received, some from the 
highest in the land : from King Henry the Fourth and his 
warlike and ambitious sons Henry v, Clarence, Bedford, 
and Gloucester ; from Edmund, Earl of March ; from 
prelates Archbishop Arundel, Repyngton of Lincoln, 
Courtney of Norwich, and Molyneux of Chichester ; from 
great Abbot Whethamstede of St. Albans ; from wealthy 
Archdeacon Browne or Cordone ; from rich citizens of 
London Thomas Knolles the grocer and T. Grauntt ; and 
from Henry Vl's physician, John Somersett. John Tiptoft, 
Earl of Worcester, also promised books worth five hundred 
marks, but after his death they did not come to hand. 2 

By far the most generous of friends was the Duke of 
Gloucester, whose first gift was made before 141 3, 3 and his 
last when he died in 1447. His record as the helper and 
protector of Oxford, his patronage of learning, and of such 
exponents of it as Titus Livius of Forli, Leonardo Bruni, 
Lydgate and Capgrave, the fact that, notwithstanding his 
" staat and dignyte," 

" His courage never doth appall 
To study in bokes of antiquitie," 

earned for him the name of the " good " duke an appella- 
tion to which the shady labyrinth of his career as a politician, 
as a persecutor of the Lollards, and as a licentious man, did 
not entitle him. But then Oxford and its library was 
most in need of such a friend as this English Gismondo 
Malatesta ; not only on account of his generosity, but 
because his royal connexions enabled him to exert influence 
on the University's behalf, both at home and abroad. 

Of the character of the Duke's gifts in 1413 and in 

1 Mun. Acad., 267. 

2 Ibid., 266; O. H. S. 35-36, Ansley, 222, 229, 279, 313, 373, 382, 397. 

3 Mun. Acad., 266. 



140 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



1430 we know nothing: in 1435 he gave books and money, 
but how many books or how much money is not recorded. 
Three years later the University sought another gift from 
him, and he forthwith sent no fewer than 120 volumes 
(I439). 1 The University's gratitude was unbounded. On 
certain festivals during the Duke's lifetime prayers were to 
be said for him, within ten days after he died a funeral 




OLD VIEW OF DUKE HUMFREY S LIBRARY. 

service was to be celebrated, and on every anniversary of 
his death he and his consort were to be commemorated. 2 
Their letters were fulsome : as a founder of libraries he was 
compared with Julius Caesar a compliment also paid him 



1 The indenture in which the books are catalogued mentions nine books 
received before: possibly these were the gift of 1435. Mun. Acad., 758 ; 
O. H. S. 35, Anstey, 177. 

- O. H. S. 35, Anstey, 184-90. 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 141 

about the same time by Pier Candid Decembrio ; Parliament 
was besought to thank him " hertyly, and also prey Godd 
to thanke hym in tyme commyng, wher goode dedys ben 
rewarded " ; l as a prince he was most serene and illustrious, 
lord of glorious renown, son of a king, brother of a king, 
uncle of a king, " the very beams of the sun himself" ; as a 
donor, as greatly and munificently liberal as the recipients 
were lowly and humble. 2 

Congregation further marked its appreciation by decree- 
ing a fresh set of library regulations. A new register, 
containing a list of the books already given, was to be 
made, and deposited in the chest " of five keys " ; lists were 
also to be written in the statute books. No volume was 
to be sold, given away, exchanged, pledged, lent to be 
copied, or removed from the library except when it needed 
repair, or when the Duke himself wanted to borrow it, as 
he could, though only under indenture. 3 All books for 
the study of the seven liberal arts the trivium and the 
quadrivium and the three philosophies were to be kept in 
a chest called the " chest of the three philosophies and the 
seven sciences " ; a name suggesting a talisman, like the 
golden fleece or the Holy Grail, for which one would ex- 
change the world and all its ways. The librarian had 
charge of this wonderful chest. From it, by indenture, he 
could lend books apparently these books were excepted 
from the general rule to masters of arts lecturing in these 
subjects, or, if there were no lecturers, to principals of halls 
and masters. And, following older custom, a stationer set 
upon each book a price greater than its real value, to lead 
borrowers to take more care of it. 4 From a manuscript 
preserved in the library of Earl Fitzwilliam at Wentworth 

1 O. H. S. 35, Anstey, 184. 2 Mun. Acad., 758. 

3 O. H. S. 35, Anstey, 246. 

4 0. H. S. 35, Anstey, 187-89 ; Mun. Acad., 326-29. 



142 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Woodhouse are taken the following curious lines indicating 
the character and arrangement of his books : 

"At Oxenford thys lord his bookis fele [many] 
Hath eu'y clerk at werk. They of hem gete 
Metaphisic ; phisic these rather feele ; 
They natural, moral they rather trete ; 
Theologie here ye is with to mete ; 
Him liketh loke in boke historial. 
In deskis XII hym selve as half a strete 
Hath boked their librair uniu'al." 1 [universal] 

A year later Gloucester sent 7 more books ; then 
after a while 9 more ( 1 440-4 1); 2 and a little later still 
his largest gift, amounting to 135 volum.es. These hand- 
some accessions made the collection the finest academic 
library in England, not excepting the excellent library of 
380 volumes then at Peterhouse. It had a character 
of its own. The usual overwhelming mass of Bibles, 
of church books, of the Fathers and the Schoolmen 
does not depress us with its disproportion. The collec- 
tion was strong in astronomy and medicine : Ptolemy, 
Albumazar, Rhazes, Serapion, Avicenna, Haly Abenragel, 
Zaael, and others were all represented. Besides these, there 
was a fine selection of the classics Plato, Aristotle, including 
the Politica and Ethica^ ^Eschines' orations, Terence, Varro's 
De Originae linguae Latinae, Cicero's letters, Verrine and 
other orations, and " opera viginti duo Tullii in magno 
volumine," Livy, Ovid, Seneca's tragedies, Quintilian, Aulus 
Gellius, Noctes Atticae, the Golden Ass of Apuleius, and 
Suetonius. But the most interesting items in the list of 
his books are the new translations of Plato, and of Aristotle, 
whose Ethica was rendered by Leonardo Bruni ; the Greek 
and Latin dictionary ; and the works of Dante, Petrarch 
(de Vita solitaria, de Rebus memorandis^ de Remediis 

1 Athenczum,'Nov. 17, '88, p. 664; Hulton, Clerk of Oxford in Fiction, 35. 

2 O. H. S. 35, Anstey, 197.. 204. 



PLATE XXV 




ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 143 

utriusque fortunae], Boccaccio, and of Coluccio Salutati's 
letters. 1 

The library's character might still further have been 
freshened had Gloucester's bequest of his Latin books the 
books, we may suppose, he himself prized too highly to 
part with during his lifetime been carried into effect 2 

" Our right special Lord and mighty Prince the Duke of 
Gloucester, late passed out of this world, whose soul God 
assoil for his high mercy, not long before his decease, 
being in our said University among all the doctors and 
masters of the same assembled together, granted unto us 
all his Latin books, to the loving of God, increase of clergy 
and cunning men, to the good governance and prosperity 
of the realm of England without end . . . the which gift 
oftentimes after, by our messengers, and also in his last 
testament, as we understand, he confirmed." But alas ! 
Gloucester's bequest was even more elusive than 
Cobham's. These books they could, " by no manner of 
labours, since he deceased, obtain." 3 What followed is 
interesting. Letters asking for the books were sent to the 
king, to Mr. John Somersett, His Majesty's physician, " lately 
come to influence," to William of Waynflete, provost of the 
king's pet project, Eton College, and much in favour ; and 
to the king's chamberlain (1447). As these appeals were 
unavailing, another letter was sent to the king in 1450, 
and several others to influential persons, some being to 
Gloucester's executors ; then, in the same year, the House of 
Lords was petitioned. All this wire-pulling failed to serve 
its end. The University became angry. An outspoken 
letter was sent to Master John Somersett, " lately come to 

1 See lists of Gloucester's books in Mun. Acad., 758-65 ; 0. H. S., Anstey, 
179, 183, 232. 

2 He also owned some French manuscripts : what he gave to Oxford formed 
part of a much larger private library. 

3 0. H. S. 35, Anstey, 294-95. 



144 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

influence " : " Our proctor, Mr. Luke, tells us of your 
efforts for us to obtain the books given by the late Duke 
of Gloucester, and of your intercession with the king in our 
cause : also that you propose to add, of your own gift, 
other books to his bequest." All this is very good of you, 
the letter proceeds, in effect, " but how is it that, under 
these circumstances, the Duke's books, which came into 
your custody, are not delivered to us, unless it be that 
some powerful influence is exerted to prevent it ; for a 
steadfast and good man will not be made to swerve from 
the path of justice by interest or cupidity. Use your 
endeavours to get these books : so do us a good favour ; and 
clear your character." Three years later it was discovered 
the books were scattered and in private hands (I453), 1 or, 
as seems likely, at King's College, Cambridge, and Eton. 

Now the library over the Congregation House was all 
too small. A Divinity School seems to have been first 
projected in 1423; building began about seven years 
later ; 2 but the work proceeded very slowly, owing to 
want of money, which the authorities tried to raise in 
various ways, even by granting degrees on easy terms. 
When Gloucester's books came to overcrowd the old 
library and the books were chained so closely together 
that a student when reading one prevented the use of 
three or four books near to it the idea was apparently 
first mooted of erecting a bigger room over the new school, 
where scholars might study far from the hum of men (a 
strepitu saeculari}. The University sent an appeal to the 
Duke for help to carry out this scheme (1445), but he had 
then lost power and was in trouble, and does not seem to 
have responded favourably, albeit they suggested adroitly 
the new library should bear his name. 3 The building was 

1 0. H. S. 35, Anstey, 285-86, 300-1, 318. 

2 0. H. S. 35, Anstey, 9, 46. 3 0. H. S. 35, Anstey, 245-46. 



PLATE 




: - 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 145 

finished forty years after his death. This ultimate success 
was due chiefly to the generosity of Cardinal Beaufort, the 
Duchess of Suffolk, and Cardinal Kempe whose own 
library was magnificent. 1 

By 1488, then, the University was in full enjoyment of 
the chamber known ever since as Duke Humfrey's Library, 
the noblest storehouse of books then existing in England. 2 
In the same year an old scholar, not known by name, 
gave 31 books, and in 1490 Dr. Litchfield, Archdeacon 
of Middlesex, presented 132 volumes and a sum of .200. 
These gifts mark the culminating point in the history of the 
first University library a collection over a century and a 
half old, accumulated slowly by the forethought and gener- 
osity of the University's friends, only, alas ! in a few years' 
time to be almost completely dispersed and destroyed. 

" 

Before speaking of the dispersion of the University 
collection it will be well to observe what had been done in 
the colleges, where libraries must have formed an important 
part of the collegiate economy. Books, indeed, were eagerly 
sought, carefully guarded and preserved ; and wealthy Fellows 
even Fellows not to be described as wealthy often proved 
their affection for their college by giving manuscripts. 

The first house of the University, William of Durham's 
Hall or University Hall (now University College), was founded 
between 1249 and 1292, when its statutes were drawn up. 
In these statutes are the earliest regulations of the Uni- 
versity for dealing with books in its possession. 3 It seems 



1 0. H. S. 35-36, Anstey, 326, 439. 

2 The plan resembled that of the old library built by Adam de Brome. For 
notes on the architectural history of this library, see Pietas O. 

3 Mun. Acad., 58, 59 ; cf. Smith, Annals of rj. (7., 37-39. 

10 




i 4 6 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

clear that the college enjoyed a library perhaps of some im- 
portance, with excellent regulations for its use, at the end of 
the thirteenth century. What is true of University College 
is true also of nearly all the other colleges. Although most 
of them were not rich foundations, one of the first efforts 
of a society was to collect books for common use. A 
few years after Merton's inception (1264) the teacher of 
grammar was supplied with books out of the common 
purse, and directions were given for the care of books. 1 
To Balliol, Bishop Gravesend of London bequeathed books 
(1336) some fifty years after the statutes were given by 
the founder's wife. 2 Four years later Sir William de 
Felton presented to the college the advowson of the 
Church of Abboldesley, so that the number of scholars 
could be raised, each could have sufficient clothing, receive 
twelvepence a week, and possess in common books relating 
to the various Faculties. 3 The earliest reference to the 
library of Exeter College, or Stapledon Hall, occurs also 
about half a century after its foundation : in 1366 payment 
was made for copying a book called Domyltone possibly 
one of John of Dumbleton's works. Oriel College either 
had a library from its foundation, or the regulations of 
1329 were drawn up for Bishop Cobham's books, which 
Adam de Brome had redeemed. In 1375 Oriel certainly 
had its own library of nearly one hundred volumes, more 
than half of them being on theology and philosophy, with 
some translations of Aristotle, but otherwise not a single 
classic work ; a collection to be fairly considered as 
representative of the academic libraries of this period. 4 
Queen's College was one of those to which Simon de Bredon, 
the astronomer, bequeathed books in 1368, nearly thirty 

1 Commiss. Docts., Oxford, i., Statutes, p. 24. 2 Lyte, 181. 

3 Paravicini, Ball. Coll., 169, 173. 

4 6>, H. S. 5, Collect., i. 66. 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 147 

years after its foundation. 1 " Seint Marie College of 
Wynchestr," or New College, made a better start than any 
house (1380). The founder, William of Wykeham, en- 
dowed it with no fewer than 240 or 243 volumes, of which 
135 or 138 were theology, 2 8 philosophy, 4 1 canon law, 
36 civil law; somebody unnamed, but possibly the founder, 
presented 37 volumes of medicine and 15 chained books 
in the library ; and Bishop Reed also the good friend of 
Merton gave 58 volumes of theology, 2 of philosophy, 
and 3 of canon law. 2 Lincoln College had a collection of 
books at its foundation (1429); Dr. Gascoigne gave 6 
manuscripts worth nearly three pounds apiece (1432); and 
Robert Flemming, a cousin of the founder, renowned for 
his travels and studies and collections in Italy, left a 
number of manuscripts, variously estimated at 25 
and 38 in number, to his house. In 1474 this 
college had 135 manuscripts, stored in seven presses. 
Rules for the use of books were included in the first 
statutes of All Souls College, founded in 1438. At 
Magdalen the library had a magnificent start when 
William of Waynflete brought with him no fewer than 
800 volumes on his visit in 1481 ; many of these were 
printed books. 

To tell the story of each of these early college libraries 
with continuity is not to our purpose, and is perhaps not 
feasible. So many details are lacking. We do not know 
whether all the libraries, once started, were constantly 
maintained ; but it is reasonable to assume they were, as 
records a few only of purchases and donations are 
preserved. Usually gifts were made only to the college in 
which the donor felt special interest, but sometimes generous 

1 Hist. MSS., ix. I, 46. 

2 O. H. S. 32, Collect., iii. 225; cf. Hist. MSS. 2nd Rep., App. I35a; 
Walcott, W. of Wykeham, 285. 



148 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

men were more catholic. Four colleges University, Balliol, 
Merton, and Oriel benefited under Bishop Stephen 
Gravesend's will (1336); six University, Balliol, Merton, 
Exeter, Oriel, and Queen's under the will of Simon de 
Bredon, astronomer and sometime Proctor of the University 
(1368): in both cases the testators distributed their gifts 
among all the secular colleges in existence at the time. 1 
Dr. Thomas Gascoigne gave many books to Balliol, Oriel, 
Durham, and Lincoln Colleges (I432). 2 William Reed, 
Bishop of Chichester, also was the friend of more than 
one society, for New College, as we have seen, got 63 
volumes from him, Exeter some others, and Merton 
99. 3 Roger Whelpdale (d. 1423) bequeathed books to 
Balliol and Queen's Colleges. Henry VI gave 23 manu- 
scripts to All Souls College (1440). Robert Twaytes 
gave books to Balliol in 145 I : his example was followed 
by George Nevil, Bishop of Exeter and afterwards Arch- 
bishop of York (1455, 1475), Dr. Bole (1478), and John 
Waltham (1492). An old Fellow showed his gratitude 
to University College by bestowing 68 books, mostly 
Scriptural commentaries, on its library (1473). Some of 
the gifts were smaller. 4 A chancellor of the church of 
York bequeathed a single volume to Merton. Bishop 
Skirlaw a good friend of the college in other ways gave 
6 books to University in 1404: they were to be chained 
in the library and never lent. Such gifts were received as 
gratefully as the larger donations ; indeed, it was esteemed 
a feather in the cap of the Master that while he held office 
Skirlaw's books were received. Never at any time were 
books more highly appreciated than in Oxford of the 

1 Hist. MSS. 9th Rep., i. 46; Reg. Abp. Whittlesey, fo. 122, cited by Lyte, 
181. 

2 Rogers, Agric. and Prices, iv. 599-600. 

3 O. H. S. 32, Collect., 223, 214-15. 

4 See the gifts to Exeter College, O. H. S. 27, Boase, passim. 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 149 

fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Sometimes gifts took 
the form of money for a curious purpose. For example, 
Robert Hesyl, a country rector, bequeathed the sum of 
6s. 8d. " ad intitulandum nomina librorum in libraria collegii 
Lincoln : contentorum, supra dorsa eorum cooperienda 
cornu et clavis." 1 But the colleges did not depend wholly 
on gifts, for records are preserved of purchases for Queen's 
College in 136667 ; 2 All Souls College between 1449 and 
1460; for Magdalen College between 1481 and 1539; for 
Merton College between 1322 and 1379; and for New 
College between 1462 and 1481. 

The growth of the libraries made the provision of 
special bookrooms a necessity. A library on the ground 
floor of University College is referred to in the Bursar's 
Roll (1391). At Merton the books were originally kept 
in a chest under three locks. A room was set apart quite 
early: books were chained up in it in 1284. In 1354 a 
carpenter was paid for fittings and " deskis." Bishop 
Reed of Chichester erected a library building in 137779 J 
Wyllyot and John Wendover contributed towards the cost, 
which amounted to 462. With the exception of the 
room thrown into the south library at its eastern end, of 
two large dormers, and of the glass in the west room, the 
original structure has been altered very little, and it is 
therefore one of the best examples of a medieval library in 
this country. When the old library of Exeter College was 
first used we do not know : it was possibly one of the 
tenements originally given to the college by Peter de 
Skelton and partly repaired by the founder. Money was 
disbursed for thatching it in I375- 3 Nearly ten years 
later a new library was put up. Bishop Brantingham and 
John More, rector of St. Petrock's, Exeter, contributed 

1 Mun. Acad., ii. 706. 2 Hist. MSS. 2nd Rep., I4oa. 

3 Hist. MSS. App. 2nd Rep., 129; 0. H. S. 27, Boase, xlvii. 



150 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

handsomely towards the cost ; another Bishop of Exeter, 
Edmund Stafford, in whose time the name of the house 
was changed from Stapledon Hall to Exeter College, 
enlarged the building in 1404; and Bishops Grandisson, 
Brantingham, Stafford, and Lacy gave books. 1 In the 
library room some of the books were chained to desks, and 
some were kept in chests. 2 All this points to a flourishing 
library at Exeter ; although, on occasions when their yearly 
expenses were heavier than usual, the Fellows were obliged 
to pawn books to one of the loan chests of the University, 
or even to their barber. 3 

The monastic college of Durham enjoyed a " fayre 
library, well-desked and well flowred withe a timber Flowre 
over it," built in 1417 and fitted in 1431.* Another college 
belonging to the monks of Christ Church, Canterbury, 
also had a library, which had been replenished with books 
from the mother-house. 5 In 1431 a library building was 
begun at Balliol College by Mr. Thomas Chace, after he 
had resigned the office of Master. Bishop William Grey, 
besides enriching his college with manuscripts, also com- 
pleted the home for them (c. 1477), on a window of which 
are still to be read his name and the name of Robert 
Abdy, the Master. 



" His Deus adjecit ; Deus his det gaudia cell ; 
Abdy perfecit opus hoc Gray presul et Ely." 6 



1 Brantingham gave 20 towards the building ; More, 10. Account of 
building expenses, amounting to ^57, 135. 5|d., is given in O. H. S., 27, Boase, 
345 ; see p. liii. 

2 O. H. S. 27, Boase, xlviii. In 1392 "iiiij pro ligacione septem librorum et 
id pro cervisia in eisdem ligatoribus, vid erario pro labore suo circa eosdem 
libros, et lid Johanni Lokyer pro impositione eorundem librorum in descis." 

3 Ibid., xlviii. 

4 The building, which is still standing as a part of Trinity College, cost 42 ; 
fittings, 6, i6s. 8d. Blakiston, Trin. Coll., 26. 

5 James, xlvii. 6 Cf. Willis, Arch. Hist. Camb., ii. 410. 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 151 

In another window, on the north side, was inscribed 

"Conditor ecce novi structus hujus fuit Abdy. 
Praesul et huic GEdi Gray libros contulit Ely." 

The first library of Oriel College, on the east side of 
the quadrangle, was not erected until about 1444 ; before 
that the books seem to have been kept in chests, although 
the collection was large for the time. 1 As early as I 388-89 
payments were made for making desks for the library of 
Queen's College. 2 In the case of New, Lincoln, All Souls, 
and Magdalen Colleges, library rooms were included when 
the college buildings were first erected. Magdalen's library 
was copied from All Souls : the windows in it were " to be 
as good as or better than " those in the earlier foundation. 

in 

Towards the end of the fifteenth century the beginning 
of the sad end of all this good work may be traced. Some 
part of the collections disappeared gradually. In 1458 
books were chained at Exeter College, because some of 
them had been taken away. When volumes became 
damaged and worn out, they were not replaced by others. 
Some were pledged, and although every effort was made 
to redeem them, as at Exeter College in 1466, 1470, 
1472 and 1473, yet it seems certain many were per- 
manently alienated. Others were perhaps sold, or given 
away, as John Phylypp gave away two Exeter College 
manuscripts in I468. 3 The University library was in 
'similar case. When Erasmus saw the scanty remains of 



1 Willis, iii. 410. 2 Hist. MSS. 2nd Rep., I4ia. 

3 O. H. S. 27, Boase; O. H. S. 5, Collect., 62. At C. C., Christ Church, 
and St. John's Colleges the least useful books could be sold if the libraries 
became too large. Oxford Stat. 



152 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

this collection he could have wept. " Before it had 
continued eighty years in its flourishing state," writes 
Wood of the library, " [it] was rifled of its precious treasure 
by unreasonable persons. That several scholars would, 
upon small pledges given in, borrow books . . . that were 
never restored. Polydore Virgil . . . borrowed many after 
such a way ; but at length being denied, did upon petition 
made to the king obtain his license for the taking out of 
any MS. for his use (in order, I suppose, for the collecting 
materials for his English History or Chronicle of England), 
which being imitated by others, the library thereby suffered 
very great loss." Matters became still worse. Owing to 
the threatened suppression of the religious houses, the 
number of students at Oxford decreased enormously. In 
I 535> l 8 men graduated, in the next year only 44 did 
so ; until the end of Henry vm's reign the average number 
graduating was 57, and in Edward's reign the average was 
33. 1 Naturally, therefore, some laxity crept into the 
administration of the University and the colleges. Active 
enemies of our literary treasures were not behindhand. 
In 1535 Dr. Layton, visitor of monasteries, descended 
upon Oxford. " We have sett Dunce [Duns Scotus] in 
Bocardo, and have utterly banisshede hym Oxforde for 
ever, with all his blinde glosses, and is nowe made a comon 
servant to evere man, faste nailede up upon postes in all 
comon howses of easment : id quod oculis meis vidi. 
And the seconde tyme we came to New Colege, affter we 
hade declarede your injunctions, we fownde all the gret 
quadrant court full of the leiffes of Dunce, the wynde 
blowyng them into evere corner. And ther we fownde 
one Mr. Grenefelde, a gentilman of Bukynghamshire, 
getheryng up part of the saide bowke leiffes (as he saide) 
therwith to make hym sewelles or blawnsherres to kepe the 

1 Camb. Lit.y iii. 50. 



PLATE XXV II 




ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: OXFORD 153 

dere within the woode, therby to have the better cry with 
his howndes." l A commission assembled at Oxford in 
1550, and met many times at St. Mary's Church. No 
documentary evidence of their treatment of libraries 
remains, but it was certainly most drastic. Any illuminated 
manuscript, or even a mathematical treatise illustrated with 
diagrams, was deemed unfit to survive, and was thrown out 
for sale or destruction. Some of the college libraries did 
not suffer severely. Most of Grey's books survived in 
Balliol, although the miniatures were cut out. Queen's, 
All Souls, and Merton came through the ordeal nearly 
unscathed. But Lincoln lost the books given by Gascoigne 
and the Italian importations of Flemming ; Exeter College 
was purged. The University library itself was entirely dis- 
persed. One of the commissioners, " by name Richard 
Coxe, Dean of Christ Church, shewed himself so zealous 
in purging this place of its rarities . . . that . . . savoured 
of superstition, that he left not one of those goodly MSS. 
given by the before mentioned benefactors. Of all which 
there were none restored in Q. Mary's reign, when then an 
inquisition was made after them, but only one of the parts 
of Valerius Maximus, illustrated with the Commentaries of 
Dionysius de Burgo, an Augustine Fryer, and with the 
Tables of John Whethamsteed, Abbat of St. Alban's. 
That some of the books so taken out by the Reformers were 
burnt, some sold away for Robin Hood's pennyworths, 2 
either to Booksellers, or to Glovers, to press their gloves, 
or Taylors to make measures, or to bookbinders to cover 
books bound by them, and some also kept by the Re- 
formers for their own use. That the said library being 
thus deprived of its furniture was employed, as the schools 
were, for infamous uses. That in laying waste in that 
manner, and not in a possibility (as the academians 

1 Cam. Soc.> xxvi. 71. 2 I.e. for practically nothing, a mere song. 



154 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

thought) of restoring it to its former estate, they ordered 
certain persons in a Convocation (Reg. I. fol. I57 a ) held 
Jan. 25, 155556 to sell the benches and desks therein ; so 
that being stript stark naked (as I may say) continued so 
till Bodley restored it." l The only cheerful reference to 
this period is that by Wood, who tells us some friendly 
people bought in a number of the manuscripts, and 
ultimately handed them over to the University after the 
library's restoration. 2 But of all the books given by the 
Duke of Gloucester only three are now in the Bodleian, 
and only three others in Corpus Christi, Oriel, and 
Magdalen. The British Museum possesses nine ; Cam- 
bridge one ; private collectors two. Six are in France : 
two Latin both Oxford books and three French manu- 
scripts in the Bibliotheque Nationale, and one manuscript 
at the Bibliotheque Ste. Genevieve. The Ste. Genevieve 
book 3 is a magnificent Livy, once belonging to the famous 
Louvre Library. It bears the inscription : " Cest livre est a 
moy Homfrey, due de Gloucestre, du don mon tres chier 
cousin le conte de Warewic.' H 

1 Wood (Gutch), 918-19. 

2 With Bodley's noble work this book has no concern. The story has been 
told briefly in Mr. Nicholson's Pietas Oxoniensis, and with more detail in Dr. 
Macray's Annals of the Bodleian. 

3 MS. franfats, I. i. 4 Delisle, Le Cabinet des MSS., i. 152. 



CHAPTER VII 
ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: CAMBRIDGE 

1 

AS the libraries of Cambridge were mostly of later 
foundation than those at Oxford, and as the collec- 
tions were of the same character, it is less necessary 
to describe them in detail, especially after having dealt 
fully with the collections of the sister university. Cam- 
bridge University does not seem to have owned books in 
common until the first quarter of the fifteenth century. 
Before that, in 1384, the books intended for use in the 
University were submitted to the Chancellor and Doctors, 
so that any containing heretical and objectionable opinions 
could be weeded out and burnt. In 1408-9 it was 
ordered that books suspected to contain Lollard doctrines 
should be examined by the authorities of both Universities ; 
if approved by them and by the Archbishop of Canterbury, 
they could be delivered to the stationers for copying, but 
not before. And in 1480 keepers of chests were forbidden 
to receive as a pledge any book written on paper ^ Certain 
regulations were also made with regard to the status of 
stationers and others engaged in book-making in the town. 
But there seems to have been no common library. 

About the time when Gloucester made his first gift of 
books to Oxford University a public library was possibly 

1 Cooper, i. 128, 152, 224. 
155 



156 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

" founded " by John Croucher, who gave a copy of Chaucer's 
translation of Boethius' De Consolatione philosophiae. Richard 
Holme, Warden of King's Hall, who died in 1424, gave 
sixteen volumes. At this time the collection amounted to 
seventy-six volumes. Robert Fitzhugh, Bishop of London, 
now left two books, a Textus moralis philosophiae and 
Codeton Super quatuor libros Sententiarum (14356). By 
1435 or 1440 it had increased to one hundred and 
twenty-two books : theology accounting for sixty-nine, 
natural and moral philosophy for seventeen, canon law 
for twenty- three, medicine for five, grammar for six, and 
logic and sophistry for one each. Besides Holme's books 
there were in this library eight books given by John 
Aylemer, six given by Thomas Paxton, ten by James 
Matissale, five each by John Preston, John Water, 
Robert Alne (I44O), 1 and John Tesdale : other benefactors 
gave one or two or three. 2 

In 1423 one John Herrys or Harris gave ten pounds 
for the library, possibly for a building, as books do not 
seem to have been bought with it. 3 A common library 
is mentioned in I438. 4 In the same year a grant was 
made by the king of the manor of Ruyslip and a place 
called Northwood for a library. The first room was erected 
between this year and 1457. After 1454 many entries 
occur in the University accounts for the roof of the new 
chapel and the library, for the general repairs of the same 
buildings, for the chaining and binding of books, and for 
their custody during a fire in King's College in 145 /. 5 A 
sketch of the Schools quadrangle drawn about 1459 shows 
this library, libraria nova, above the Canon Law schools, on 
the west side. 6 Between the completion of this library 

1 Surtees Soc., xxx. 78-79. 2 Bradshaw, 19-34 ; Willis, iii. 404. 

3 Cooper, i. 170 ; Rotuli Parl., iv. 321. 

4 Willis, Arch. Hist. Camb., iii. u. 5 Ibid., iii. 12. 6 Ibid., iii. 5. 



PL A TE X XVIII 




UiL 





a 







-T 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: CAMBRIDGE 157 

and 1470 the south side of the quadrangle was built, the 
school of civil law occupying the ground floor, and the 
Great Library or Common Library the first floor. The 
second extant catalogue of books (1473) relates to the 
books in this room : possibly the west room had been 
cleared for other purposes. Now the inventory proves the 
library to have been in possession of three hundred and 
thirty volumes, stored upon eight stalls or desks on the north 
side and upon nine stalls on the southern side, facing King's 
College Chapel. 1 But in a few years the buildings were 
extended and the collection augmented munificently by 
Thomas Rotherham or Scot, then Chancellor of the 
University and Bishop of Lincoln, afterwards Archbishop 
of York. Rotherham completed the building begun on 
the east side of the quadrangle by erecting the library 
which occupies the whole of the first floor (147075). In 
this libraria domini cancellarii his own books were stored. 
His generosity was recognised by the University in the 
fullest possible manner ; special care was taken of his 
books, and his library came to be known as the private 
library, to which only a few privileged persons were 
admitted, while the great library remained in use as the 
public room. 2 

The learned Bishop Tunstall gave some Greek books 
to the library in 1529, just before he was translated to 
the see of Durham. Even then, however, the collection 
was on the down grade. Nine years later, owing to a 
decline in numbers at the University and a loss of revenue, 
some of the books, described as " useless," were sold. 3 
Then again, in 1547, occurs a more significant notice. A 
Grace was passed recommending the conversion of the 
great or common library into a school for the Regius 

1 Bradshaw, 35-53 ; C. A. S. Coimn., ii. 258. 

2 Willis, iii. 25. 3 Mullinger, ii. 50. 



158 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Professor of Divinity, because " in its present state it is no 
use to anybody." 1 Neglect and worse had laid this part 
of the library as waste as Duke Humfrey's room at Oxford. 
Apparently then only the Chancellor's library remained. 
More " old " books were removed from the collection in 
J 57 2 3- I n this same year a catalogue was drawn up. 
Only one hundred and seventy-seven volumes were left : 
" moste parte of all theis bookes be of velam and parchment, 
but very sore cut and mangled for the lymned letters and 
pictures." 2 Clearly sad havoc had been played with this 
library, which had started with so much promise. 

" 

The earliest collegiate libraries were Peterhouse, 
Pembroke Hall, Clare Hall, Trinity Hall, and Gonville. 
Peterhouse had the first library in Cambridge. Hugh of 
Balsham, Bishop of Ely, introduced into an Augustinian 
Hospital at Cambridge a number of scholars who were to 
live with the brethren. Before Hugh died the brethren 
and the scholars quarrelled, and the latter were removed 
to two hostels on the site of the present college (128184). 
He did not forget to provide his new foundation with 
books, among other properties. In the statutes of 1344 
are stringent provisions for the care of books, which prove 
that the society had a library worthy of some thought. 
Clare College was founded by the University as University 
Hall (1326), then refounded twelve years later by Lady 
Elizabeth de Clare as Clare Hall. In 1355 she bequeathed 
a few books. Pembroke College, founded in 1346, re- 
ceived a gift of ten books from the first Master, William 
Styband. The statutes of Trinity Hall, which was 
founded by Bishop William Bateman in 1350, partly to 

1 Willis, iii. 25. 2 Ibid., iii. 25-2611. 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: CAMBRIDGE 159 

repair the losses of scholarly clergy during the Black 
Death, also contain a special section relating to the college 
books. It was not drawn up in anticipation of the forma- 
tion of a library, for the founder himself gave seventy 
volumes on civil and canon law and theology, besides 
fourteen books for the chapel ; forty-eight, including seven 
chapel books, were reserved for the Bishop's own use during 
his life. 1 To Gonville College, founded as the Hall of the 
Annunciation in 1348, Archdeacon Stephen Scrope left a 
Catholicon in I4i8. 2 King's Hall, later absorbed in 
Trinity College, some sixty years after its foundation, 
possessed a library of eighty-seven volumes (1394). Gifts 
of books were made to Corpus Christi College soon after 
its foundation in 1352, but a library is not referred to in 
the old statutes. Thomas de Eltisle, the first Master, 
gave several books, among them a very fine missal, " most 
excellently annotated throughout all the offices, and bound 
with a cover of white deer leather, and with red clasps." 
At this time (1376) we find an inventory showing that 
the contents of the library were chiefly theological and 
law books. 

The intention of King Henry VI was to make the 
library of King's College and that of Eton very good. In 
his great plan for the former, which was never carried out, 
Henry proposed to have in the west side of the court, 
" atte the ende toward the chirch," " a librarie, conteynyng 
in lengthe . ex . fete, and in brede . xxiiij . fete, and under 
hit a large hous for redyng and disputacions, conteynyng 
in lengthe . xl . fete, and. . ij . chambres under the same 
librarie, euery conteynyng . xxix . fete in lengthe and in 
brede . xxiiij . fete." 3 But an apartment was set aside 
for books, and, as a charge was incurred for strewing it 

1 C. A. S. Comm., ii. 73 ; Willis, iii. 402. 

2 Surtees Soc., iv. 385. 3 Willis, i. 370. 



160 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

with rushes in expectation of a visit from the king, it was 
evidently a repository worth seeing. 1 Early in 1445 the 
king sent Richard Chester, sometime his envoy at the 
Papal court, to France and other countries, and to certain 
parts of England, in search of books and relics for his 
foundations. Within two years, however, a joint petition 
came from Eton and King's College, stating that neither 
of these colleges " nowe late fownded and newe growyng " 
11 were sufficiently supplied with books for divine service and 
for their libraries and studies, or with vestments and 
ornaments, ' whiche thinges may not be had withoute 
great and diligente labour be longe processe and right 
besy inquisicion.' They therefore begged that the king 
would order Chester to ' take to hym suche men as shall 
be seen to hym expedient and profitable, and in especiall 
John Pye,' the King's ' stacioner of London, and other 
suche as ben connyng and have undirstonding in such 
matiers,' charging them all ' to laboure effectually, inquere 
and diligently inserche in all place that ben under ' the 
King's * obeysaunce, to gete knowleche where suche bokes, 
onourmentes, and other necessaries for ' the ' saide colleges 
may be founden to selle.' They were anxious that 
Richard Chester should have authority ' to bye, take, and 
receive alle suche goodes afore eny other man . . . satis- 
fying to the owners of suche godes suche pris as thei may 
resonably accorde and agree. Soo that he may have the 
ferste choise of alle suche goodes afore eny other man, 
and in especiall of all maner bokes, ornementes, and other 
necessaries as nowe late were perteyning to the Duke of 
Gloucestre.' " 2 At King's College many charges were 
incurred for books a year later, in 1448. By 1452 this 
foundation had 174 or 175 books, on philosophy, theology, 
medicine, astrology, mathematics, canon law, grammar, and 
1 Willis, i. 537. 2 Lyte, Eton, 28-29. 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: CAMBRIDGE 161 

in classical literature. 1 The only volume now remaining 
of this collection once belonged to Duke Humfrey, and as 
the list contains a fair number of classical books Aristotle, 
Liber policie Platonis, Tullius in noua rethorica, Seneca, 
Sallust, Ovid, Julius Caesar, Plutarch besides a book of 
Poggio Bracciolini, it seems likely that King's College, and 
perhaps Eton, received some of the books promised by the 
Duke to Oxford University and begged for repeatedly and 
in vain by that University, after his death. 2 

Likewise at Eton which may be referred to appro- 
priately here the king desired to have a good library. 
" Item the Est pane in lengthe within the walles . ccxxx . 
fete in the myddel whereof directly agayns the entre of 
the cloistre a librarie conteynyng in lengthe . lij . fete and 
in brede . xxiiij . fete with . iij . chambres aboue on the 
oon side and . iiij . on the other side and benethe . ix . 
chambres euery of them in lengthe . xxvj . fete and in brede 
. xviij . fete with . v . utter toures and . v . ynner toures." 3 

A library room is referred to in 1445 or 1446; then 
" floryshid " glass was bought for the windows of it. 4 In 
1484-85 it is again mentioned in connexion with repairs. 
A year later a lock and twelve keys for the library were 
paid for. 5 Then in 1 5 17, we are told, "the fyrst stone was 
layd yn the fundacyon off the weste parte off the College, 
whereon ys bylded Mr. Provost's logyn, the Gate, and the 
Lyberary." 6 It would seem that these several references 
are to the vestry of the Chapel, in which the books were 
first kept, and then to the Election Hall, to which they were 
subsequently removed. 7 Henry VI seems to have given 
200 "for to purvey them books to the pleasure of God." 8 

St. Catharine's Hall, founded in 1473-75, m a few 

1 James 2 , 72-83. 2 James 2 , 70-71 ; and see p. 144. 3 Willis, i. 356. 

4 Lyte, Eton, 37 ; Willis, i. 393. 5 Willis, i. 414. 

6 Lyte, Eton, 101. 7 James 14 , viii. 8 Lyte, Eton, 29. 

U 



i62 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

years enjoyed the use of 104 volumes, of which 85 were 
given by the founder, Dr. Robert Wodelarke. At Queens' 
College a library was included in the first buildings ; and 
some twenty-five years after the foundation in 1448, no 
fewer than 224 volumes were on the desks. 1 

As at Oxford, these collections were augmented by the 
gifts of generous friends and loyal scholars. Peterhouse 
had many friends. Thomas Lisle, Bishop of Ely, gave a 
large Bible (I3OO). 2 In 1418 a welcome gift came from 
a former Master, John de Newton, who had reserved some 
theological books, Seneca, Valerius Maximus, and other 
books for his old house. At this time Peterhouse had 380 
volumes : at Oxford the University library was no larger, 
although it was possibly richer, and in numbers only the 
library of New College can have beaten it. Sir Thomas 
Beaufort, Duke of Exeter, bequeathed a volume of sermons 
in I427. 3 Later Dr. Thomas Lane gave some good books 
(1450). Then Dr. Roger Marshall presented a large 
number of volumes, some of which were to be placed in 
libraria secretiori^ and in chains, if the Master and Fellows 
thought fit, while the remainder were to be chained in aper- 
tiori libraria, where they could not be borrowed, but were 
easily accessible (1472): this benefactor evidently fully 
appreciated Peterhouse's division of its library into reference 
and lending sections. Less than a decade later Dr. John 
Warkworth, the Master, presented fifty-five manuscripts, 
among which was his own Chronicle. " Among the gifts 
made to the library in the fifteenth century are one or two 
which raise curious questions. One book comes from Bury 
and has the Bury mark. Another belonged to the canons 
of Hereford ; another to Worcester ; another to Durham (it 
is still identifiable in the Durham catalogue of 1391); and 

1 C. A. S. Comm., ii. 165. 

2 C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. (8vo. ser.) 398. 3 Ibid., 399. 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: CAMBRIDGE 163 

there are other instances of the kind. Such a phenomenon 
makes one very anxious to know how freely and under what 
conditions collegiate and monastic bodies were in the habit 
of parting with their books during the time before the 
Dissolution. Was there not very probably an extensive 
system of sale of duplicates ? I prefer this notion," writes 
Dr. James, " to the idea that they got rid of their books 
indiscriminately, because the study of monastic catalogues 
shows quite plainly that the number of duplicates in any 
considerable library was very large. On the other hand, it 
is clear that books often got out of the old libraries into the 
hands of quite unauthorised persons : so that there was 
probably both fair and foul play in this matter." 1 To 
Pembroke College came gifts from successive Masters and 
from friends between the date of foundation and the year 
1484, when the College had received 158 volumes in this 
way. 2 One of the donors was Rotherham, the great friend 
of the public library. During the same period a number of 
books were also purchased. Corpus Christi received a like 
series of donations. The third Master, John Kynne, gave 
a Bible, which he had " bought at Northampton at the time 
(1380) when the Parliament was there, for the purpose of 
reading therefrom in the Hall at the time of dinner." The 
fifth and sixth Masters, Drs. Billingford and Tytleshale, 
were benefactors to the library ; and during the latter's 
mastership one of the fellows, Thomas Markaunt the 
antiquary, bequeathed seventy-six volumes, then valued at 
over 100 (I439). 3 Later Dr. Cosyn presented books ; and 
Dr. Nobys, the twelfth Master, left a large number of 
volumes, which were chained in the library. 

1 C. A. S. (N.S.), Hi. (8vo. ser.), 399- 

2 James (M. R.) 10 , xiii.-xvii. ; C. A. S., ii. (8vo. ser. 1864), 13-21. 

3 MS. 232, in the library, contains his will, a list of his books with their prices, 
another catalogue, and a register of the borrowers of the books from 1440 
to 1516. 



164 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

A vicar of St. Mary's, Nottingham, named John Hurte, 
gave books to several colleges to Clare Hall seven books, 
including Guido delle Colonne's Troy book, Ptolemy in 
Quadripartite] to the College of God's House, afterwards 
absorbed in Christ's College, Egidius and a Doctrinale\ to 
King's College Isaac de Urinis ; to the University Library 
three books ; as well as an astronomical work to Gotham 
Chest (I476). 1 

At Peterhouse in 1414 special provision was being 
made for the books in a long room on the first floor. The 
workman employed on the job was to receive, in addition 
to his wages, a gown if the College were pleased with his 
work. By 1431 a new library was necessary, and a 
contract was entered into for building it. Sixteen years 
later the work had so progressed that desks were being 
made. In 1450 the old desks were broken up, and locks 
and keys were bought for sixteen new cases. This library 
was on the west side of the quadrangle. A library for 
Clare Hall was built between 1420 and 1430. A little 
before this a new library was begun for King's Hall, 
probably to replace a smaller room. For the books of 
Pembroke College a storey was added to the Hall about 
1452. The early collection of Gonville Hall was kept in 
a strong-room ; then in 1441 a special room was included 
in the buildings on the west side of the quadrangle. At 
Trinity Hall the books were stored in a room over the 
passage from one court to the other and at the east end of 
the chapel, and here they remained until after the Refor- 
mation. The early library room of Corpus Christi was in 
the Old Court, on the first floor next to the Master's lodge. 
In Queens', St. Catharine's, Jesus, Christ's, St. John's and 
Magdalene a library formed a part of the original quadrangle. 2 

1 Surtees Soc., xlv. 220-22. 2 Willis, i. 200, 226 ; iii. 411. 



CHAPTER VIII 
ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: THEIR ECONOMY 

HERE it will be convenient to give some account of the 
regulations for the use of books in colleges, both at 
Oxford and Cambridge. The University libraries 
were for reference : the College libraries were for both 
reference and lending use, and the regulations are there- 
fore different in essentials. By the statutes of University 
College (1292) one book of every kind that the college had 
was to be put in some common and safe place, so that 
the Fellows, and others with the consent of the Fellows, 
might have the use of it. Sometimes, especially in the 
colleges of early foundation, this common collection was 
kept in chests ; usually the books were securely chained to 
desks. The common books were chained at New College 
(statutes, 1400) and at Lincoln College (1429). At Peter- 
house, soon after 1418, some 220 volumes were preserved for 
reference, and 1 60 were distributed among the Fellows. 1 At 
All Souls College a number of books selected by the warden, 
vice-wardens, and deans, were chained, together with the 
books given on the express condition that they should be 
chained (statutes, 1443). This collection, then, was the 
college reference library ; corresponding with the common 
aumbry of the monastery, but also indicative of the principle 
of all library organisation that, while it is desirable to lend 
books, it is also necessary to keep a number of them all 
together in one fixed place for reference. 

1 Clark, 140. 
165 



1 66 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

The libri distribuendi, or books for lending, were the 
special feature of the college library. At Merton the 
books were distributed by the warden and sub-warden 
under an adequate pledge (1276). Once a year, after 
the books had been inspected, each Fellow of Oriel could 
select a book on the subject he was reading up, and could 
keep it, if he chose, until the next distribution a year 
later, while if there were more books than Fellows, those 
over could be selected in the same way (statutes, 1 329). At 
Peterhouse, the Senior Dean distributed the books to scholars 
in the manner he saw fit; later it was ruled that all the 
books not chained might be circulated once every two years 
on a day to be fixed by the Master and Senior Dean 
(statutes, 1344, 1480). At New College students in civil 
and canon law could have two books for their special use 
during the time they devoted themselves to those faculties, 
if they did not own the books themselves. If books 
remained over, after this distribution, they were to be 
distributed annually in the usual way (statutes, 1400). 
Similarly the books were circulated at All Souls (statutes, 
1443), at Magdalen (1459), at Exeter 1 and at Queen's. At 
Lincoln College bachelors could only have logical and 
philosophical books distributed to them, and not theology 
(statutes, 1429). 

The procedure was the same as at the annual claustral 
distribution. Although these regulations suggest restric- 
tions and little else, the students were as a rule fairly 
well provided with books. Even if they did not own a 
single volume of their own, they had the use of the public 

1 In winter 1382 "vhW. ob pro ligatura cuiusdam textus philosophic de 
eleccione Johannis Mattecote." Winter 1405, " \d. ob pro pergameno empto pro 
novo registro faciendo pro eleccione librorum " ; winter 1457? "iiiu/. More 
stacionario pro labore suo duobus diebus appreciando libros collegii qui traduntur 
in eleccionibus sociorum." Autumn 1488, "ii.r. \d. pro redempcione librorum 
quondam eleccionis domini Ricardi Symon." 0. H. S. 27, Boase, xlix. 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: ECONOMY 167 

library of the University, and of the college common 
library. It is true the distribution or electio librorum took 
place only once or twice a year, and then a student got 
only a few volumes. Yet we should not assume that he 
was obliged to confine his attention to this small dole alone, 
for it is but reasonable to suppose he could exchange his 
books with those selected by another student. The electio 
librorum was a method of securing the safety of the books 
by distributing the responsibility for making good losses 
equally over the whole community. In the case of 
University College an Opponent in theology, a teacher 
of the Sentences, and a Regent who also taught, had the 
right to borrow freely any book he wanted if he would 
restore it, when he had done with it, to the Fellow who 
had chosen it at the distribution (statutes, 1292). 

A register of loans was carefully maintained. The 
Fellows of All Souls were required to have a small 
indenture drawn up for each book borrowed, and such 
indenture was to be left with the warden or the vice- 
warden (statutes, 1443). At Pembroke College, Cambridge, 
the librarian or keeper was to prepare large tablets covered 
with wax and parchment : on the latter were to be written 
the titles of books, on the former the names of the 
borrowers ; when each book was returned, the borrower's 
name was pressed out. This was a monastic practice. 
Such records, even if trifling, were in turn the subject of an 
indenture if they were transferred from one person to 
another. 1 

The rules drawn up to prevent loss were as stringent 
for college as for monastic libraries. No Fellow of 
University College could take away, sell, or pawn books 
belonging to his house without the consent of all the 
fellows (statutes, 1292). At Peterhouse scholars were 

1 P.R.O., Anc. Deeds, c. 1782. 



i68 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

bound by oath to similar effect (statutes, 1 344). A 
statute of Magdalen is most insistent a book could not be 
alienated, under any excuse whatever, nor lent outside 
the college, nor could it be lent in quires for copying to 
a member of the College or a stranger, either in the Hall 
or out of it, nor could it be taken out of the town, or 
even out of the Hall, either whole or in sheets, by the 
Master or any one else, but to the schools it could be 
taken when necessary and on condition that it was brought 
back to the college before nightfall (1459). A like 
injunction was given at Pembroke College, Cambridge, and 
Brasenose College. 

Lending outside a college was unusual, but was some- 
times allowed, as in monasteries, under indenture, and upon 
deposit of a pledge of greater value than the book lent, 
and with the general consent of Fellows (University College 
statutes, 1292; All Souls statutes, 1443). Every book 
belonging to University College had a high value set upon 
it, so that a borrower should not be careless in his use of 
it (statutes, 1292); and at Peterhouse the Master and two 
Deans were expected to set a value upon the books (special 
statute, 1480). Punishment for default was severe. Any 
Fellow of Oriel neglecting or refusing to restore his books, 
or to pay the value set upon them, forfeited his right of 
selecting for another year, and if he failed to make good 
the loss before the following Christmas, he was no longer a 
Fellow eo facto non socius ibidem existat (1441). If a 
Fellow of Peterhouse did not produce his book at the fresh 
selection, or appoint a deputy to bring it, he was liable to be 
put out of commons until he restored it (statute, 1480). 

Equal care was taken of the books which were not 
circulated. At Merton they were to be kept under three 
locks (1276). The deeds, books, muniments, and money 
of Stapeldon Hall or Exeter College were kept in a 



ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: ECONOMY 169 

chest, of which one key was in the hands of the Rector, 
another of the Senior Scholar, and a third of the Chaplain 
(statutes, 1316). Three different locks, two large and one 
small, were used to secure the library door of New College : 
the Senior Dean and the Senior Bursar had the keys of the 
large locks, and each Fellow had a key of the small lock ; 
all three locks were to be secured at night (statutes, 1400). 
An indenture was drawn up of all the books, charters, and 
muniments of Peterhouse in the presence of the greater 
number of the scholars : all the books were named and 
classified according to faculty. One part of the indenture 
was retained by the Master, the other part by the Deans. 
All these books and records were preserved in chests, each 
of which had two keys, one in the care of the Master, the 
other in the hands of the Senior Dean (statutes, 1344). 
Books being regarded as an inestimable treasure, which 
ought to be most religiously guarded, they could not be 
taken from Peterhouse, if chained up, except with the 
consent of the Master and all the Fellows in residence, who 
must be a majority of the whole Society ; and books given 
on condition of being chained were not to be removed 
under any pretext, excepting only for repair. Even libri 
distribuendi were not to be without the college at night, 
except by permission of the Master or a Dean, and then 
they could not be retained for six months in succession 
(statute, 1480). 

To detect missing books stock was taken, usually once 
a year : again, as in the monasteries. Once a year on a 
fixed day the books of Oriel were to be brought out and 
displayed for inspection before the Provost or his deputy 
and all the Fellows (statutes, 1329). The same ceremony 
took place at Trinity Hall twice a year ; the books were to 
be laid out one by one, so that they could be seen by 
everybody (statutes, 1350); at Peterhouse the inspection 



170 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

was held only once in two years (statute, 1480). At All 
Souls an inspection was held (statutes, 1443); at the 
Pembroke College inspection each book was exhibited in 
order to the Masters and Fellows. At Magdalen, as else- 
where, the inspection was thorough : the books were to be 
shown realiter, visibiliter, et distincte. 

The above rules embody the common practice of the 
colleges. Certain houses had unusual provisions. Every 
Fellow of Magdalen College was to close the book he had 
been reading before he left, and also shut the windows 
(statutes, 1459). With the beginning of the sixteenth 
century comes a faint hint of discrimination in selecting 
books. No book was to be brought into the library of 
Corpus Christi College, Oxford, or chained there, if it were 
not of sufficent worth and importance (nisi sit competentis 
pretii aut utilitas) (unless it had been given with specific 
direction that it should be chained), but it was to go among 
the books for lending (statutes, i 5 1 7). 1 

In certain of the colleges a book was read aloud during 
meals. It is noted that in 1284 the scholars of Merton 
were so noisy that the person appointed to read from 
Gregory's Moralia could not be properly heard. 2 Reading 
aloud was also enjoined at University Hall, Oxford. 3 
This was, of course, a monastic practice. 

This brief description of the practice of the colleges in 
regard to books may be concluded fittingly with an account 
of the rules which Richard de Bury proposed to apply for 
the safety of his library when reposed within the walls of 
Durham Hall. These provisions are specially interesting 
as an example of the care with which a fussy bookworm 



1 See further, Documents relating to the University and Colleges of Cambridge 
(3v. 1852) ; Statutes of the College of Oxford (3v. 1853), especially i. 54, 97; 
ii. 60, 89 ; and Mun. Acad. Cf. Willis, Camb., iii. 387. 

2 Lyte, 8 1. 3 Ibid., 84. 



PL A TE XXIX 




ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: ECONOMY 171 

attempted to safeguard his treasures, and because they 
permit free lending of books outside the Hall. Five of 
the scholars sojourning in the Hall were to be appointed 
by the Master to have charge of the books, " of which five 
persons three and not fewer" might lend any book or 
books for inspection and study. No book was to be 
allowed outside the walls of the house for copying. 
" Therefore, when any scholar, secular or religious, whom 
for this purpose we regard with equal favour, shall seek 
to borrow any book, let the keepers diligently consider if 
they have a duplicate of the said book, and if so, let 
them lend him the book, taking such pledge as in their 
judgment exceeds the value of the book delivered, and 
let a record be made forthwith of the pledge, and of the 
book lent, containing the names of the persons delivering 
the book and of the person who receives it, together with 
the day and year when the loan is made." But if the 
book was not in duplicate, the keepers were forbidden to 
lend it to anybody not belonging to the Hall, "unless 
perhaps for inspection within the walls of the aforesaid 
house or Hall, but not to be carried beyond it." 

A book could be lent to any of the scholars in the 
Hall by three of the keepers, on condition that the 
borrower's name and the date on which he received the 
book were recorded. This book could not be transferred 
to another scholar except by permission of three keepers, 
and then the record must be altered. 

" Each keeper shall take an oath to observe all these 
regulations when they enter upon the charge of the books. 
And the recipients of any book or books shall thereupon 
swear that they will not use the book or books for any 
other purpose but that of inspection or study, and that 
they will not take or permit to be taken it or them beyond 
the town and suburbs of Oxford. 



172 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

" Moreover, every year the aforesaid keepers shall render 
an account to the Master of the House and two of his 
scholars whom he shall associate with himself, or if he 
shall not be at leisure, he shall appoint three inspectors, 
other than the keepers, who shall peruse the catalogue of 
books, and see that they have them all, either in the 
volumes themselves or at least as represented by deposits. 
And the more fitting season for rendering this account we 
believe to be from the first of July until the festival of 
the Translation of the Glorious Martyr S. Thomas next 
following. 

" We add this further provision, that anyone to whom 
a book has been lent, shall once a year exhibit it to the 
keepers, and shall, if he wishes it, see his pledge. More- 
over, if it chances that a book is lost by death, theft, fraud, 
or carelessness, he who has lost it or his representative or 
executor shall pay the value of the book and receive back 
his deposit. But if in any wise any profit shall accrue to 
the keepers, it shall not be applied to any purpose but 
the repair and maintenance of the books." l 

It will be seen that had De Bury's aim been consum- 
mated, a small public lending library would have been 
founded in Oxford, from which at first only a few duplicates 
would be issued, but which might, in time, have become 
an important institution. 

1 R. de B., ed. Thomas, pp. 246-48. 



CHAPTER IX 

THE USE OF BOOKS TOWARDS THE END OF 
THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 

1 

THE cheapening of books has brought many pleasures, 
but has been the cause of our losing or almost 
losing one pleasant social custom, the pastime 
of reciting tales by the fireside or at festivities, which was 
popular until the end of the manuscript age. 

i 
" Men lykyn jestis for to here 

And romans rede in divers manere." 

At their games and feasts and over their ale men were 
wont to hear tales and verses. 1 The tale-tellers were 
usually professional wayfaring entertainers: "japers and 
' mynstralles ' that sell ' glee,' " as the scald sang his lays 
before King Hygelac and roused Beowulf to slay 
Grendel 

"Gestiours, that tellen tales 
Bothe of weping and of game." 2 

Call hither, cries Sir Thopas, minstrels and gestours, " for 
to tellen tales " 

" Of romances that been royales, 
Of popes and of cardinals, 

And eek of love-lykinge." (11. 2035-40). 

1 Piers Plowman. a Hous of 'Fame , 1. 1198. 

173 



174 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Rhymers and poets had these entertainments in mind 
when they wrote 

"And red wher-so thou be, or elles songe, 
That thou be understonde I god beseche," 

cries Chaucer. 1 Note also the preliminary request for 
silence and attention at the beginning of Sir Thopas 

"Listeth, lordes, in good entent, 
And I wol telle verrayment 

Of mirthe and of solas [solace] ; 
Al of a knyght was fair and gent [gallant] 
In bataille and in tourneyment, 

His name was Sir Thopas." 

At the beginning of his metrical chronicle of England 
Robert Mannyng of Brunne begs the " Lordynges that be 
now here " to listen to the story of England, as he had 
found it and Englished it for the solace of those " lewed " 
men who knew not Latin or French. 2 

References to these minstrels are common 

" I warne you furst at the beginninge, 
That I will make no vain carpinge [talk] 
Of dedes of armys ne of amours, 
As dus mynstrelles and jestours, 
That makys carpinge in many a place 
Of Octoviane and Isembrase, 
And of many other jestes, 
And namely, whan they come to festes ; 
Ne of the life of Bevys of Hampton^ 
That was a knight of gret renoun, 
Ne of Sir Gye of Warwyke?* 

The monks of Hyde Abbey or New Minster paid an 
annuity to a harper (1180). No less a sum than seventy 
shillings was paid to minstrels hired to sing and play the 

1 Troilus, Bk. v. 11. 1797-98. 

2 Furnivall's ed., Rolls S., pt. i, p. I. 

3 M, Reg. 17, C. viii. f. 2 ; cited in Skeat's Chaucer, v. 194. 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 175 

harp at the feast of the installation of an abbot of St. 
Augustine's, Canterbury (1309). When the bishop of 
Winchester visited the cathedral priory of St. Swithin or Old 
Minster, a minstrel was hired to sing the song of Colbrond the 
Danish giant a legend connected with Winchester and 
the tale of Queen Emma delivered from the ploughshares 
(1338). Payments to minstrels were commonly made by 
monks: at Bicester Priory, for example (1431), and at 
Maxstoke, where mimi> joculatores, jocatores^ lusores, and 
citharistae were hired. A curious provision occurs in the 
statutes of New College, Oxford (i 380). The founder gives 
his permission to the scholars, for their recreation on festival 
days in the winter, to light a fire in the hall after dinner 
and supper, where they could amuse themselves with songs 
and other entertainments of decent sort, and could recite 
poems, chronicles of kingdoms, the wonders of the world, 
and such like compositions, provided they befitted the 
clerical character. At Winchester College where minstrels 
were often employed and Magdalen College the same 
practice was followed. Commonly minstrels formed a 
regular part of the household of rich men. 1 

This part of the subject is so interesting that we feel 
tempted to linger over it, but it is sufficient for our purpose 
to observe that minstrelsy, before and after the Conquest 
indeed, up to nearly the end of the manuscript period 
was the chief and almost the only means of circulating 
literature among seculars. This fact should be borne in 
mind when any comparison is made between the number 
of religious and scholastic books in circulation and the 
number of books of lighter character. Even books of the 
scholastic class were read aloud to students in class, and 
often to small audiences of older people ; but this method 
had obvious disadvantages, and the necessity of studying 

1 Warton, 96-99 ; Rashdall and Rait, New Coll., 60. 



176 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

them personally soon came to be recognised as imperative. 
Hence such books, and especially those which summarised 
the subject of study, were greatly multiplied. On the other 
hand, romances were better heard than read, and only 
enough copies of them were made to supply wealthy 
households and the minstrels and jesters whose business 
it was to learn and recite them. Rarely, therefore, did the 
ordinary layman of medieval England own many books. 
The large class to whom romances appealed seldom owned 
books at all, simply because the people of this class, even 
if wealthy and of noble rank, could not in ninety cases out 
of one hundred read at all, or could read so poorly that the 
pastime was irksome. Among the educated classes, the 
books needed were those with which a reader had made 
acquaintance at his university, or which were necessary 
for his special study and occupation. Yet it is uncommon 
to find private libraries; and with few exceptions they 
were ridiculously small. The vast majority of the books 
were owned in common by monastic or collegiate societies. 
Let us bring together the meagre records of three 
centuries, and some exceptions to the general rule which 
serve only to show up the general poverty of the land. 
Henry II, an ardent sportsman, a ruler almost completely 
immersed in affairs of State, made time for private reading 
and for working out knotty questions, 1 and very probably 
he had a library to his hand. King John received from 
the sacristan of Reading a small collection of books of 
the Bible and severe theology, perhaps as a diplomatic 
gift, perhaps as a subtle reminder that a little food for the 
spirit would improve his morals and ameliorate the lot of 
his subjects. Edward II borrowed at least two books, the 
Miracles of St. Thomas and the Lives of St. Thomas and 
St. Anselm, from Christ Church, Canterbury. 2 Great Earl 

1 Stubbs, Lect. on Mtd, Hist., 137. 2 James (M. R.), 148. 



r._ .!-v/-v - 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 177 

Simon had a Digestum vetus from the same source. Guy 
de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick (d. 1315), had a little 
hoard of romances, and some other books. Hugh le 
Despenser the elder enjoyed a " librarie of bookes " 
(c. 1321), how big or of what character we do not know. 
Archbishop Meopham (d. 1333) gave some books to Christ 
Church, Canterbury ; and his successor, John Stratford, 
presented a few to the same house. Lady Elizabeth de 
Clare, foundress of Clare Hall, bequeathed to her foundation 
a tiny collection of service books and volumes on canon 
law (1355). William de Feriby, Archdeacon of Cleveland, 
left a small theological library (1378). One John Percy- 
hay of Swinton in Rydal (1392), Sir Robert de Roos 
(1392), John de Clifford, treasurer of York Church (1392), 
Canon Bragge of York (i 396), and Eleanor Bohun, Duchess 
of Gloucester (i 399), all left Bibles ; and small collections 
of books, much alike in character, consisting usually of 
psalters, books of religious offices, legends of the saints, 
Peter of Blois, Nicholas Trivet, the Brut chronicle, books 
of Decretals, and the Corpus Juris Civilis, most of it sorry 
stuff, the last achievements of dogmatism on threadbare 
subjects. " Among all the church dignitaries whose wills 
are recorded in Bishop Stafford's register at Exeter (1395 
1419), the largest library mentioned is only of fourteen 
volumes. The sixty testators include a dean, two arch- 
deacons, twenty canons or prebendaries, thirteen rectors, 
six vicars, and eighteen layfolk, mostly rich people. The 
whole sixty apparently possessed only two Bibles between 
them, and only one hundred and thirty-eight books 
altogether-: or, omitting church service-books, only 
sixty ; i.e. exactly one each on an average. Thirteen of 
the beneficed clergy were altogether bookless, though 
several of them possessed the baselard or dagger which 
church councils had forbidden in vain for centuries past ; 
12 




i;8 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

four more had only their breviary. Of the laity fifteen 
were bookless, while three had service books, one of these 
being a knight who simply bequeathed them as part of the 
furniture of his private chapel." 3 

A few exceptions there were, as we have said. Not 
till the fifteenth century do we find that a few books were 
commonly in the possession of well-to-do and cultivated 
people; suggesting an advance in culture upon the previous 
age. But before 1400 several book collectors were sharp 
aberrations from the general rule. Richard de Gravesend, 
Bishop of London, owned nearly a hundred books, almost 
all theological, and each worth on an average more than 
a sovereign a volume, or in all about 1740 of our money. 
A certain Abbot Thomas of St. Augustine's Abbey, 
Canterbury, gave to his house over one hundred volumes. 2 
To the same monastery a certain John of London, prob- 
ably a pupil of Friar Bacon, left a specialist's library of 
about eighty books, no fewer than forty-six being on 
mathematics, astronomy, and medicine. 3 Simon Langham, 
too, bequeathed to Westminister Abbey ninety-one works, 
some very costly. 4 John de Newton, treasurer of York, 
left a good library, part of which he bequeathed to York 
Minster and part to Peterhouse (1418). A canon of York, 
Thomas Greenwood, died worth more than thirty pounds 
in books alone (1421). And Henry Bowet, Archbishop 
of York, left a collection of thirty-three volumes, nearly all 
of great price, copies de luxe, finely illuminated and 
embellished, worth on an average a pound a volume 

(1423). 

But Richard de Bury, Bishop of Durham, is at once the 



1 Coulton, Chaiicer and his England, 99. 

2 James (M. R.), Ixxii. ; this number is probably correct, but owing to con- 
fusion between three Abbots of this name it is not certainly right. 

9 Ibid.) Ixxiv. 4 Robinson, 4-7. 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 179 

bibliomaniac's ideal and enigma (12871345). All accounts 
agree in saying he collected a large number of books. 

What became of them we do not know. In the 
Philobiblon, of which he is the reputed author, he expressed 
his intention of founding a hall at Oxford, and of leaving 
his books to it. Durham College, however, was not com- 
pleted until thirty-six years after his death. Among the 
Durham College documents is a catalogue of the books it 
owned at the beginning of the fifteenth century, and only 
the books sent to Oxford in 1315, and as many more are 
mentioned, so that his large library did not go to the 
college, but was probably dispersed. 1 De Bury, like 
Cobham, was a heavy debtor, and as he lay dying his 
servants stole all his moveable goods and left him naked 
on his bed save for an undershirt which a lackey had 
thrown over him. 2 His executors, as we know, were glad 
to resell to St. Albans Abbey the books he had bought 
from the monks there. 

De Bury has left us an account of his methods of 
collecting which throws some light upon the trade in books 
in his time. " Although from our youth upwards we had 
always delighted in holding social commune with learned 
men and lovers of books, yet when we prospered in the 
world, ... we obtained ampler facilities for visiting every- 
where as we would, and of hunting as it were certain most 
choice preserves, libraries private as well as public, and of 
the regular as well as of the secular clergy. . . . There was 
afforded to us, in consideration of the royal favour, easy 
access for the purpose of freely searching the retreats of 
books. In fact, the fame of our love of them had been 
soon winged abroad everywhere, and we were reported to 
burn with such desire for books, and especially old ones, 

1 0. H. S., 32, Collect. 36-40; also 9. 

8 Blakiston, Trin. Coll. 5, 7 ; A. de Murimuth, 171. 



i8o OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

that it was more easy for any man to gain our favour by 
means of books than of money. Wherefore, since supported 
by the goodness of the aforesaid prince of worthy memory, 
we were able to requite a man well or ill ... there flowed in, 
instead of presents and guerdons, and instead of gifts and 
jewels, soiled tracts and battered codices, gladsome alike to 
our eye and heart. Then the aumbries of the most famous 
monasteries were thrown open, cases were unlocked and 
caskets were undone, and volumes that had slumbered 
through long ages in their tombs wake up and are 
astonished, and those that had lain hidden in dark places 
are bathed in the ray of unwonted light. These long life- 
less books, once most dainty, but now become corrupt and 
loathesome, covered with litters of mice and pierced with 
the gnawings of the worms, and who were once clothed in 
purple and fine linen, now lying in sackcloth and ashes, 
given up to oblivion, seemed to have become habitations of 
the moth. . . . Thus the sacred vessels of learning came into 
our control and stewardship ; some by gift, others by 
purchase, and some lent to us for a season." l 

If his words are true, monastic and other libraries must 
have been seriously despoiled to build up his own collection. 
He was bribed by St. Albans Abbey, and nobody need 
disbelieve him when he says he got many presents from 
other houses, for the merit of being open-handed was 
rewarded with more good mediation and favours than the 
giver's cause deserved ; indeed, De Bury himself seems to 
have made judicious use of bribes for his own advance- 
ment. 2 Usually gifts were in jewels or plate, but books 
were given to men known to love them ; as when 



1 R. de B., 197-199- 

2 "R. de Bury . . . qui ipsum episcopatum et omnia sua beneficia prius 
habita per preces magnatum et ambitionis vitium adquisivit, et ideo toto tempore 
suo inopia laboravit et prodigus exstitit in expensis." Murimuth, 171. 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 181 

Whethamstede presented Humfrey of Gloucester and 
the Duke of Bedford with books they coveted. 

While acting as emissary for his " illustrious prince," 
de Bury hunts his quarry in the narrow ways of Paris, 
and captures " inestimable books " by freely opening his 
purse, the coins of which are, to his mind, " mud and sand " 
compared with the treasures he gets. He blesses the friars 
and protects them, and they rout out books from the 
" universities and high schools of various provinces " ; but 
how, whether rightfully or wrongfully, we do not know. 
He " does not disdain," he tells us in truth, he is surely 
overjoyed to visit ", their libraries and any other repositories 
of books " ; nay, there he finds heaped up amid the utmost 
poverty the utmost riches of wisdom. He freely employs 
the booksellers, but the wiles of the collector are as notorious 
as the wiles of women, and his chief aim is to " captivate 
the affection of all " who can get him books ; not even 
forgetting " the rectors of schools and the instructors of rude 
boys," although we cannot think he gets much from them. 
If he cannot buy books, he has copies made : about his 
person are scribes and correctors, illuminators and binders, 
and generally all who can usefully labour in the service of 
books ; in large numbers in no small multitude. And by 
these means he gets together more books than all the other 
English bishops put together: more than five waggon 
loads ; a veritable hoard, overflowing into the hall of his 
house, and into his bedroom, where he steps over them to 
get to his couch. He was a man " of small learning," says 
Murimuth ; " passably literate," writes Chambre ; at the 
best, according to Petrarch, " of ardent temperament, not 
ignorant of literature, with a natural curiosity for out-of-the- 
way lore " : an antiquarian, not of the lovable kind, but un- 
scrupulous, pedantic, and vain, indulging an inordinate taste 
for collecting and hoarding books, perhaps to satisfy a 



182 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

craving for shreds and patches of knowledge, but more 
likely to earn a reputation as a great clerk. 1 For De Bury 
was something of a humbug; the Philobiblon, if it is his 
work, reaches the utmost limit of affectation in the love of 
books. 

n 

The literature of the later part of the fourteenth century 
affords us glimpses of other readers who were not merely 
collectors. The author or authors of Piers Plowman 
seems to have had within his reach a fair library. His 
reading was carelessly done for the most part, his references 
are vague and incorrect, and his quotations not always exact. 
But he was well read in the Scriptures, which he knew far 
better than any other book. From the^Fathers he gathered 
much, perhaps by means of collections of extracts from 
their works. He used the Golden Legend^ Huon de Meri's 
allegorical poem of the fight between Jesus and the Anti- 
christ, Peter Comestor's Bible History, Rustebeufs La Vote 
de Paradis, Grosseteste's religious allegory of Le Chastel 
a" Amour, the paraded learning of Vincent of Beauvais in 
Speculum Historiale, and other works numerous and small 
signs of booklore, which are completely overshadowed by 
his illuminating comprehension of the popular side in the 
politics of his day. Gower, too, had at his disposal a little 
library of some account, including the Scriptures, theological 
writings and ecclesiastical histories, Aristotle, some of 
the classics, and a good deal of romance in prose and 
verse. 

But Chaucer was the ideal book-lover : knowing Dante, 
Boccaccio, and in some degree " Franceys Petrark, the 
laureat poete," who " enlumined al Itaille of poetry," Virgil, 
Cicero, Seneca, Ovid his favourite author and Boethius ; 

1 " Volens tamen magnus clericus reputari." Murimuth, 171. 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 183 

as well as Guido delle Colonne's prose epic of the story of 
Troy, the poems of Guillaume de Machaut, the Roman de 
la Rose, and a work on the astrolabe by Messahala. 1 We 
have some excellent pictures of Chaucer's habit of reading. 
When his day's work is done he goes home and buries 
himself with his books 

"Domb as any stoon, 
Thou sittest at another boke, 
Til fully daswed is thy loke." 2 

In the Parliament of Fowls he tells us that he read books 
often for instruction and pleasure, and the coming on of 
night alone would force him to put away his book. He 
would not have been a true reader had he not developed 
the habit of reading in bed. 

". . . Whan I saw I might not slepe, 
Til now late, this other night, 
Upon my bedde I sat upright 
And bad oon reche me a book, 
A romance, and he hit me took 
To rede and dryve the night away ; 

And in this boke were writen fables 
That clerkes hadde, in olde tyme, 
And other poets, put in ryme. . . ." 3 

So he found solace and delight, as countless thousand's 
have done, in his Ovid. The world of books and of 
reading is apt to seem stuffy, the favoured home of the 
moody spirit, a lair to which a dirty and ragged Maglia- 
bechi retreats, a palace where a Beckford gloats solitary 
over his treasures a world whence we often desire to 
escape, since we know we can return to it when we will. 
For if good books shelter us from the realities of life, life 

1 Skeat's Chaucer, vi. 381. 

2 Hous of Fame, Works, iii. bk. ii. 1. 656-58. 

3 Book of the Duchesse, 44. 



1 84 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

itself refreshes the student like cool rain upon the fevered 
brow. Chaucer was the bright spirit who let his books fill 
their proper place in his life. In books, he says 

"I me delyte, 

And to hem give I feyth and ful credence, 
And in myn heart have hem in reverence 
So hertely that ther is game noon 
That fro my bokes maketh me to goon." 

Yet books are something much less than life : there is the 
open air, the meadows bright with flowers, the melody 
of birds, 

". . . Whan that the month of May 
Is comen, and that I hear the foules singe, 
And that the flowers 'ginnen for to spring 
Farwel my book. . . ." l 

in 

By the end of the fourteenth century we find signs 
that books more often formed a part of well-to-do house- 
holds, and that the formal reading and reciting entertain- 
ments were giving place gradually to the informal and 
personal use of books. Among many pieces of evidence 
that this was so, Chaucer himself furnishes us with two of 
the best, one in the Wife of Bath's Tale, and the other in 
his Troilus and Criseide. The Wife took for her fifth 
husband, " God his soule blesse," a clerk of Oxenford 

"He was, I trowe, a twenty winter old, 
And I was fourty, if I shal seye sooth." 

Joly Jankin, as the clerk was called, 

" Hadde a book that gladly, night and day, 
For his desport he wolde rede alvvay. 

1 Legend of Good Women, prol. 3off. 




CARMELITE IN HIS STUDY 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 185 

He cleped [called] it Valerie and Theofraste, 1 
At whiche book he lough alwey ful faste. 

And every night and day was his custume, 
When he had leyser and vacacioun 
From other worldly occupacioun, 
To reden on this book of wikked wyves." 2 

And having quickly taken measure of the Wife's character, 
he could not refrain from reading to her stories which 
seemed to contain a lesson and to point a moral for her. 
She lost patience, and was " beten for a book, pardee." 

"Up-on a night Jankin, that was our syre, 
Redde on his book, as he sat by the fyre." 

And when his wife saw he would " never fyne " to read 
" this cursed book al night," all suddenly she plucked 
three leaves out of it, " right as he radde," and with 
her fist so took him on the cheek that he fell " bakward 
adoun " in the fire. Springing up like a mad lion he 
smote her on the head with his fist, and she lay upon the 
floor as she were dead. Whereupon he stood aghast, sorry 
for what he had done ; and " with muchel care and wo " 
they made up their quarrel : our clerk, let us hope, winning 
peace, and his wife securing the mastery of their household 
affairs and the destruction of the " cursed book." 

In Troilus we are told that Uncle Pandarus comes 
into the paved parlour, where he finds his niece sitti \g 
with two other ladies 

"... And they three 
Herden a mayden reden hem the geste 
Of the Sege of Thebes . . ." 

1 Valerie: possibly Epistola Valerii ad Riifinum de uxore non ducenda, 
attributed to Walter Mapes ; it is a short treatise of about eight folios ; it is 
printed in Cam. Soc. xvi. 77. Theofraste : Aureolus liber de Nuptiis, by one 
Theophrastus. 

2 LI. 669-85. 



1 86 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

' " What are you reading ? " cries Pandarus. " For 
Goddes love, what seith it ? Tel it us. Is it of love ? " 
Whereupon the niece returns him a saucy answer, and 
" with that they gonnen laughe," and then she says 

" This romaunce is of Thebes, that we rede ; 
And we can herd how that King Laius deyde 
Thurgh Edippus his sone, and al that dede ; 
And here we stenten [left off] at these lettres rede, 
How the bisshop, as the book can telle, 
Amphiorax, fil through the ground to helle." 1 

This picture of a little informal reading circle is not to be 
found in like perfection elsewhere in English medieval 
literature. 2 

IV 

By the middle of the fifteenth century book-collecting 
was a more fashionable pastime. Had it not been so we 
should have been surprised. From 1365 to 1450 was an 
age of library building. Oxford University now had its 
library : in quick succession the colleges of Merton, 
William of Wykeham, Exeter, University, Durham, Balliol, 
Peterhouse, Lincoln, All Souls, Magdalen, Queens' 
(Cambridge), Pembroke (Cambridge), and St. John's 
(Cambridge) followed the example. Library rooms also 
had been put up in the cathedrals of Hereford, Exeter, 
York, Lincoln, Wells, Salisbury, St. Paul's, and Lichfield. 
Moreover, in London had been established the first 
public library. Dick Whittington, of famous memory, 
and William Bury founded it between 1421 and 1426. 
The civic records tell us that " Upon the petition of John 



1 Troilus, ii. 81-105. 

2 It seems to be Chaucer's own ; only about one-third of the poem comes 
from Boccaccio's Filostrato. Chaucer had a copy of the Thebais of Statius. 
Troilus , v. 1. 1484. 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 187 

Coventry, John Carpenter, and William Grove, the executors 
of Richard Whittington and William Bury, the Custody of 
the New House, or Library, which they had built, with the 
Chamber under, was placed at their disposal by the Lord 
Mayor, Aldermen, and Commonalty." x The foundation is 
described as " a certen house next unto the sam Chapel 
apperteynyng, called the library, all waies res'ved for 
students to resorte unto, w l three chambres under nithe 
the saide library, which library being covered w l slate is 
valued together w l the chambres at xiijs. iiijd. yerely. . . . 
The saied library is a house appointed by the saied Maior 
and cominaltie for ... resorte of all students for their 
education in Divine Scriptures." 2 Stow, writing in 1598, 
spoke of it as " sometime a fayre and large library, furnished 
with books. . . . The armes of Whitington are placed on 
the one side in the stone worke, and two letters, to wit, 
W. and B., for William Bury, on the other side." Wealthy 
citizens came forward with pecuniary aid then as they have 
ever done. William Chichele, sometime Sheriff, bequeathed 
" x h to be bestowyed on books notable to be layde in the 
newe librarye at the gildehall at London for to be memoriall 
for John Hadle, sumtyme meyre, and for me there while 
they mowe laste." 3 This was in 1425. Eighteen years 
later one of Whittington's executors, named John Carpenter, 
made this direction in his will : " If any good or rare books 
shall be found amongst the said residue of my goods, 
which, by the discretion of the aforesaid Master William 
Lichfield and Reginald Pecock, may seem necessary to the 
common library at Guildhall, for the profit of the students 
there, and those discoursing to the common people, then I 



1 Letter-book K, fo. 39, July 4, 1426. 

2 From schedule of the possessions of the Guildhall College, July 24, 1549. 
L. A. R., x. 381. 

3 Chichele Register, pt. I, fo. 3920, Lamb. Pal. ; Z. A. R. t x. 382. 



i88 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

will and bequeath that those books be placed by my 
executors and chained in that library that the visitors and 
students thereof may be the sooner admonished to pray for 
my soul " (I442). 1 But this library, like so many others, did 
not survive the disastrous years of mid-sixteenth century. 

It would be singular if this progress in library making 
were not reflected in the habits of a considerable section of 
the people. The court and its entourage set the fashion. 
Henry vi was a lover of books and a collector. His 
uncle, John, Duke of Bedford, although much occupied 
with public affairs and mercilessly warring with France, 
got together a rich library, particularly noteworthy for 
finely illuminated books : the famous library of the 
Louvre was a part of his French booty. Of his 
brother Gloucester we have already spoken. Arch- 
bishop Kempe owned a library of theology, canon and 
civil law, and other books, worth more than 260. He 
also gave money towards the cost of Gloucester's library at 
Oxford ; as did also Cardinal Beaufort and the Duchess of 
Gloucester. Sir John Fastolf possessed a small number 
of books at Caistor (c. 1450). The collection was of some 
distinction, as the inventory will show : " In the Stewe 
hous ; of Frenche books, the Bible, the Cronycles of France, 
the Cronicles of Titus Levius, a booke of Jullius Cesar, lez 
Propretez dez Choses [by Earth Glanville], Petrus de 
Crescentiis, liber Almagesti, liber Geomancie cum iiij aliis 
Astronomic, liber de Roy Artour, Romaunce la Rose, 
Cronicles d'Angleterre, Veges de larte Chevalerie, Instituts 
of Justien Emperer, Brute in ryme, liber Etiques, liber de 
Sentence Joseph, Problemate Aristotelis, Vice and Vertues, 
liber de Cronykes de Grant Bretagne in ryme, Meditacions 
Saynt Bernard." z Perhaps this little hoard may be taken 

1 Conf. of Librarians (1877), 216 ; L. A. R., x. 382. 

2 Hist. MSS., Wi Kept., pt. I, 268a. 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 189 

as a fair example of a wealthy gentleman's library in the 
fifteenth century. A collection perhaps accurately repre- 
senting the average prelatical library was that of Richard 
Browne, running to more than thirty books of the common 
medieval character (1452). A canon residentiary of York 
named William Duffield had a library of forty volumes, as 
fine as Archbishop Bowet's collection, and valued at a 
higher figure (1452). Ralph Dreff, of Broadgates Hall, 
possessed no fewer than twenty-three volumes, a larger 
collection than Oxford students usually had. A vicar of 
Cookfield owned twenty-four books, some of them priced 
cheaply (1451). 

Some collections were pathetically small. A disreput- 
able student of Oxford, John Brette, had among his " bits 
of things" a book and a pamphlet. Thomas Cooper, 
scholar of Brasenose Hall, enjoyed the use of six volumes. 
Another scholar, John Lassehowe, had a like number ; 
and another, Simon Berynton, had fifteen books, worth 
sixpence (c. 1448)! A rector also had six, one of them 
Greek ; a chaplain was equipped with six medical works ; 
and James Hedyan, bachelor of canon and civil law, 
could employ his leisure in reading one of his little store 
of eight volumes. One Elizabeth Sywardby owned eight 
books, three being costly (1468). 

v 

More records of the same kind may be obtained from 
almost any collection of wills and inventories, the number 
of them increasing towards the end of the manuscript age. 
How far this change was due to the influence of Italy we 
do not fully know. Certainly before the end of Henry Vl's 
reign the first impulse of the Italian renascence the 
impulse to gather up the materials of a more catholic and 



190 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

liberal knowledge had been transmitted to England. 
Students left our shores to widen their studies in Italy. 
Public men in England corresponded with Italians, and 
fell into sympathy with their aims. Occasionally scholars 
came hither from Italy. Manuel Chrysoloras, one of the 
leading revivers of Greek studies in Italy, visited England 
in the service of Manuel Palaeologus, and possibly stayed 
at Christ Church monastery in I4O8. 1 Poggio Bracciolini 
came to this country in 141823 at the invitation of 
Cardinal Beaufort : what he did while here we know far 
too little about, but this visit of Italy's greatest book- 
collector and discoverer of Latin classical manuscripts 
cannot have been without some effect upon English 
students. For Poggio the visit was almost without result. 
He was in search of manuscripts, but apparently failed to 
get any with which he was unacquainted. He dismissed 
our libraries with the sharp criticism that they were full of 
trash, and described Englishmen as almost devoid of love 
for letters. 2 ^Eneas Sylvius also came here, and his visit 
likewise must have borne some fruit (1435). 

Much also was accomplished by correspondence. 
Among those in communication with Italians and ac- 
quainted with the course of their studies, were Bishop 
Bekington, one of the earliest alumni of Wykeham's 
foundation at Oxford, Adam de Molyneux, the corre- 
spondent of ^Eneas Sylvius, Thomas Chaundler, warden 
of New College, Archdeacon Bildstone, Archbishop Arundel, 
the benefactor of Oxford University Library and corre- 
spondent of Salutati, Cardinal Beaufort's secretary, and 
Humfrey of Gloucester. Upon the last-named Italian 
influence was strong. Among the books he gave to 

1 Gasquet 2 , 20; Sandys, ii. 220; Legrand, Bibliographic HelUnique, i. (1885) 
xxiv., where the date is 1405-6. 

2 Epp. (ed. Tonelli, 1832-61), i. 43, 70, 74. 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 191 

Oxford were Petrarch, Dante, and Boccaccio, but probably 
the strongest evidence of this influence would be found in 
the books he retained for his own use. He sought a 
rendering of Aristotle's Politics from Bruni ; of Cicero's 
Republic from Decembrio ; of certain of Plutarch's Lives 
from Lapo da Castiglionchio ; and had other works 
translated. 1 

But many English students were attracted to visit Italy 
for the express purpose of sitting under Italian teachers. 
As early as 1395, one Thomas of England, a brother of 
the Augustine order, went to Italy and purchased manu- 
scripts, " books of the modern poets," and translations and 
other early works of Leonardo Bruni. 2 Thomas was one 




AUTOGRAPH OF DUKE HUMFREY OF GLOUCESTER. 

of the first of a number of enlightened Englishmen who 
journeyed laboriously and in steady procession to Italy, 
this time not only to Rome, but to the northern towns, 
then, with Venice, " the common ports of humanity," 
whither they were attracted by the fame of the bright 
galaxy of humanists of Coluccio Salutati, collector of 
Latin manuscripts, Manuel Chrysoloras, Niccolo de' Niccoli, 
grubbing Poggio Bracciolini, Pope Nicholas, sometime 
Cosimo de' Medici's librarian and the founder of the 
Vatican Library, Giovanni Aurispa, famous collector of 

1 " Cest livre est a moy Homfrey Due de Glocestre, lequel je fis translater 
de Grec en Latin par un de mes secretaires, Antoyne de Beccariane de Verone." 
Cam. Soc. 1843, Ellis, Letters, 357. 

2 Gherardi, Statuti delta Univ. e Studio Fiorentino, 364 ; Sandys, ii. 220 ; 
Einstein, 15. 



192 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Greek manuscripts in the East, the renowned Guarino da 
Verona, Palla degli Strozzi, would-be founder of a public 
library, Cosimo de' Medici, whose princely collections are 
the chiefest treasures of the Laurentian Library, Francesco 
Filelfo, another importer of Greek books from Constantinople, 
and Vespasiano, the great bookseller. 

Sometimes these pilgrims to Italy were poor men, 
as were John Free, and the two Oxford men, Norton 
and Bulkeley, who went thither in I425-29. 1 But as a 
rule such a journey was only possible for wealthy men. 
An important pilgrim was Andrew Holes, who repre- 
sented England a,t the Pope's court in Florence. 2 In 
the eyes of Vespasiano, Holes was one of the most 
cultivated of Englishmen. He appears to have bought 
too many books to send by land, and so was obliged to 
wait for a ship to transport them. What became of these 
books ? did he collect for his own use ? or was he acting 
merely for Duke Humfrey or the king? or did he leave 
them, as it is said, to his Church ? Unfortunately these 
are questions which cannot be answered. 

Four other men, Tiptoft, Grey, Free, and Gunthorpe, 
all of Balliol College, where the influence of Duke Humfrey 
may fairly be suspected, journeyed to Italy. "Butcher" 
Tiptoft, an intimate of another enlightened community at 
Christ Church, visited Guarino, walked Florentine streets 
arm-in-arm with Vespasiano, thrilled yEneas Sylvius, then 
Pope, with a Latin oration, and returned to his own country 
with many books, some of which he intended to give 
to Oxford University one of the best deeds of his 
unhappy and calamitous life. 3 While in Italy, William 
Grey, who sat under Guarino, and made Niccolo Perotti, 

1 O.H.S., 35, Anstey, 17, 45. 

3 " Messer Andrea Ols " in Italian authority ; identified by Dr. Sandys. 

3 O.H.S., 36, Anstey, ii. 389-91 ; Sandys, ii. 221-26; Einstein, 26. 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 193 

well known as a grammarian, free of his princely establish- 
ment, was conspicuously industrious in accumulating books. 
If he could not obtain them in any other way he employed 
scribes to copy for him, and an artist of Florence to adorn 
them in a costly manner with miniatures and initials. In 
nearly six years he collected over two hundred volumes 
of manuscripts, some as old as the twelfth century; 
probably the finest library sent to England in that age. 
No fewer than 152 of his manuscripts are now in the 
Balliol College library, to which he gave his whole collec- 
tion in 1478; unfortunately most of the miniatures are 
destroyed. To his patronage of learning and his book- 
collecting propensities Grey owed his friendship with 
Nicholas V, and his bishopric of Ely. Grey was also a 
good friend to Free or Phreas, a poor student, and aided 
him in Italy with money for his expenses of living and to 
obtain Greek manuscripts to translate. 1 Free and John 
Gunthorpe, Dean of Wells, went to Italy together : Free 
did not live to return, but Gunthorpe brought home 
manuscripts. He gave the bulk of them to Jesus College, 
where only one or two are left; some have found their 
way to other Cambridge Colleges. 2 Another Oxford 
scholar, Robert Flemming, was in Italy in 1450: here he 
became the friend of the great librarian of the Vatican, 
Platina ; and got together a number of manuscripts, 
afterwards given to Lincoln College. 

VI 

The intercourse of all these scholars with Italians was 
carried on before mid-fifteenth century. Their chief interest 

1 MS. 587 Bodl. 

2 Leland 3 , 463 ; Leland, iii. 13 ; Einstein, 23, 54-5 ; C.A.S., 8vo ser., No. 32 
(1899), 13- 



194 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

was in Latin books, although a large number of Greek 
manuscripts had been brought to Italy by Angeli da 
Scarparia, Guarino, Giovanni Aurispa, and Filelfo. After 
the fall of Constantinople the Greek immigrants introduced 
books into Italy much more freely. George Hermonymus 
of Sparta, a Greek teacher and copyist of Greek manu- 
scripts, visited England on a papal mission in 1475, but 
whether he had any influence on our intellectual pursuits 
does not appear. 1 Certainly, however, English scholars 
soon appreciated this new literature. 

Letters sent to Pope Sixtus in 1484 by the king, refer 
to the skill of John Shirwood, bishop of Durham, in Latin 
and Greek. 2 Shirwood seems to have collected a respectable 
library. His Latin books were acquired by Bishop Foxe, 
and formed the nucleus of the library with which the latter 
endowed Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Some thirty 
volumes, a number of them printed, now remain at the 
College to bring him to mind : among them we find Pliny, 
Terence, Cicero, Livy, Suetonius, Plutarch, and Horace. 
Less fortunate has been the fate of his Greek books, which 
went to the collegiate church of Bishop Auckland. At the 
end of the fifteenth century this church owned about forty 
volumes. The only exceptions to its medieval character 
were Cicero's Letters and Offices, Silius Italicus, and 
Theodore Gaza's Greek grammar. 3 But Leland tells us 
that Tunstall, who succeeded to the bishopric in 1530, 
found a store of Shirwood's Greek manuscripts at this 
church. What became of them we do not know. 4 

About this same time a certain Emmanuel of Con- 
stantinople seems to have been employed in England as a 



1 E. H. R., xxv. 449. 

2 Rymer, Foedera, xii. 214, 216; E. H. R., xxv. 450. 

3 Now MS. li. 4, 1 6, at Cambridge University Library. 

4 On Shirwood's books see E. H. R., xxv. 449-53. 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 195 

copyist. For Archbishop Neville he produced a Greek 
manuscript containing some sermones judiciales of Demos- 
thenes, and letters of Aeschines, Plato, and Chion (I468). 1 
Dr. Montague James has shown that this manuscript of 
Emmanuel is by the same hand as the manuscripts known 
as the " Ferrar group," which comprises " a Plato and 
Aristotle now at Durham, two psalters in Cambridge 
libraries, a psalter and part of a Suidas at Oxford, and 
the famous Leicester Codex of the Gospels." 2 Dr. James 
believes the Plato and the Aristotle to have been transcribed 
for Neville by Emmanuel. In 1472 the archbishop's house- 
hold was broken up, and the " greete klerkys and famous 
doctors " of his entourage went to Cambridge. Among 
them, it is conjectured, was Emmanuel, and so it came to 
pass that three manuscripts in his writing have been at 
Cambridge ; two psalters, as we have said, are there now, 
and in the beginning of the sixteenth century one of them, 
with the Leicester Codex, was certainly in the hands of the 
Grey Friars at Cambridge. This happy fruit of Dr. James' 
research throws a welcome ray of light on the pursuit of 
Greek studies in the last quarter of the fifteenth century. 3 

In view of all the hard things which have been said of 
the religious, it is significant to find them taking a leading 
part in bringing Greek studies to England. We cannot 
collate all the instances here, but a few may be brought 
together. Two Benedictines named William of Selling and 
William Hadley, some time warden of Canterbury College, 
Oxford, were in Italy studying and buying books for 
three years after 1464.* The former became distinguished 
for his aptitude in learning the ancient tongues, and 

1 Leiden, Voss. MSS. Graec., 56. 

2 On this group see Harris, Jas. Rendel, The Leicester Codex. 

3 E. H. R., xxv. 446-7 j James. 

4 Liter ae Cant. (Rolls Ser.), iii. 239; cf. Campbell, Math for Hist, of 
H. vn., ii. 85, 114, 224. 



196 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

consequently won the friendship of Angelo Poliziano. 
At least two other visits to Italy were made by him ; 
the last being undertaken as an emissary of the king. 
On these occasions he got together as many Greek 
and Latin books as he could, and brought them a 
large and precious store to Canterbury. 1 For some 
reason the books were kept in the Prior's lodging 
instead of in the monastic library, and here they perished 
through the carelessness of Layton's myrmidons. 2 Among 
the books lost was possibly a copy of Cicero's Republic. 
Only five manuscripts have been found which can be con- 
nected with Selling's library: a fifteenth-century Greek 
Psalter, a copy of the Psalms in Hebrew and Latin, a 
Euripides, a Livy, and a magnificent Homer. 3 This 
Homer we have already referred to in an earlier chapter, 
when describing the work of Theodore of Tarsus. The 
signature eo&wpo? has now been more plausibly explained. 
" The following note," writes Dr. James, " which I found in 
Dr. Masters's copy of Stanley's Catalogue, preserved in 
[Corpus Christi] College Library, suggests another origin 
for this Homer. I have been unable to identify the docu- 
ment to which reference is made. It should obviously be a 
letter of an Italian humanist in the Harleian collection. . . . 
' Mem. : Humphrey Wanley, Librarian to the late Earl of 
Oxford, told Mr. Fran : Stanley, son of the author, a little 
before his death, that in looking over some papers in the 
papers in the Earl's library, he found a Letter from a learned 
Italian to his Friend in England, wherein he told him there 
was then a very stately Homer just transcribed for Theodorus 

1 Leland 3 , 482. The Obit in Christ Church MS. D. 12 refers to Selling as 
" Sacrae Theologiae Doctor. Hie in divinis agendis multum devotus et lingua 
Graeca et Latina valde eruditus." Gasquet 2 , 24. 

2 Gasquet 2 , 24 ; James, li. 

3 Homer and Euripides are in Corpus Christi College, Cambridge; the 
others are in Trinity College, Cambridge. James 16 , 9 ; Gasquet 2 , 30, 




A SCRIBE (ST. MARK WRITING HIS GOSPEL) 

FROM THE BEDFORD HOURS 



END OF THE MANUSCRIPT PERIOD 197 

Gaza, of whose Illumination he gives him a very particular 
description, which answer'd so exactly in every part to that 
here set forth, that he [Wanley] was fully perswaded it was 
this very Book, and y l the OeoSwpos at the bottom of 1st 
page order'd to be placed there by Gaza as his own name, 
gave occasion to Abp. Parker to imagine it might have 
belonged to Theodore of Canterbury, which however Hody 
was of opinion could not be of that age.' Th. Gaza," 
continues Dr. James, " died in 1478; the suggestion here 
made is quite compatible with the hypothesis that Sellinge 
was the means of conveying the Homer to England, 
and does supply a rather welcome interpretation of the 
OeoBwpos inscription." This reasonable hypothesis may 
be strengthened if we point out that Gaza was in Rome 
from 1464 to 1472, and Selling visited that city between 
1464 and 1467 and again in 1469. Selling may have got 
the manuscript from Gaza on one of these occasions. 

There is evidence of Greek studies at other monasteries, 
at Westminster after 1465, when Millyng, an "able 
graecian," became prior at Reading in 1499 and 1500, 
and at Glastonbury during the time of Abbot Bere. 1 

But Canterbury's share was greatest Selling seems 
to have taught Greek at Christ Church. In the monastic 
school there Thomas Linacre was instructed, and probably 
got the rudiments of Greek from Selling himself. Thence 
Linacre went to Oxford, where he pursued Greek under 
Cornelius Vitelli, an Italian visitor acting as praelector in 
New College. 2 In 14856 Linacre went with his old 
master to Italy his Sancta Mater Studiorum where Sell- 
ing seems to have introduced him to Poliziano. Linacre 
perfected his Greek pursuits under Chalcondylas, and 

1 Gasquet 2 , 37. 

2 The point is disputed ; cf. Einstein, 32 ; Lyte, 386 ; Camb. Lit., iii. 5, 6 ; 
Rashdall and Rait, New. Coll., 93 ; Dr. Sandys does not mention Vitelli. 



i 9 8 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

became acquainted with Aldo Manuzio the famous printer, 
and Hermolaus Barbarus. A little story is told of 
his meeting with Hermolaus. He was reading a copy of 
Plato's Phaedo in the Vatican Library when the great 
humanist came up to him and said " the youth had no 
claim, as he had himself, to the title Barbarus, if it were 
lawful to judge from his choice of a book " an incident 
which led to a great friendship between the two. Grocyn 
and Latimer were with Linacre in Rome. The former 
was the first to carry on effectively the teaching of Greek 
begun at Oxford possibly by Vitelli ; but he was neverthe- 
less a conservative scholar, well read in the medieval 
schoolmen, as his library clearly proves. This library is of 
interest because one hundred and five of the one hundred 
and twenty-one books in it were printed. The manuscript 
age is well past, and the costliness of books, the chief 
obstacle to the dissemination of thought, was soon to give 
no cause for remark. 



CHAPTER X 
THE BOOK TRADE 

SECULAR makers of books have plied their trade in 
Europe since classic times, but during the early age 
of monachism their numbers were very small and 
they must have come nigh extinction altogether. In and 
after the eleventh century they increased in numbers and 
importance ; their ranks being recruited not only by 
seculars trained in the monastic schools, but by monks 
who for various reasons had been ejected from their order. 
These traders were divided into several classes : parchment- 
makers, scribes, rubrishers or illuminators, bookbinders, 
and stationers or booksellers. The stationer usually con- 
trolled the operations of the other craftsmen ; he was the 
middleman. Scribes were either ordinary scriveners called 
librarii, or writers who drew up legal documents, known as 
notarii. But the librarius and notarius often trenched 
upon each other's work, and consequently a good deal of 
ill-feeling usually existed between them. 

Bookbinders, and booksellers or stationarii, probably 
first plied their trade most prosperously in England at 
Oxford and Cambridge. By about 1 1 80 quite a number of 
such tradesmen were living in Oxford ; a single document 
transferring property in Cat Street bears the names of 
three illuminators, a bookbinder, a scribe, and two parch- 
menters. 1 Half a century later a bookbinder is mentioned 

1 Rashdall, ii. 343. 

IQQ 



200 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

in a deed as a former owner of property in the parish of 
St. Peter's in the East ; another bookbinder is witness to the 
deed (c. 1232-4.0)}- After this bookbinders and others of 
the craft are frequently mentioned. Towards the end of the 
thirteenth century Schydyerd Street and Cat Street, the 
centre of University life, were the homes of many people 
engaged in bookmaking and selling; the former street 
especially was frequented by parchment makers and 
sellers. In this street, too, " a tenement called Bokbynder's 
is mentioned in a charter of I 363-4 ; and although book- 
binding may not have been carried on there at that date, 
the fact of the name having been attached to the place 
seems sufficient to justify the assumption that a binder 
or guild of binders had formerly been established there. 
In Cat Street a Tenementum Bokbyndere, owned by Osney 
Abbey, was rented in 1402 by Henry the lymner, at a some- 
what later date by Richard the parchment-seller, and in 
1453 by All Souls' College." 2 

Stationers had transcripts made, bought, sold and hired 
out books and received them in pawn. They acted as 
agents when books and other goods were sold; in 1389, for 
example, a stationer received twenty pence for his services 
in buying two books, one costing 4 and the other five 
marks. 3 They attended the fair at St. Giles near Oxford 
to sell books. This was not their only interest, for they 
dealt in goods of many kinds. They were in fact general 
tradesmen : sellers, valuers, and agents ; liable to be called 
upon to have a book copied, to buy or sell a book, to set a 
value upon a pledge, to make an inventory and valuation 
of a scholar's goods and chattels after his death. Their 
office was such an important one for the well-being of 

1 Biblio. Soc. Monogr. x. (S. Gibson), 43-6. 

2 Ibid., p. i ; O.ff.S., 29 ; Madan, 267, contains long list of references. 

3 0. H. S., 27, Boase, xxxvi. 



THE BOOK TRADE 201 

the scholars that it was found convenient to extend to 
them the privileges and protection of the University, and 
in return to exact an oath of fairdealing from them. 1 

Before the end of the thirteenth century the Univer- 
sity's privileges had been extended to servientes known 
as parchment-makers, scribes, and illuminators; in 1290 
the privileges were confirmed. 2 Certain stationers were 
then undoubtedly within the University as servientes t but 
in 1356 they are recorded positively as being so with parch- 
menters, illuminators, and writers: and again in 1459 " alle 
stationers " and " alle bokebynders " enjoyed the privileges 
of the University, with " lympners, wryters, and perge- 
meners." 3 These privileges took them out of the jurisdic- 
tion of the city, although they still had to pay taxes, which 
were collected by the University and paid over to the city 
treasurer. 

Stationers regarded as the University's servants were 
sworn, as we have already indicated. The document 
giving the form of their oath is undated, but most likely 
the rules laid down were observed from the time the 
stationers were first attached to the University. The oath 
was strict. A part of their duties was the valuation of 
books and other articles which were pledged by scholars 
in return for money from the University chests. These 
chests or hutches were expressly founded by wealthy men 
for the assistance of poor scholars. By the end of the 
fifteenth century there were at Oxford twenty-four such 
chests, valued at two thousand marks ; a large pawnbroking 
fund, but probably by no means too large. 4 Mr. Anstey, the 
editor of Munimenta Academica, has drawn a vivid picture 
of the inspection of one of these chests and of the business 

1 Cf. Grace B. A ix, xlii, xliii. ; O.H.S., 29, Madan, Early Oxf. Press, 266 ; 
Mun. Acad., 532, 544, 579. 

2 Mun. Acad., 52. 3 Ibid., 174, 346. 4 Ibid., xxxviii. 



202 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

conducted round them, and we cannot do better than 
reproduce it. Master T. Parys, principal of St. Mary Hall, 
and Master Lowson are visiting the chest of W. de Seltone. 
We enter St. Mary's Church with them, "and there we 
see ranged on either side several ponderous iron chests, 
eight or ten feet in length and about half that width, for 
they have to contain perhaps as many as a hundred or 
more large volumes, besides other valuables deposited as 
pledges by those who have borrowed from the chest. 
Each draws from beneath his cape a huge key, which one 
after the other are applied to the two locks ; a system of 
bolts, which radiate from the centre of the lid and shoot 
into the iron sides in a dozen different places, slide back, 
and the lid is opened. At the top lies the register of 
the contents, containing the particulars ; dates, names, 
and amounts of the loans granted. This they remove 
and begin to compare its statements with the contents of 
the chest. There are a large number of manuscript 
volumes, many of great value, beautifully illuminated and 
carefully kept, fof each is almost the sole valuable posses- 
sion perhaps of its owner ! Then the money remaining in 
one corner of the chest is carefully counted and compared 
with the account in the register. If we look in we can 
see also here and there among the books other valuables 
of less peaceful character. There lie two or three daggers 
of more than ordinary workmanship, and by them a silver 
cup or two, and again more than one hood lined with 
minever. By this time a number of persons has collected 
around the chest, and the business begins. That man in 
an ordinary civilian's dress who stands beside Master 
Parys is John More, the University stationer, and it is his 
office to fix the value of the pledges offered, and to take 
care that none are sold at less than their real value. It is 
a motley group that stands around ; there are several 



PLATE XXXII 




A SCR I HE AT WORK 



THE BOOK TRADE 203 

masters and bachelors, . . . but the larger proportion is of 
boys or quite young men in every variety of coloured dress, 
blue and red, medley, and the like, but without any 
academical dress. Many of them are very scantily clothed, 
and all have their attention rivetted on the chest, each with 
curious eye watching for his pledge, his book or his cup, 
brought from some country village, perhaps an old treasure 
of his family, and now pledged in his extremity, for last 
term he could not pay the principal of his hall the rent 
of his miserable garret, nor the manciple for his battels, but 
now he is in funds again, and pulls from his leathern 
money-pouch at his girdle the coin which is to repossess 
him of his property." x Naturally their duty as valuers of 
much-prized property invested the stationers with some 
importance. Their work was thought to be so laborious 
and anxious that about 1400 every new graduate was 
expected to give clothes to one of them ; such method of 
rewarding services with livery or clothing being common in 
the middle ages. 2 The form of their oath was especially 
designed to make them protect the chests from loss. All 
monies received by them for the sale of pledges were to be 
paid into the chests within eight days. The sale of a pledge 
was not to be deferred longer than three weeks. Without 
special leave they could not themselves buy the pledges, 
directly or indirectly : a wholesome and no doubt very 
necessary provision. Pledges were not to be lent for more 
than ten days. All pledges were to be honestly appraised. 
When a pledge was sold, the buyer's name was to be 
written in the stationer's indenture. No stationer could 
refuse to sell a pledge ; nor could he take it away from 
Oxford and sell it elsewhere. He was bound to mark all 
books exposed for sale, as pledges, in the usual way, by 
quoting the beginning of the second folio. All persons 

1 Mun. A cad., xl.-xlii. 2 Ibid., 253. 



204 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

lending books, whether stationers or other people, were 
bound to lend perfect copies. This oath was sworn afresh 
every year. 1 

Many stationers were not sworn. They speedily 
became serious competitors with the privileged traders. 
By 1 3 73 their number had increased largely, and restric- 
tions were imposed upon them. Books of great value were 
sold through their agency, and carried away from Oxford. 
Owners were cheated. All unsworn booksellers living within 
the jurisdiction of the University were forbidden, there- 
fore, to sell any book, either their own property, or belonging 
to others, exceeding half a mark in value. If disobedient 
they were liable to suffer pain of imprisonment for the first 
offence, a fine of half a mark for the second a curious 
example of graduated punishment and a prohibition to ply 
their trade within the precincts of the University for the 
third. 2 

At this time bookselling was a thriving trade. De 
Bury tells us : " We secured the acquaintance of stationers 
and scribes, not only within our own country, but of those 
spread over the realms of France, Germany and Italy, 
money flying forth in abundance to anticipate their demands : 
nor were they hindered by any distance, or by the fury of 
the seas, or by the lack of means for their expenses, from 
sending or bringing to us the books that we required." 3 

Records of various transactions are extant, of which the 
following may serve as examples. In 1445, a stationer and 
a lymner in his employ had a dispute, and as the two arbiters 
to whom the matter was referred failed to reach a settle- 
ment in due time, the Chancellor of the University stepped 
in and determined the quarrel. The judgment was as 
follows : the lymner, or illuminator, was to serve the 
stationer, in liminando bene et fideliter libros suos> for one 

1 Mun. Acad., 383-7. 2 Ibid., 233-4. 8 R. de B., 205. 



THE BOOK TRADE 205 

year, and meantime was to work for nobody else. His 
wage was to be four marks ten shillings of good English 
money. The lymner in person was to fetch the materials 
from his master's house, and to bring back the work when 
finished. He was to take care not to use the colours 
wastefully. The work was to be done well and faithfully, 
without fraud or deception. For the purpose of super- 
intending the work the stationer could visit the place 
where the lymner wrought, at any convenient time. 1 
The yearly wage for this lymner was nearly fifty pounds 
of our money. 

An inscription in one codex tells us it was pawned 
to a bookseller in 1480 for thirty-eight shillings. Pawn- 
broking was an important part of a bookseller's business. 
Lending books on hire was usual among both booksellers 
and tutors, for it was the exception, rather than the rule, 
for university students to own books, while in the college 
libraries there were sometimes not enough books to go 
round. For example, the statutes of St. Mary's College, 
founded in 1446, forbade a scholar to occupy a book in 
the library above an hour, or at most two hours, so that 
others should not be hindered from the use of them. 2 

At Cambridge the trade was not less flourishing. From 
time to time it was found necessary to determine whether 
the booksellers and the allied craftsmen were within the 
University's jurisdiction or not. In 1276 it was desired 
to settle their position as between the regents and scholars 
of the University and the Archdeacon of Ely. Hugh de 
Balsham, Bishop of Ely, when called in as arbiter, decided 
that writers, illuminators, and stationers, who exercise offices 
peculiarly for the behoof of the scholars, were answerable to 

1 Mun. Acad. y 550. 

2 Bodl. MS. Rawlinson, 34, fo. 21, Stat, Coll, S, Mariae pro Oseney : Dt 
Libraria, 



206 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

the Chancellor ; but their wives to the Archdeacon. Nearly 
a century later, in 135354, we find Edward III issuing a 
writ commanding justices of the peace of the county of 
Cambridge to allow the Chancellor of the University the 
conusance and punishment of all trespasses and excesses, 
except mayheim and felony, committed by stationers, 
writers, bookbinders, and illuminators, as had been the 
custom. But the question was again in debate in 1393-94, 
when the Chancellor and scholars petitioned Parliament to 
declare and adjudge stationers and bookbinders scholars' 
servants, as had been done in the case of Oxford. This 
petition does not seem to have been answered. But by 
the Barn well Process of 1430, it was decided that 
" transcribers, illuminators, bookbinders, and stationers have 
been, and are wont and ought to be as well by ancient 
usage from time immemorial undisturbedly exercised, as 
by concession of the Apostolic See the persons belong 
and are subject to the ecclesiastical and spiritual juris- 
diction of the Chancellor of the University for the time 
being." Again in 1503 was it agreed, this time between 
the University and the Mayor and burgesses of Cambridge, 
that " stacioners, lymners, schryveners, parchment-makers, 
boke-bynders," were common ministers and servants of the 
University and were to enjoy its privileges. 1 

Fairs were so important a means of bringing together 
buyers and sellers that we should expect books to be sold 
at them. And in fact they were. The preamble of an 
Act of Parliament reads as follows : " Ther be meny feyers 
for the comen welle of your seid lege people as at 
Salusbury, Brystowe, Oxenforth, Cambrigge, Notyngham, 
Ely, Coventre, and at many other places, where lordes 
spirituall and temporall, abbotes, Prioures, Knyghtes, 
Squerys, Gentilmen, and your seid Comens of every Countrey, 

1 Cooper, i. 57, 104, 141, 262 j cf, Biblio. Soc. Monogr. 13, p. 1-6. 



THE BOOK TRADE 207 

hath their comen resorte to by and purvey many thinges 
that be gode and profytable, as ornaments of holy church 
chaleis, bokes, vestmentes [etc.] . . . also for howsold, as vytell 
for the tyme of Lent, and other Stuff, as Lynen Cloth, wolen 
Cloth, brasse, pewter, beddyng, osmonde, Iren, Flax and Wax 
and many other necessary thinges." * The chief fairs for 
the sale of books were those of St. Giles at Oxford, at 
Stourbridge, Cambridge, and St. Bartholomew's Fair in 
London. 

London, however, speedily asserted its right to be 
regarded as England's publishing centre. The booksellers 
with illuminators and other allied craftsmen established 
themselves in a small colony in " Paternoster Rewe," 
and they attended St. Bartholomew's Fair to sell books. 
By 1403 the Stationers' Company, which had long been 
in existence, was chartered ; its headquarters were in 
London, at a hall in Milk Street. This guild did not 
confine its attention to the book-trade ; nor did the book- 
sellers sell only books. Often, indeed, this was but a small 
part of general mercantile operations. For example, 
William Praat, a London mercer, obtained manuscripts 
for Caxton. Grocers also sold manuscripts, parchment, 
paper and ink. King John of France, while a prisoner in 
England in 1360, bought from three grocers of Lincoln 
four " quaires " of paper, a main of paper and a skin of 
parchment, and three " quaires " of paper. From a scribe 
of Lincoln named John he also bought books, some of 
which are now in the Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris. 2 

We have a record of an interesting transaction which 
took place at the end of the manuscript period (1469). 
One William Ebesham wrote to his most worshipful and 

1 3 H. vii., cap. 9, 10, Stat. of the Realm, ii. 518. 

2 Donn^e des comptes des Roys de France, au 14 siecle (1852), 227 ; Putnam, 
i. 312 ; Library, v. 3-4. 



208 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

special master, Sir John Paston, asking, in a hesitating, 
cringing sort of way, for the payment of his little bill, 
which seems to have been a good deal overdue, as is the 
way with bills. All this service most lowly he recommends 
unto his good mastership, beseeching him most tenderly 
to see the writer somewhat rewarded for his labour in the 
" Grete Boke " which he wrote unto his said good master- 
ship. And he winds up his letter with a request for alms 
in the shape of one of Sir John's own gowns ; and beseeches 
God to preserve his patron from all adversity, with which 
the writer declares himself to be somewhat acquainted. 
He heads his bill : Following appeareth, parcelly, divers 
and sundry manner of writings, which I William Ebesham 
have written for my good and worshipful master, Sir John 
Paston, and what money I have received, and what is 
unpaid. For writing a " litill booke of Pheesyk " he was 
paid twenty pence. Other writing he did for twopence 
a leaf. Hoccleve's de Regimine Principum he wrote 
for one penny a leaf, " which is right wele worth." 
Evidently Ebesham did not find scrivening a too profit- 
able occupation. 1 

1 Gairdner, Paston letters, v. 1-4, where the whole bill is transcribed. 






CHAPTER XI 

THE CHARACTER OF THE MEDIEVAL LIBRARY, 
AND THE EXTENT OF CIRCULATION OF BOOKS 

" Some ther be that do defye 
All that is newe, and ever do crye 
The olde is better, away with the new 
Because it is false, and the olde is true. 
Let them this booke reade and beholde, 
For it preferreth the learning most olde." 
A Comparison betwene the old learnynge and the newe (i$37). 1 



AFTER a storm a fringe of weed and driftwood 
stretches a serried line along the sands, and now 
and then too often on the flat shores of one of 
our northern estuaries, whence can be seen the white teeth 
of the sea biting at the shoals flanking the fairway are 
mingled with the flotsam sodden relics of life aboard ship 
and driftwood of tell-tale shape, which silently point to a 
tragedy of the sea. Usually the daily paper completes 
the tale ; but on some rare occasion these poor bits of 
drift remain the only evidence of the vain struggle, and 
from them we must piece together the narrative as best 
we can. And as the sea does not give up everything, nor 
all at once, some wreckage sinking, or perishing, or float- 
ing upon the water a long time before finding a well- 
concealed hiding-place upon some unfrequented shore, so 
the past yields but a fraction of its records, and that 

1 Cited in Gasquei*, 17. 
14 




210 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

fraction slowly and grudgingly. So far this book has 
been a gathering of the flotsam of a past age : odd relics 
and scattered records, a sign here and a hint there ; often 
unrelated, sometimes contradictory. In more skilful hands 
possibly a coherent story might be wrought out of these 
pieces justificatives ; but the author is too well aware of 
the difficulty of arranging and selecting from the mass of 
material, remembers too well the tale of mistakes thank- 
fully avoided, and is too apprehensive that other errors 
lurk undiscovered, to be confident that he has succeeded 
in his aim. Whether the story is worth telling is another 
matter. Surely it is. To be able to follow the history 
of the Middle Ages, to become acquainted with the people, 
their mode of life and customs and manners, is of profound 
interest and great utility ; and it is by no means the least 
important part of such study to discover what books they 
had, how extensively the books were read, and what 
section of the people read them. 

Let us here sum up the information given in detail in 
the foregoing pages ; adding thereto some other facts of 
interest. And first, what of the character of the medieval 
library ? 

During the earlier centuries monastic libraries con- 
tained books which were deemed necessary for gram- 
matical study in the claustral schools, and other books, 
chiefly the Fathers, as we have seen, which were regarded 
as proper literature for the monk. The books used in the 
cathedral schools were similar. Such schools and such 
libraries were for the glory of God and the increase of 
clergy and religious. At first, especially, the ideal of the 
monks was high, if narrow. It is epitomised in the 
untranslatable epigram Claustrum sine armario (esf] 
quasi castrum sine armamentaria^ " The library is the 
1 Martene, Thesaurus t i. 511. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 211 

monastery's true treasure," writes Thomas a Kempis ; 1 
" without which the monastery is like ... a well without 
water ... an unwatched tower." Again : " Let not the 
toil and fatigue pain you. They who read the books 
formerly written beautifully by you will pray for you 
when you are dead. And if he who gives a cup of cold 
water shall not lack his guerdon, still less shall he who 
gives the living water of wisdom lose his reward in 
heaven." 2 St. Bernard wrote in like terms. Books were 
their tools, "the silent preachers of the divine word," or 
the weapons of their armoury. " Thence it is," writes a 
sub-prior to his friend, " that we bring forth the sentences 
of the divine law, like sharp arrows, to attack the enemy. 
Thence we take the armour of righteousness, the helmet 
of salvation, the shield of faith, and the sword of the 
Spirit which is the Word of God." 3 With such an end 
in view Reculfus of Soissons required his clergy to have 
a missal, a lectionary, the Gospels, a martyrology, an 
antiphonary, a psalter, a book of forty homilies of Gregory, 
and as many Christian books as they could get (879). 
With this end in view were chosen for reading in the 
Refectory at Durham (1395) such books as the Bible, 
homilies, Legends of the Saints, lives of Gregory, Martin, 
Nicholas, Dunstan, Augustine, Cuthbert, King Oswald, Aidan, 
Thomas of Canterbury, and other saints. 4 With this end 
in view the monastic libraries contained a very large 
proportion of Bibles, books of the Bible, and commentaries 
a proportion suggesting the Scriptures were studied with 
a closeness and assiduity for which the monks have not 
always received due credit. 5 A great deal of room was 



1 Opera, fo. 1523. Fo. xlvii. 7, Doctrinale juvenum, c. v. 

2 Ibid., c. iv. 3 Maitland, 200. 

4 Surtees Soc., vii. 80. 

5 V. Catalogues in Becker ; James (M. R. ) ; Bateson ; Surtees Soc., vii. ; etc. 



212 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

given up to the works of the Fathers their confessions, 
retractations, and letters, their polemics against heresies, 
their dogmatic and doctrinal treatises, and their sermons 
and ethical discourses. Of all these writings those of 
Hilary, Basil, Ambrose, Chrysostom, Jerome, and the great 
Augustine were most popular. John Cassian, Leo, Prosper, 
Cassiodorus, Gregory the Great, Aldhelm, Bede, Anselm, 
and Bernard, and the two encyclopaedists, Martianus Capella 
and Isidore of Seville, were the church's great teachers, and 
their works and the sacred poetry and hymns of Juvencus 
the Spanish priest, of Prudentius, of Sedulius, the author 
of a widely-read and influential poem on the life of Christ, 
and of Fortunatus, were nearly always well represented in 
the monastic catalogues, as may be seen on a cursory 
examination of those of Christ Church and St. Augustine's, 
Canterbury, of Durham, of Glastonbury in 1248, of Peter- 
borough in 1400, and of Syon in the sixteenth century. 
In the earlier libraries the greater part of the books were 
Scriptural and theological ; to these were added later a 
mass of books on canon and civil law ; so that the 
monastic collection may be characterised as almost entirely 
special and fit for Christian service, as this service was 
conceived by the religious. 

And classical literature was received into the fold for a 
like purpose. From the earliest days of Christendom 
prejudice against the classics was widespread among 
Christians. Such books, it was urged, had no connexion 
with the Church or the Gospel ; Ciceronianism was not the 
road to God ; Plato and Aristotle could not show the way 
to happiness ; Ovid, above all, was to be avoided. 1 In 
dreams the poets took the form of demons ; they must be 
exorcised, for the soul did not profit by them. The precepts 
and for these the Christian sought in the poems were 

1 Sandys, i. 638 ; and see Jerome, Ep. xxii., ed. 1734, i. 114. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 213 

like serpents, born of the evil one ; the characters, devils. 
Some Christians sighed as they thrust the tempting books 
away. Jerome frankly confesses he cared little for the 
homely Latin of the Psalms, and much for Plautus and 
Cicero. For a time he renounced them with other vanities 
of the world ; yet when going through the catacombs at 
Rome, where the Apostles and Martyrs had their graves, a 
fine line of Virgil thrills him ; and later he instructed boys 
at Bethlehem in Plautus, Terence, and Virgil, much to the 
horror of Rufinus. Even in the eleventh century this feeling 
existed. Lanfranc wrote to Dumnoaldus to say it was un- 
befitting he should study such books, but he confessed 
that although he now renounced them, he had read them 
a good deal in his youth. Somewhat later Herbert 
" Losinga," abbot of Ramsey, had a dream which led him 
to cease reading and imitating Virgil and Ovid ; but else- 
where he recommends his pupils to accept Ovid as a model 
in Latin verse, while he quotes the Tristia. 1 The rules of 
some orders, as those of Isidore, St. Francis, and St. 
Dominic, forbade the reading of the classics, save by per- 
mission. For their value in teaching grammar and as 
models of literary style, however, certain classic authors 
especially Virgil, Ovid, Cicero, Horace, Juvenal, and Statius 
were regarded as supplementary to the grammatical 
works of Donatus, Victorinus, Macrobius, and Priscian, and 
were studied by the religious throughout the Middle Ages. 
They were grammatical text-books, as indeed they are still ; 
but then they were very little else. A man would call 
himself Virgil, not from inordinate vanity, but from a naive 
pride in his profession of grammarian : to his way of thinking 
the great poet was no more. 2 " As decade followed decade," 
writes Mr. H. O. Taylor, " and century followed century, 
there was no falling off in the study of the ALneid. Virgil's 

1 Sandys i. 618. 2 Comparetti, Vergil in the M. A., 77. 



214 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

fame towered, his authority became absolute. But how? 
In what respect? As a supreme master of grammatical 
correctness and rhetorical excellence and of all learning. 
With increasing emptiness of soul, the grammarians the 
' Virgils ' of the succeeding centuries put the great poet to 
ever baser uses." 1 

From time to time the use of the classics even for 
grammatical purposes was condemned, though unavailingly. 
They were necessary in the schools ; evils, doubtless, but 
unavoidable. Then, again, some of the classics were looked 
upon as allegorical : from the sixth century to the Renascence 
the ALneid was often interpreted in this way ; and Virgil's 
Fourth Eclogue was thought to be a prophecy of Christ's 
coming. Ovid allegorised contained profound truths ; his 
Art of Love, so treated, was not unfit for nuns. 2 Other 
writers, as Lucan, were appreciated for their didacticism ; 
Juvenal, Cato and Seneca the younger as moralists. And 
some of the religious fell a prey to these evils, inasmuch as 
they assessed them at their true value as literature. 

The classics therefore were accepted. Anselm recom- 
mended Virgil. Horace, in his most amorous moods, was 
sung by the monks. Ovid, either adapted or in his natural 
state, was a great favourite. In an appendix we have 
scheduled the chief classics found in English monastic 
catalogues to indicate roughly the extent to which they 
were collected and used. A glance at Becker's sheaf of 
catalogues will show us that Aristotle, Horace, Juvenal, 
Lucan, Persius, Plato, Pliny the elder, Porphyry, Sallust, 
Statius, Terence, and especially Cicero, Ovid, Seneca, and 
Virgil are well represented. But it must not be supposed 
that they were in monastic libraries in excessive numbers. 
On the contrary. An inspection of almost any catalogue of 

1 Taylor, Classical Heritage, 37. 

2 Sandys, i. 638-39 ; see what is said about use of Ovid at Canterbury. 



PL A TE XXXIII 



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ENGLISH ILLUMINATED WORK UNDER FRENCH INFLUENCE 

THIRTEENTH CENTURY 
FROM "TENISON PSALTER," BRIT. MUS. ADD. MS. 24686, F. 12 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 215 

such a library will prove that only a small proportion of it 
consisted of classical writings, especially in those catalogues 
compiled prior to the time when Aristotle's works dominated 
the whole of medieval scholarship. The monastic library 
was throughout the Middle Ages the armoury of the 
religious against evil, and the few slight changes of character 
which it underwent at one time and another do not alter 
the fact that on the whole it was a fit and proper collection 
for its purpose. 1 

5" 

After the twelfth century broadening influences were at 
work. The education given in the cathedral and monastic 
schools was found to be too restricted ; the monasteries, 
moreover, now began to refuse assistance to secular students. 2 
To some extent the catechetic method of the theologians 
was forced to give place to the dialectic method, equally 
dogmatic, but more exciting and stimulating. Hence 
was compiled such a book as Peter Lombard's Sentences 
(l 14550), a cyclopaedia of disputation, wherein theological 
questions were collected under heads, together with Scriptural 
passages and statements of the Fathers bearing on these 
questions. By the thirteenth century Lombard was the 
standard text-book of the schools : a work of such reputation 
that it was studied in preference to the Scriptures, as 
Bacon complained. 

A demand also arose for instruction in civil and canon 
law, which the existing schools did not supply. This 
broader learning was provided in the early universities, at 
first to the dislike of the Church, and sometimes to the 

1 On the use of classics in the Middle Ages see Sandys, i. 630 (Plautus and 
Terence), 631 (Lucretius), 633 (Catullus and Virgil), 635 (Horace), 638 (Ovid), 
641 (Lucan), 642 r (Statius), 643 (Martial), 644 (Juvenal), 645 (Persius), 648 
(Cicero), 653 (Seneca), 654 (Pliny), 655 (Quintilian), etc. 

2 Rashdall, i. 42. 



216 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

annoyance of royal heads. Particular objection was taken 
to the study of law. An Italian named Vicario (Vacarius) 
lectured on Justinian at Oxford in 1 149. Then he abridged 
the Code and Digest for his students there. King Stephen 
forbade him to proceed with his lectures, and prohibited the 
use of treatises on foreign law, many manuscripts of which 
were consequently destroyed. But these measures were 
not very effectual. Within a short time civil law became 
recognised in the University as a proper subject of study. 
By 1275, when another Italian jurist named Francesco 
d'Accorso, a distinguished teacher at Bologna, came to 
Oxford to lecture, the study of civil law was pursued with 
the royal favour. 1 

The searcher among old wills cannot fail to be struck 
with the number of law books in the small private libraries. 
Sometimes the whole of one of these little collections con- 
sists of law books ; often there are more books of this 
kind than of any other. For example, of eighty books 
bequeathed by Prior Eastry to Christ Church, Canterbury, 
forty-three were on canon and civil law : of eighty-four 
books given to Trinity Hall, Cambridge, by the founder, 
exactly one-half were juridical. A wealthy canon of York 
left but half a dozen books, all on law. The books be- 
queathed to Peterborough Abbey by successive abbots were 
chiefly on law. Many other examples could be recited. 
There was a reason for this. Friar Bacon, writing in 1271, 
complained that jurists got all rewards and benefices, while 
students of theology and philosophy lacked the means of 
livelihood, could not obtain books, and were unable to pursue 
their scientific studies. Canonists, even, were only rewarded 
because of their previous knowledge of civil law : at Oxford 
three years had to be devoted to the study of civil law 
before a student could be admitted as bachelor of canon 

1 Lyte, 88-89 ; Einstein, 180. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 217 

law. Consequently a man of parts, with a leaning towards 
theological and philosophical learning, took up the study of 
civil law, with the hope of more easily winning preferment. 1 
" Compared with such [legal] lore," writes Mr. Mullinger, 
" theological learning became but a sorry recommendation 
to ecclesiastical preferment ; most of the Popes at Avignon 
had been distinguished by their attainments in a subject 
which so nearly concerned the temporal interests of the 
Church ; and the civilian and the canonist alike looked down 
with contempt on the theologian, even as Hagar, to use the 
comparison of Holcot, despised her barren mistress." 2 The 
most casual glance through some pages of monastic records 
will show how frequent and endless was the litigation in 
which the Church was engaged, and consequently how use- 
ful a knowledge of civil law would be. 

But these changes were trifling compared with the 
stimulus given to medieval learning by the influx of Greek 
books and of Arabic versions of them. In the second half 
of the eleventh century the works of Galen and Hippocrates 
were re-introduced into Italy from the Arabian empire by a 
North African named Constantine, who translated them 
at the famous monastery of Monte Cassino. These trans- 
lations, with the numerous Arabian commentaries, and 
the conflict of the physicians of the new school with those 
of the old and famous school of Salerno, constitute the 
revival of medical studies which occurred at that time. 3 
It would seem that this revival was felt quickly in England, 
as in the twelfth century four books by Galen and two by 
Hippocrates, with some Arabian works, were to be found 
in the monastic library of Durham ; a number significant of 
the liberal feeling of the monks of this house, inasmuch as 
in all the catalogues transcribed by Becker appear only 

1 Bacon, Op. ined., 84, 148. 2 Mullinger, 211. 

3 Rashdall, i. 77-8. 



2i8 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

ten books by Galen and nine by Hippocrates. 1 Before 
1150 the whole of the Organon of Aristotle was known to 
scholars ; 2 but not till about that time did the other works 
begin to be exported from Arabic Spain. Then Latin 
versions of Arabic translations of the Physics and Meta- 
physics were first made. 

Daniel of Morley (fl. 1 170-90) brought into this country 
manuscripts of Aristotle, and commentaries upon him got 
in the Arab schools of Toledo, then the centre of Moham- 
medan learning. Michael the Scot (r. 1 175 1234), 
" wondrous wizard, of dreaded fame," was another agent 
of the Arab influence. He received his education perhaps 
at Oxford, certainly at Paris and Toledo. From manu- 
scripts obtained at the last place he translated two 
abstracts of the Historia animalium^ and some com- 
mentaries of Averroes on Aristotle (1215 3o). 3 A third 
pilgrim from these islands, Alfred the Englishman, also 
made use of Arabic versions ; and most likely both he 
and Michael brought home with them manuscripts from 
Toledo and Paris. Of the renderings made by these men 
and by some foreign workers in the same field, Friar Bacon 
speaks with the utmost contempt. Their writings were 
utterly false. They did not know the sciences they dealt 
with. The Jews, the Arabs, and the Greeks, who had good 
manuscripts, destroyed and corrupted them, rather than let 
them fall into the hands of unlettered and ignorant 
Christians. 4 Aristotle should be read in the original, he 
also says ; it would be better if all translations were burnt. 
The criticism is acrid ; but the men he contemns served 
scholarship well by quickening the interest in Greek books, 

1 Becker, 244. 2 Cf. Becker, index. 

3 On Michael, see Bacon, Op. maj., 36, 37; Dante, Inferno, xx. 116; 
Boccaccio, 8 day, 9 novel ; Scott, Lay, II. xi. ; Brown, Life and Legend of 
M. S. (1897). 

4 Bacon, Op. ined., Comp. stud., 472 (Rolls Series). 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 219 

and they succeeded so well because they gave to the 
schoolmen not only versions of Aristotle's text, but 
commentaries and elucidations written by Arabs and 
Jews who had carefully studied the text, and could 
explain the meaning of obscure passages in it. 1 

When these translations were coming to England, 
travellers were bringing Greek books directly from the 
East. A doctor of medicine named William returned to 
Paris from Constantinople in 1167, carrying with him 
"many precious Greek codices." 2 About 1209 a Latin 
translation of Aristotle's Physics or Metaphysicsvws made from 
a Greek manuscript brought straight from Constantinople. 
Some of these few importations were certainly destroyed 
at once, probably all were, for Aristotle was proscribed in 
Paris in the following year, and again in 1215, at the 
very time when Michael the Scot was procuring versions 
in another direction, at Toledo. 3 Not until mid-thirteenth 
century was the ban wholly removed. 

For a time, owing to the capture of Constantinople by 
the Crusaders, intercourse between East and West had 
become far freer than it had been for centuries (120361). 
Certain Greek philosophers of learned mien came to 
England about 1202, but did not stay; and some 
Armenians, among them a bishop, visited St. Albans. 
Whether they or Nicholas the Greek, clerk to the abbot 
of that monastery, brought books with them we do not 
know ; Nicholas, at any rate, seems to have assisted 
Grosseteste in his Greek studies. 4 John of Basingstoke, 



1 In Peterhouse Library, Cambridge, is a manuscript of Aristotle's Meta- 
physica, with Latin translations from the Arabic and the Greek in parallel 
columns : the one being called the old translation, the other the new. The 
manuscript is of the thirteenth or fourteenth century. James 8 , 43. 

2 Gasquet 3 , 143-44 ; see other instances, Camb. Mod. Hist., i. 588. 

3 Jourdain, Recherches . . . traductions Latines cCA., 187 ; Gasquet 3 , 148. 

4 Paris, Chron. Maj., iv. 232-3 ; cp. Bacon, Op. ined., 91, 434. 



220 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Grosseteste's archdeacon, carried Greek manuscripts many 
valuable manuscripts, we are told from Athens, whither 
Grosseteste had sent him. The bishop himself imported 
books to this country, probably from Sicily and South 
Italy. 1 He had a copy of Suidas' Lexicon, possibly the 
earliest copy brought to the West. The Testaments of the 
Twelve Patriarchs was also in Grosseteste's possession : the 
manuscript was brought home by John of Basingstoke, and 
still exists in the Cambridge University Library. 2 These 
forged Testaments were translated by Nicholas the Greek, 
and as no fewer than thirty-one copies of the Latin version 
still remain they must have had a good circulation. 8 
Possibly the Greek Octateuch (Genesis to Ruth), now in 
the Bodleian Library, was imported into this country by 
Grosseteste or by somebody for him ; at one time the 
manuscript was in the library of Christ Church, Canterbury. 4 
Among other Greek books which Grosseteste used and 
translated, or had translated under his direction, were the 
Epistles of St. Ignatius, a Greek romance of Asenath, the 
Egyptian wife of the patriarch Joseph, and some writings 
of Dionysius the Areopagite. At Ramsey, where the 
bishop's influence may be suspected, Prior Gregory (fl. 1 290) 
owned a Grseco-Latin psalter, still extant. 5 Possibly all the 
importations were of similar character, and the number of 
them cannot have been great or we should have heard more 
of them. 

Friar Bacon, writing about 1 270, complains that he could 
not get all the books he wanted, nor were the versions of 
the books he had satisfactory. Parts of the Scriptures were 
untranslated, as, for example, two books of Maccabees, 

1 Stevenson, 224, 227; Camb. Mod. Hist., i. 586 ; James, Ixxxvi. 

2 MS. Ff. i. 24; Paris, C.M. iv. 232; cf. v. 285. 3 Sandys, i. 576. 

4 Now Canon, gr. 35 Bodleian ; James, Ixxxvi. This may be the Liber 
grccorum in the list of books repaired in 1508. James, Ixxxvi., 163. 

5 James 16 , 10. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 221 

which he knew existed in Greek, and books of the Prophets 
referred to in the books of Kings and Chronicles ; the 
chronology of the Antiquities of Josephus was incorrectly 
rendered, and biblical history could not be usefully studied 
without a true version of this book. Books of the Hebrew 
and Greek expositors were almost wanting to the Latins : 
Origen, Basil, Gregory, Nazianzene, John of Damascus, 
Dionysius, Chrysostom, and others, both in Hebrew and 
Greek. 1 The scientific books of Aristotle, of Avicenna, of 
Seneca, and other ancients could only be had at great cost. 
Their principal works had not been translated into Latin. 
" The admirable books of Cicero De Republica are not to 
be found anywhere, as far as I can hear, although I have 
made anxious inquiry for them in different parts of the 
world and by various messengers." 2 

The period during which the intellectual life of the 
Middle Ages was broadened by the introduction of new 
knowledge and ideas originally from Greek sources, began, 
as we have said, with the influx of translations from the 
Arabic. The movement culminated with the work of 
William of Moerbeke, Greek Secretary at the Council of 
Lyons (1274), who, between 1270 and 1281, translated 
several of Aristotle's works from the Greek, including the 
Rhetorica and the Politico,. Fortunately we have a record 
belonging to this time of a collection of books which shows 
admirably the character of the change. A certain John of 
London (V. 1 270-1 330), believed to have been Bacon's 
pupil, probably became a monk of St. Augustine's Abbey, 
Canterbury, and in due course bequeathed a library of 
books to his house. This collection amounted to nearly 
eighty books, of which twenty-three were on mathematics 
and astronomy, a like number on medicine, ten on 
philosophy, six on logic, four historical, three on grammar, 

1 Op. Maj. , 46. z Op. Tertium, p. 55, 56. 



222 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

one poetry, and the rest collections. 1 Such a collection is 
remarkable not only for its character, but on account of its 
size, which was very large for anybody to own privately in 
that age. 

HI 

On one occasion, after spending much time in search- 
ing wills and in examining catalogues without finding a 
reference to an interesting book to either an ancient or a 
medieval classic the writer well remembers the little 
shock of pleasure he felt when, in a single half-hour, he 
noted Piers Plowman in one brief unpromising will, and 
six English books among the relics of a mason. Nearly 
all the libraries of private persons and of academies are 
depressing in character. Rarely can be found a bright 
human book gleaming like a diamond in the dust. Score 
after score of decreta, decretales, Sextuses, and Clementines, 
and chestsful of the dreariest theological disquisition impress 
upon the weary searcher the fact that academic libraries 
were usually even more dryasdust than monastic collec- 
tions, and he begins to understand how prosperous law 
may be as a^ calling, and to have an inkling of what is 
known, in classic phrase, as a good plain Scotch education. 

Between an academic library and a monastic collection 
there were differences of character and in the beauty and 
value of the manuscripts. As a general rule a large pro- 
portion of the monks' books were more or less richly 
ornamented : they were the treasures as well as the tools 
of the community. The books of the colleges were usually 
for practical purposes : they were tools, treasured, doubtless, 
for their contents, not for the beauty of the writing or 
because they were decorated. The difference in character 
of the collections as a whole was one of proportion in the 

1 James (M. R.), Ixxiv. 



PLATE XXXIV 




CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 223 

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. 1 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. 121 2), called Graecismus, because it includes a chapter 
on derivations from the Greek ; and a very large book, the 



1 Mun. Acad^ 86, 430, 444 ; cf. Lyte, 235. Donatus came to be regarded as 
a synonymous term for grammar. In Piers Plowman a grammatical lesson or 
text-book is called " Donet." A Greek grammar was called a "Donatus 
Graecorum." 



224 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

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, firmest, benigne, 
Ignaveopz, probe vel avare sive severe, 
Inde nove, plene, vel abunde sive proterve, 
Dicis in er vel' in e, quamvis sint ilia sectmdae," 

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. 1 

Next to the figure of Grammar is Rhetoric, with Cicero 

1 Mun. Acad., 441. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 225 

seated beneath. Cicero, with Aristotle, Quintilian and 
Boethius 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 (Rhetoricd), De Orator e, the Ad Herennium 
ascribed to Cicero, Quintilian's Institutes and the Declama- 
tiones 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 Boethius' 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, Boethius was the guide. 
With Astronomy is associated Ptolemy. The Cosmo- 
graphia 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 com- 
panion. Arithmetic is associated with Pythagoras in the 
picture : for this subject Boethius was the text-book. 1 

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 

1 In the right-hand doorway of the west front of Chartres Cathedral are 
figures of the Seven Arts, Grammar being associated with Priscian, Logic with 
Aristotle, Rhetoric with Cicero, Music with Pythagoras, Arithmetic with 
Nicomachus, Geometry with Euclid, and Astronomy with Ptolemy. Cf. 
Marriage, Sculp, of Chartres Cat A., 71-73 (1909). 



226 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

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 " 

"Wei 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. 1 

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 

1 On medieval studies see further Mun. Acad,, 34, 242-43, 285, 412-13; 
Sandys, i. 670. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 227 

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, ^Eneas 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. 1 

iv 

In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries romances 
began to creep into all libraries, save the academic, in 

1 Oxford Stat., c. 21. 



228 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

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." l Thomas Nashe, in his 
story of The Unfortunate Traveller^ describes romances as 
" the fantasticall dreams of those exiled Abbie lubbers," 
that is, the monks. 2 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 Erie 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 Beau- 
champ bequeathed romances to Bordesley Abbey (i 3 i 5). _ 
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 J33! a work of such interest that he kept it in his 

1 Toxophilus, Arber's ed., p. 19. 2 Camb. Eng. Lit., iii. 364. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 229 

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. 1 

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, Charle- 
magne, Alexander, which was of the best of romances, 
Guy of Warwick, which was very popular, and the semi- 
historical Richard Cceur 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 C<zsar* the emperour, 
Of Greece and Troy the strong stryf, 
Ther many a man lost his lyfe : 
Of Brut? 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 Gaiveyn, 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 Iscnbras, 
Of Ydoine and Amadas?* 



1 Cf. Warton, ii. 95. 2 By Jehan de Tuim, c. 1240. 

3 Wace or Layamon. 

4 Amadas et Idoine, an anonymous Norman French poem of the twelfth 
century. 



2 3 o OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Again, many " speak of men who read romances 

Of Bevys?- Gy, and Gwayane, 

Of Kyng Rychard, and Owayne, 

Of Tristram and Percyvayle, 

Of Rowland Ris* and Aglavaule, 

Of Archeroun, and of Octavian, 

Of Charles, and of Cassibelan. 

Of Keveloke? Home, 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, some- 
times 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 lewde men y undyrtoke 
On Englyssh tunge to make thys boke : 
For many ben of swyche manere 
That talys and rymys wyl blethly 4 here, 
Ye gamys and festys, and at the ale." 6 

1 Sir Beves of Hamtoun (Fr. 13 cent., Eng. 14 cent.). 

2 Character in romance of Tristrem, by Thomas the Rymer. 

3 Haveloke. For other metrical catalogues see first and second prologues to 
Richard Cceur de Lion. Ritson, Anc, Eng. Metr. Romances t i. 55. 

4 Gladly, blithely. 

5 From beginning of Handlyng Synne, by Robert Mannying of Brunne. 



PL A TE 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. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 231 

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 in- 
complete 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 



s 3 2 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

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 
Ethel wold. 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 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 233 

on the continent ; of the library of York ; of Bede's work- 
shop 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. 1 

Outside this small circle the people were almost book- 
less : 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 

1 Bateson x. ; Gasquet 4 , 30-31 ; James (M.R.), 148. 



234 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



owne use and at hir owne liberte durynge hur lyfe, and after 

hur 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 (I46O)." 1 
A manuscript now in Wor- 
cester 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 book- 
seller named Hunt for twenty 
shillings, in the presence of 
Will. Westgate, monk? In a 
manuscript of the Sentences is 
a note telling us that it was 
the property of Roger, arch- 
deacon of Lincoln : he bought 
it from Geoffrey the chaplain, 
^ ie brother of Henry, vicar of 
North Elkington, the witnesses 
being master Robert de Luda, 

clerk, Richard the almoner, the said Henry the vicar, his 

1 Written at the end of the manuscript, which is in the Douce collection. 
Warton, i. 182-83. 

2 MS. Burney, 11 ; James (M.R.), 515. 




CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 235 

clerk, and others. 1 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. 2 

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 

1 B.M. MS. Reg., 9 B ix. I. 2 Lyte, 135. 



236 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

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, Y son e 
of John Swanne of Bridlington, in Y counte of Yorke, have putte 
me servante unto William Osbarne, forto serve him undir Y foorme 
of a servante for Y terme of iiii. yere, and Y se ide William Osbarne 
forto enfoorme Y seide John Swann in Y kunnyng of writyng, and 
Y seide John Swann forto have Y fi fst y ere of Y 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 Y secunde yeere xiijs. iiijd., and in Y u 'j- vere xxs - an d a 
gowne, and in > e iiij. yeere xls. And in Y witnesse hereof, etc." 



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." 2 Such students 
would not be likely to have many or perhaps any books. 
" The stock of books possessed by \kzyounger 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 

1 Mun. Acad., 665. Cf. p. 66l. 2 Mun. Acad., ci. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 237 

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." 1 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. I29O). 2 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 some- 
times used to prove how easy it was to make a small 
collection of books. Chaucer's poems display his acquaint- 
ance, more or less thoroughly, with many authors. Surely, 

1 Mun. Acad., Ixxvii. 2 Lytc, 93. 



238 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

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. Pro- 
fessor 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." 1 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." 2 

In composite volumes often only the earlier parts of 
authors' works were included. If Chaucer owned a few 

1 Lounsbury, Studies in Chaucer, ii. 265. 

2 Wife of Bath's Prologue, 11. 673-81. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 239 

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 some- 
times 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." * 

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 com- 

1 E. H. A\, xxv. 453. 



2 4 o OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

mented 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 con- 
siderable, 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." l 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." 2 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 (I4I7). 3 
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 

1 Camb. Lit., i. 262. " Piers Plowman, 186. 

3 "Quendam libru' meu' de Canfbury Tales." N. & Q., II ser. ii. 26. 



CHARACTER OF MEDIEVAL LIBRARY 241 

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." l So great was the influence of 
Piers Plowman, that from it were taken watchwords at the 
great rising of the peasants. 2 The power of such works 
could not be wholly hemmed in by the barrier of manu- 
script : 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 ? 

1 Camb. Lit., i. 262. ' 2 Jusserand, Piers, 13. 



16 



APPENDIX A 



PRICES OF BOOKS AND MATERIALS FOR BOOKMAKING 



. 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 .... 
Rogers, i. 646 


3 


'1354-74 


For redeeming a Bible which lay in Langeton 
chest (1354) ..... 
For a Bible pledged in Chichester chest (1357) . 
For a Bible redeemed from Chichester chest (1358) 
For Bible pledged in Winton chest (1358) 
To our barber for a Bible pledged to him in time 
of John Dagenet .... 
O. H. S., 27, Boase, xlviii. 


3 
3 



4 marks. 


1376 


Bible, small ..... 
Robinson, 5 


12 fr. 


c. 1387 
15 c. 


Bible for New College 
Another ...... 
Another ...... 
O. H. S., 32, Collect., 220 
Bible, 13 cent., 358 ff., double cols, of 53 lines, 
in good small hand .... 
James 4 , 19 


2, 135. 4d. 
i, 6s. 8d. 
1, os. od. 

5 marks. 


1423 


Pro j Biblia, cum ij signaculis deauratis . 
Surtees Soc. , xlv. 76 


6, I3s. 4d. 


1439 


Bible 
James 10 , xxiv. 


3, 6s. 8d. 



244 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 


DESCRIPTION 


PRICE 




BIBLES (continued] 




1444 


Bible 
James 10 , xxiv. 


2, 135. od. 


1449 


Bible covered with red leather, and having gilded 
clasps ...... 
Surtees Soc., xlv. no 


6, 135. 4d. 


1452 


Bible 
Surtees Soc., xlv. 132 


6, 135. 4d. 


1471 


Bible, in 5 vols. . . . . . 2 
James 10 , xxiv. [ 


H73 


Bible bought at Oxford. Now Brit. Mus. MS. 
Burney 1 1 . . 
James, 515 


20S. 




MISSALS 




1358 


Missal pledged in Burnel chest 
O. H. S., 27, Boase, xlviii. 


8s. 46. 


1383-4 


Abbot Litlington's missal .... 
Robinson, 7-8 


34, 145. 7d- 


1449 


Old Missal, de usu Ebor. . 
Surtees Soc., xlv. no 


26s. 8d. 


MS 2 


Missal, de usu Ebor. .... 
Old Missal ..... 
Surtees Soc., xlv. 132-33 


4, 135. 4d. 

I OS. 


1459 


A fair mass book ..... 
Rogers, iv. 600 


10 


1468 


Missal 
Surtees Soc., xlv. 163 


4 


1491 


Missal ....... 
Surtees Soc., xlv. 161 n. 


405. 


i59 


A new masboke couered with white lether and ij 
longe claspes of latyn . 
A little massebooke after the ffrenche use . 
C. A. S. (N.S.) 8vo ser., iii. 361 


4 

3s. 4d- 




BREVIARIES 




1370 


Portiforium ..... 
Cam. Soc. , Bury Wills, I 


IOS. 



APPENDIX A 



245 



DATE 


DESCRIPTION 


PRICE 




BREVIARIES (continued] 




1395 


Portiforium notatum .... 
Parvum portiforium .... 
Surtees Soc., xlv. 6 


20S. 

335. 4d. 


1400 


Portiforium de usu Sarum .... 
Ibid., 13 


66s. 8d. 


1449 


Great portiforium de usu Ebor. 
Great portiforium de usu Sarum . 
Ibid., 1 10 


11, 35. 6d. 
535. 46. 


i45i 


Portiforium ..... 
Mun. Acad., 609 


6s. 8d. 


H5 2 


Portiforium de usu Sarum .... 
Portiforium de usu Ebor. .... 
Portiforium ..... 
Surtees Soc., xlv. 132-33 


53s. 4<3. 
535. 46. 
133. 4d. 


1491 


Portiforium de usu Ebor. .... 
Ibid., i6in. 


43 s - 4d. 


1518 


A little portuos lyinge to plegge in teamce street . 
Reliquary, vii. 18 


533. 4 d. 


Before 
1300 


PSALTERS 

Psalter, with glosses .... 
Warton, i. i88n. 


I OS. 


1376 


Psalter, glossed ..... 
Robinson, 6 


12 fr. 


c. 1380 


Psalter, glossed ..... 
O. H. S., 32, Collect., 226 


263. 8d. 


1395 


Psalter, in large letters ; price 65-. 8d., sold for 
Surtees Soc. , xlv. 6 


135. 4d. 


1447 


Psalter ...... 
Rogers, iv. 600 


33. 8d. 


1449 


Psalter, glossed ..... 
Surtees Soc., xlv. no 


IIS. 


1451 


Psalter, glossed ..... 
Mun. Acad., 609 


6s. 8d. 



246 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



PRICE 



PSALTERS (continued] 



I45 2 

1468 
c. 1470 

c. 1420-40 

1459 
1491 

1509 



Psalter, glossed 
Illuminated Psalter 
Small Psalter 



Psalter 
Psalter 



1449 
1509 



c. 690 



Surtees Soc., xlv. 132-33 
Ibid., 163 

Paston Letters, ed. Gairdner, vi. 175-77 
ANTIPHONARIES 



Antiphonary for S. Albans 

Another ...... 

Ann. mon. S. Alb. aj. Amund., ii. 256-71 



2 new great antiphons 



Rogers, iv. 600 



Antiphonary [with musical notation] 

Surtees Soc., xlv. 161 n. 

A grete antyphoner in parchement with legent 
couered with white lether with ij long claspes of 
latyn ...... 

An olde litle antyphoner withoute couer and 
claspes ...... 

C. A. S. (N.S.), 8vo ser., iii. 361 



PROCESSIONALS 

20 new Processionals for All Souls College 

Rogers, iv. 600 

A Processionall noted [with musical notation] 
couered with Tawny lether and ij long claspes . 

A processionall couered with Tawny lether with 

oon claspe ..... 

C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 361 



MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS 

Land sufficient for 8 families exchanged for a book 
on cosmography, of admirable workmanship. 

Vita Abb. 15 



135. 4d. 
135. 4d. 
6s. 8d. 



8s. 4d. 
6s. 8d. 

6s, 135. 4 

13, 6s. 8d. 
335. 4d. 



26s. 8d. 



APPENDIX A 



247 



DATE 



ii74 



Before 
1300 



1300 

1322 
1357 

c. 1360 



1376 



DESCRIPTION 



MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS (continued] 

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 

Historia Scholastica [Peter Comestor]. [Cf. 1452. ] 
Concordance ..... 

Four greater prophets, with glosses 

*Warton, i. 188 n. 



Book of Decretals . 



A school book 



Liber gardanarum . 



*Stevenson, Hist, of Ely 

Rogers, i. 645-56 

Rogers, i. 646 



For book on Prophets and the third part of 

Thomas Aquinas (tertia pars Summae), pledged 

in Tykeford chest .... 

O. H, S., 27, Boase, xlviii. 

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 . . 

Ordered to be sold by the Last will of his 
Countess Elizabeth for . 

Warton, i. 187 

Dictionary in 3 volumes .... 
Gospels glossed in i volume 

N. de Lyra on the Gospels and the Epistles of Paul 
Quodlibeta of Herveus Natalis Brito 
Milleloquium Augustini [anthology of S. Augustine 

by Bartholomew of Urbino] 
Augustine, super psalterium abbreviatus cum 

septem quaternis non ligatis 

N. de Lyra, third part .... 
Small concordance .... 

Speculum Historiale, first part, by Vincent of 

Beauvais ..... 

Augustine, de Civitate Dei 
Lombard's Sentences. [Cf. 1423, 1452.] 
Boethius, de Consolatione philosophiae, cum aliis. 
Summa Hostiensis [one of the chief books on 

canon law]. [Cf. 1380.] 



PRICE 



I OS. 

3s. 

2d. 

3, 6s. 8d. 
135. 4d. 



loo marks. 
40 livres. 

200 francs. 

15 francs. 
37^ francs. 

3 francs. 

80 francs. 

I franc. 

37^ francs. 

I franc. 

50 francs. 
12 francs. 
6 francs. 
10 francs. 

20 francs. 



248 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



PRICE 



1376 



1378 



1379 



c. 1380 



1389 



MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS (contmuea) 

ronica Martiniana, by Martinus Polonus ; Bede, 
de Gestis Anglorum ; Life of S. Thomas, in 
i volume ..... 

Anselm, de Similitudinibus 

*Robinson, 5-7 

Wylliott's book on natural philosophy 

Rogers, i. 646 



1 1 quires of Bacon's Mathematics 



Rogers, i. 646 



Lectura T. Alquini super 410 sententiarum 
Evangelium Johannis et Apocalypsis glosatum 
Concordantiae Bibliae .... 
Sermones veteres ..... 
Sermones N. Gorham de communi sanctorum 
Liber Genesis glosatus .... 
Legenda Aurea ..... 
Augustine, de Civitate Dei 
Haymo super epistolas Pauli 
Evangelium Mathaei . . 

,, Johannis glos. 

Biblia versificata . 
Quaternus sermonum . 
Epistolae Sidonii, in quaterno 
Albertus Magnus, de vegetabilibus et plantis cum 
multis aliis . . . . . 

Textus Metha[physi]cae . 
Commentator super libros caeli et mundi . 
Liber de Anima, continens 3 libros cum aliis 
Textus naturalis philosophiae 



Tractatus de Animalibus . 

Liber Decretal ium non glosatus . 

Liber Decretalium . 

Summa Hostiensis. [Cf. 1376.] . 

Liber Sextus decretalium. [Cf. 1423, 1445 

1451.] ..... 
Codex. [Cf. 1423.] 
Liber inforciatus. [Cf. 1423, 1445.] 
Digestum vetus. [Cf. 1423.] 

0. H. S., 32, Collect., 224-41 

Problems of Aristotle for Exeter College . 
Boethius, De Disciplina Scholarum, and De 
Consolatione philosophiae 

O. H. S., 27, Boase, xxxvi 



10 francs. 
2 francs. 



3. 6s. 8d. 

55. 6d. 



20S. 

8s. 

35. 4d. 
5s. 

20S. 
20S. 

535. 4d. 

IOCS. 
2S. 

35. 4d. 

5s. 
2s. 6d. 

I2d. 

53 s - 4d. 
IDS. 

I 

1 6s. 

135. 4d. 
135. 4d. 

48. 

35. 4d. 
1 6s. 8d. 
4, 135. 4d. 

75 s 
315. 4d. 

20S. 

5s. 



5 marks. 



APPENDIX A 



249 



DATE 

1394 
c- 1394 

1395 



1397 



DESCRIPTION 



PRICE 



MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS (continued) 

Parchment for 4 choir books, and writing them 

Surtees Soc., xxxv. 130 

Writing, illuminating and other expenses of a 
primer, given to the Lady Queen of Castile, 
i.e. Constance, 2nd wife of John of Gaunt 

C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 401 

Cronica Martiniana, cum aliis. Priced 3^. 4^., 

sold for [Cf. price in 1376] 
Libellus cum causa T. Cantuariensis, et aliis. 

Priced 2s., sold for 
Repertorium Willelmi Durand. Priced 65-. 8d., 

not sold ..... 

William de Mandagoto de Electionibus. Priced j 

55-., sold for 
Constitutions of Ottobonus, cum aliis. Priced i 

i&d., not sold . 
Petrus de Forma dictandi, quire. Priced 2s., \ 

not sold [Cf. 1443] .... 
Bernard, Meditationes, cum aliis 5^., sold for 
Mandeville on paper, in French. 2s., not sold 
Quire, de Arte dictandi, with letters of Peter of 

Blois. 2s., not sold .... 
Textus Clementinarum [Decretals of Clement]. 

\2.d. , not sold ..... 
Brut in French. 2s., not sold 

Stirtees Soc., xlv. 6 

Vellum for 6 Processionals, and writing, noting 

(notatio, musical notation), illuminating and 

binding them ..... 

Surtees Soc., vii. xxvi.-vii. n. 



Liber Scintillarum 
Augustine on John 



C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 403 



For 39 quires parchment at \\d. = xxs. v\d. (sic) 
For writing same at xx^/. quire 
For illuminating ..... 
For binding ..... 

Summa 
James 3 , 105 

27 quires parchment at \\\d. 
For writing same at i6d. . 
Illumination ..... 

Binding ...... 

Summa 
Ibid., 128 



11, 135. 3d. 

633. 6d. 

35. 46. 
35. 46. 
6s. 8d. 
6s. 8d. 
i8d. 

2S. 

6s. 

2S. 
25, 

i2d. 

2S. 

735. 46. 



2S. 
IO marks. 



195. 6d. 

655. 

I2d. 
2s. 6d. 

4, 8s. od. 



6s. Qd. 
36s. 
8d. 

2S. 

455. 5d. 



250 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 


DESCRIPTION 


PRICE 




MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS (continued] 




150. 


27 quires and 6 fo. parchment at iiiV. 


6s. gd. 




For writing same at \6d, .... 


36s. 




Illumination ..... 


6d. 




Binding ...... 


2S. 




Total 


453. 3d. 




Ibid., 133 




15 c. 


33 quires parchment .... 


8s. 3d. 




For writing same at i6d. . 


445. 




Illumination ..... 


I2d. 




Binding ...... 


2S. 




Total 


55s. 3d. 




Ibid., 169 




15 c. 


29 quires parchment at \\\d. 


7s. 3d. 




For writing same at i6d. . 


385. 8d. 




Illumination . . . 


i2d. 




Binding ...... 


2S. 




Total 


485. lid. 




Ibid., 226 




15 c. 


Antonius Andreas, super Metaphysica, etc., 1536., 






on paper ..... 


135. 4d. 




James 3 , 290 




1400 


John of Meun's Roman de la Rose, sold before 






the palace gate at Paris .... 


;33, 6s. 6d. 




War ton, i. 187 




1400 


Tabula Martiniana .... 


35. 4d. 




Gradual, de usu Ebor. .... 


4os. 




Catholicon. [Cf. 1452.] .... 


4, IDS. od. 




*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 .... 


IIS. 2d. 




Archceologia, Ivii. 208-9 




1420-40 


Three books given to the Duke of Gloucester, 






Cato glossed, and two books of Abbot Whet- 






hamstede's own composition 


10 




Book of astronomy, given to the Duke of Bedford 


3, 6s. 8d. 




Boethius, de Consolatione philosophiae, glossed . 
Holkot, super Sapientiam Salomonis 


^ 5 , 
135. 4d. 




Holkot, Sermons ..... 


3, 6s. 8d. 




Thos. Netter of Walden and Wm. Wodeford 






against Wyclif. 2 vols. 


6, 135. 4d. 




* Ann. man S. Alb. a J. Amnnd. ii. 256, 259, 






268-71. 





APPENDIX A 



251 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



PRICE 



1420-40 



1423 



1432 



1441 

1442 
1443 
1443 
1443 
1445 
H45 



MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS (continued) 

Alan de Lisle's Anticlaudianus, cum quaestionibus 
in eodem ..... 

Unus parvus libellulus, cum metris et tabulis 
diversis ...... 

* Ann. man S. Alb. a J. Amund. ii. 256, 259, 
268-71. 

Magister Sententiarum. [Cf. 1376, 1452.] 
Concordance ..... 
Gregory's Pastoral care .... 
Anselm, Cur Deus homo. [Cf. 1451.] . 
Archdeacon Guido de Baysio's Rosarium . 
Liber Sextus Decretalium. [Cf. 1380, 1445, 1451.] 
Digestum Inforciatum. [Cf. 1380, 1445.] 
Digestum vetus. [Cf. 1380.] 
Codex. [Cf. 1380.] . 

Surtees Soc.^ xlv. 76 

Dr. Thomas Gascoigne gave 6 books to Lincoln 

College, value ..... 

Clark, Line. Coll. (Coll. Hist.) 

Thomas Aquinas super primum Sententiarum 
Thomas Aquinas in secundum Sententiarum 

James 10 , xxiv. 

Tabula super Senecam et Boetium de Consolat. et 
de disciplina scholarium 

James 10 , xxiv. 



One part of Lyra 



James 10 , xxiv. 



27 volumes bought from John Paston's Exors. for 
King's Hall, Cambridge. 

For an old book, Postillae super Lucam . 

James 10 , xxiv. 

Petrus de forma dictandi. [Cf. 1395.] . 

Mun. Acad., 532 

Book of philosophy, cum tractatibus Alberti 

James 10 , xxiv. 

Liber Sextus Decretalium, pledged for. [Cf. 1380, 

1423, 1451.] . 
Digestum Inforciatum, pledged for. [Cf. 1380, 

1423.] ...... 

* Mun. Acad., 543 



135. 
135. 



1 6s, 

2OS. 
48. 

IOS. 

405. 
403. 

135. 46. 

I3J. 4d. 

i,6s. 8aT. 



17, IDS. 

i, 6s. 8d. 

is. 8d. 
3, 6s. 8d. 

j8, 175. 4d. 

23. 

is. 8d. 
133. 4d. 

ji, et ob. 
33. 4d. 



252 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 


DESCRIPTION 


PRICE 




MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS (continued) 




1449 


Cicero, Rhetoric ..... 


35. 4<1. 




James 10 , xxiv. 




H5i 


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] 


45. 




Liber Sextus Decretalium, cum glossa cardinali. 






[Cf. 1380, 1445, 1423.]. 


5s- 




Codex. [Cf. 1423.] 


45. 




Bernardus Parmensis de Botone, Casus longus 


5s. 




Martial ...... 


IS. 




Anselm, Cur Deus homo. [Cf. 1423.] 


2s. 4d. 




Decretals of Clement .... 


35. 4d. 




Vetus liber Decretalium .... 


is. 4d. 




* Mun. A cad., 609 




MS 2 


Isidore, Etymologies ; Bede, Historia Ecclesi- 






astica ...... 


305. 




Augustine, de spiritu et anima, with the Meditations 






of S. Bernard, and many other contents 


405. 




Guillelmus Parisiensis de virtutibus 


20S. 




Bartholomeus Anglicus [Bartholomew de Glanville] 






de proprietatibus rerum 
Pupilla oculi. [There were several books of this 


6s. 8d. 




title.] ...... 


20S. 




Catholicon. [Cf. 1400.] .... 


4 




Polichronica ..... 


20S. 




Historia Scholastica. [Cf. bef. 1300.] . 


5S. 




Lombard's Sentences. ^1376,1423.]. 


1 6s. 




* Stirtees Soc., xlv, 132-3 




H53 


Book by Wyclif ..... 


75. 6d. 




Book against Wyclif .... 


3 s. 6d. 




More's book on Wyclif and other books . 


2, 2s. od. 




Rogers, iv. 600 




H55 


Nicolaus de Gorham super Psalterium, pledged 






for ...... 


/i, 6s. 8d. 




James 10 , xxiv. 




1455 


Gregory the Great's Works, 157 leaves . 


3, 6s. 8d. 




Library (N. S.), viii. 172 




1456 


Avicenna, redeemed for . 


i, 6s. 4d. 




James 10 , xxiv. 




M57 


Aegidius super Physica .... 


i6s. 8d. 




James 10 , xxiv. 





APPENDIX A 



253 



DATE 


DESCRIPTION 


PRICE 




MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS (continued) 




1457 


Aristotle de animalibus .... 
James 10 , xxiv. 


55. 6d. 


1459 


A Holy Legend ..... 
Rogers, iv. 600 


10 


1462 


Aristotle, Rhetor. Polit., etc. 
James 10 , xxiv. 


8s. sd. 


1462 


Map of the world, bought for New College 
Rogers, iv. 600 


5 


1467 


Cicero, de Officiis and Ambrosius super eodem . 
James 10 , xxiv. 


6s. 


c. 1468 


S. Augustine's Epistles .... 
Library (N.S.), viii. 172 


1, 135. 4d. 


1468 


Richard Rolle's Meditatio de passione domini 
*S^lrtees Soc. , xlv. 163 


4 d. 


1469 


Jerome's Epistles ..... 
James 10 , xxiv. 


l 


1469 


Vellum, writing, correcting, illuminating, and 
binding a Lectionary in redskin, and cleaning 
the book ...... 
Library, ii. (1890), 243 


645. 3d. 


c. 1470 


iij bokes of soffistre .... 
A red boke with Hugucio and Papie 
A boke of Seynt Thomas de Veritatibus . 
I boke of xij chapetyrs of Lyncoln, and a boke of 
Safistre ...... 
I premere (primer? ) .... 
* Gairdner, Paston Letters, vi. 175, 177 


is. 8d. 
l 

I OS. 

I OS. 
2S. 


1472 


Thomas Aquinas, Tabula on works 
James 10 , xxv. 


55. 4d. 


1481 


Alexander Aphrodisaeus, super libros de Anima . 
Rogers, iv. 600- 1 


*, i3s. 4d. 


1502 


Hugo de Vienna's works in 7 volumes [printed] . 
Rogers, iv. 600- 1 


2, 6s. 4d. 


1509 


A printed legende in paper de usu Saris coueryd 
with white lether with ij short claspes of latyn . 
C. A. S. (N.S.), Svoser., iii. 361 


35. 4d. 



254 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



PRICE 



1509 



1525 



1538 

1539 
1540 

1542 



1346 



1383-4 



MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS (continued) 

A graile couered with white lether with ij long 
claspes ...... 

A graile couered with white lether having ij longe 
claspes ...... 

A prikesong boke in parchement . 

C. A. S. (N.S.), 8vo ser., iii. 361 

Cicero, de Officiis, bought by Thos. Linacre ; now 
B. M. Reg. 15 A vi. . 

James, 519 



4 hymnaria for the quire at 1/3 



i Statutes of the Kingdom 
Polydore Vergil's history . 



Rogers, i. 600-1 



Rogers, i. 600- 1 



Giorgio della Valle [ ? Aristotle's Poetics] 

Rogers, iv. 600- 1 

Map of the World ..... 
Suidas in Greek [? printed ed. 1499] 
Erasmus on New Testament 

Rogers, iv. 600- 1 

Theophylact and Eustathius [? printed ed. 1542] . 
Epiphanius ..... 

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] 

Hist. MSS., 2nd Rept., App. 129; 
Bibliographical iii. 148 

Note. Many prices of books at Winchester 
College, temp. Henry VI will be found in 
Arcfuzol. Jour. xv. (1858) 62-74. 



WRITING 

For writing a Psalter with Kalendar 
And a "placebo et dirige cum ympnario et 
collectario" , , . . . 

Surtees Soc., xxxv. 165 

For writing Abbot Litlington's Missal during 
two years .... 

Robinson, 7-8 



6s.8d. 



53s. 
135. 



8d. 

5s. 



143. 
6s. 8d. 



I OS. 



45. od. 
i, I2s. od. 
95. 



2, 25. Od. 

8s. 



155. 



55. 6d. 
43. 3d. 



APPENDIX A 



2 55 



DATE 


DESCRIPTION 


PRICE 




WRITING (continued) 




1383-4 


Livery for the scribe .... 
For writing notes (musical notation) in Abbot 
Litlington's Missal .... 
Robinson, 7-8 


20S. 

33. 4d. 


1393 


Writing 2 Graduals , . , 
Surtees See., xxxv. 130 


4, 6s. 8d. 


1397 


For writing a Legenda of 34 "quires " 
Surfees Soc. , vii. xxvi-xxvii n. 


72S. 


15 c. 


Writing 25 quires at i6d. . 
James 3 , 234 


335. 4d. 


?i5 c. 


Writing per quire ..... 
C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 398 


i6d. 


143 


N. de Lyra transcribed *. 
Warton, i. 187 n. 


100 marks 


1467 


Item, for wrytynge of a quare and demi . . . prise 
the quayr, xxd. ..... 
Item, for wrytenge of a calendar . 
Item, for notynge (musical notation) of v. quayres 
and ij leves, prise of the quayr, viij|W.] . 
Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 4 


2s. 6d. 
I2d. 

3s. 7d. 


1469 


For writing a " litill booke of Pheesyk " . 
For writing ' ' the tretys of Werre in iiij books, 
which conteyneth Ix levis aftir \]d, a leaff " 
For writing "De Regimine Principum, which 
conteyneth xlv li leves, aftir a peny a leef, which 
is right wele worth " 
* Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 2-4 


2d. 
I OS. 

35. gd. 


1469 


For writing a Lectionary of 18 quires and 9 skins . 
Library, ii. (1890) 243 


285. 4d. 




ILLUMINATING 




1374 


Church of Norwich paid for illuminating a 
Graduale and Consuetudinary . 
Merry weather, 36 n. 


22, 95. 


1383-4 


For illumination of the large letters in Abbot 
Litlington's Missal .... 
Robinson, 7-8 


22, os. 3d. 



2 5 6 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 


DESCRIPTION 


PRICE 




ILLUMINATING (continued) 




1393 


Illuminating 2 graduals .... 
Surtees Soc., xxxv. 130 


2 


1395 


Illuminating 3 graduals .... 
Surtees Soc., xxxv. 130 


2 


1397 


Illuminating and binding Legenda of 34 " quires " 
Surtees Soc. , vii. xxvi-xxvii n. 


305. 


1445 


Yearly wages of an illuminator at Oxford, four 
marks, ten shillings .... 
Mun. A cad., 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. .... 
Item, for xxj. demi-vynets . . . prise the demi- 
vynett, \\\]d. ..... 
Item, for Psalmes lettres xv c and di' . . . the prise 
of C. \\\]d. [I.e., 1550 at 4^. a hundred] 
Item, for p'ms letters lxiij c . . . prise of a C., ]d. 
Item, for floryshynge of capy tails, v c 
Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 4 


8s. 
7s. 

55. 2d. 
5s- 3d- 
5d- 


1469 


For rubrishing a book .... 
Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 4 


35. 4 d. 


1469 


Illuminating a Lectionary .... 
Library, ii. (1890) 243 


133. 6d. 




BINDING 




1383-4 


Binding Abbot Litlington's Missal 
Robinson, 7-8 


2IS. 


1384-5 


Covering a great Portiforium 
Covering a book and making three silver clasps . 
Robinson, 8 


35. 2d. 
5s. 8d. 


1392 


Binding seven books .... 
O. H. S., 27, Boase, xlviii. 


45. od. 


1395 


Binding large gradual (York Cathedral) . 
Surtees Soc., xxxv. 130 


IDS. 


?I 5 C. 


Binding (in white skin over wooden boards) 
C. A. S. (N.S.), iii. 398 


2S. 









APPENDIX A 



257 



DATE 



1412-13 

1428 
1467 

1469 



DESCRIPTION 



BINDING (continued] 

Stitching 67 books at \\d. a book, with 
addition .... 

Stitching covers of 52 books at id. 

C. A. S. (N.S.), i 



300-3 



Binding Bible in 2 vols. 



Rogers, iv. 600 



Item, for byndynge of the boke [a Psalter or 

other liturgical book] .... 

Gairdner, Paston Letters, v. 4 

Binding a Lectionary in redskin, and correcting 

the book ..... 

Library , ii. (1890) 243 

Note. For many prices for binding, repairing, 
and chaining books, see Bibliographical Society's 
Monograph 13, p. 18-19. 



PRICE 



93. 

45. 



5s. 3d- 



5s- 



MATERIALS 

A very large number of prices of vellum and parchment might be quoted. 
These will suffice : (1301) vellum per skin, ijd. ; (1312-13) 6 doz. parchment, 
8s. 8d. ; (1358-59) 2 doz. parchment, 6s. ; (1359-60) 2^ doz. parchment, 7s. 6d. ; 
(1383-84) 13 doz. vellum, ^4, 6s. 8d. ; (1395) 12 parchment skins, 55. od. ; 
(1397) vellum per dozen skins, 45. 6d. ; (1412-13) vellum cost a dozen skins 
2s. lod. ; (1412-13) 9 skins of parchment I3^d., and 6 skins of parchment, i6d. ; 
(1467) 3 quires of vellum, 55. ; 17 quires for a Lectionary, los. 6d. 

Skins for binding were sold in (1395) I deerskin, 35. 2d. ; (1397) 6 deerskins 
for processionals, 133. 4d. ; (1412-13) 97 calfskins @ 4d. a skin, 82 sheepskins 
@ 3d., 3 sheepskins for 5d., 12 redskins @ 6d. ; (1469) I redskin, 5d. 




tf 11 I 



APPENDIX B 

LIST OF CERTAIN CLASSIC AUTHORS FOUND IN 
MEDIEVAL CATALOGUES 

THIS list is brief, but it should be long enough to show clearly what Greek 
and Latin authors were read in the Middle Ages, and to indicate roughly their 
comparative popularity. A note has been made of only one copy of a work 
found at a particular place at a certain time ; often there were duplicates, some- 
times many copies : for example, consult Appendix C, under date c. 1170. 

The following abbreviations are used : August. Fr. York = Augustinian Friary, 
York ; C. U. L. = Cambridge University Library ; Cant. Coll. = Canterbury 
College, Oxford; Ch. Ch. C. = Christ Church, Canterbury; Durh. = Durham 
Priory ; Lanthony = Lanthony Priory, nr. Gloucester ; Ox. U. L. Oxford 
University Library; S. Cath. H. =S. Catharine's College; Rochester = 
S. Andrew's Priory, Rochester ; S. Aug. C. = S. Augustine's Monastery, 
Canterbury ; S. Mart. Dov. = S. Martin's Priory, Dover. Other abbreviations 
are self-explanatory. 

AESCHINES. Orations (1443, Ox. U. L.). 

ARISTOTLE. (8 cent., York; 1248, Glastonbury; 1315, Durh.; c. 1387, New 
Coll. ; 1418, Peterhouse). Organon(c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1202, Rochester; 
c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, August. Fr. York; c. 1385, Pembr. Coll.; 
1389, S. Mart. Dov. ; 1391 and 1395, Durh. ; 1435 and J 473> C. U. L. ; 
1452, King's Coll. Camb. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1524, Cant. Coll. ; c. 1526, 
Syon). Topica (bef. 13 cent., Reading; 1372, August. Fr. York; 1387, 
Exeter Coll. ; 1448, Hospital of S. Mary within Cripplegate, London). 
De Sophisticis elenchis (bef. 13 cent., Reading). Natiiral sciences (1274, 
Peterborough; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 14 cent., Ramsey; 1435 and 1473, 
C. U. L. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C., de nova translations; 1524, Cant. Coll. ; 
c. 1526, Syon). Physica (c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 14 cent, Ramsey; 1372, 
August. Fr. York ; 1391 and 1395, Durh. ; 1435, C. U. L. ; 1452, King's 
Coll. Camb. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1508, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1524, Cant. Coll.). 
Meteorologica (1435 and 1473, C. U. L.). Historia animalium (c. 1300, 
Ch. Ch. C., de animalibus ; 1372, August. Fr. York, de animalibus ; 
1389, S. Mart. Dov., de natura animalium \ 1473, C. U. L. ; 1520, 
Wm. Grocyn, de animalibus). De generatione animalitim (c. 1300, 
Ch. Ch. C. ; 1443, Ox. U. L.). De anima (c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, 
August. Fr. York; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1524, Cant. 
Coll. ; c. 1526, Syon). Metaphysica (c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, August. 

258 



APPENDIX B 259 

Fr. York ; 1452, King's Coll. Camb. ; 1473, C. U. L. ; 1487, Pembr. Coll. ; 
c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1524, Cant. Coll. ; c. 1526, Syon). Ethica (c. 1300, 
Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, August. Fr. York; 1387, Exeter Coll. ; 1391, Durh. ; 
1428, Pembr. Coll. ; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; 1452, King's Coll. Camb. ; 1473, 
C. U. L. ; 1475, S. Cath. H. ; 1487, Pembr. Coll. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 
1508, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1524, Cant. Coll., noviter translatus ; c. 1526, Syon). 
Magna Moralia (1487, Pembr. Coll. ; c. 1526, Syon). Politico, (c. 1428, 
Pembr. Coll. ; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; 1452, King's Coll. Camb. ; 1487, Pembr. 
Coll. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1508, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1524, Cant. Coll. ; c. 1526, 
Syon). Rhetorica (c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, August. Fr. York ; 1475, 
S. Cath. H. ; 1487, Pembr. Coll. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1508, Ch. Ch. C. ; 
1524, Cant. Coll. ; c. 1526, Syon). Problemata (1435 and *473> C. U. L. ; 
1520, Wm. Grocyn ; c. 1526, Syon). Oeconomica (1372, August. Fr. York). 

CAESAR. Commentaries (1443, Ox. U. L. ; 1452, King's Coll. Camb. ; 1520, 
Wm. Grocyn). 

CICERO. (8 cent., York; 1439, Ox. U. L., Opera viginti duo in magno 
volumine; 1520, Wm. Grocyn, Opera omnia). Epistolae (1480, Bp. Shir- 
wood ; 1498, Coll. of Bishop Auckland ; 1524, Cant. Coll. ; 1439, Ox. U. L., 
1520, Wm. Grocyn, and c. 1526, Syon, ad familiares ; 1439, Ox. U. L., 
ad Quintum). Orationes (beg. 14 cent., Lanthony, in Catilinam ; 1439, 
Ox. U. L. ; 1474, Bp. Shirwood ; 1478, Balliol Coll. ; 1500, Jesus Coll., 
Rotherham ; 1520, Wm. Grocyn ; 1372, August. Fr. York, Tullii invectiv- 
arum ; 1391, Durh. ; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; and 1520, Wm. Grocyn, Philippics ; 
1439, Ox. U. L., in Verreni). De Senecttite (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1180, 
Whitby ; 12 cent., Durh. ; 1217-18, Evesham ; 1248, Glastonbury ; c. 1300, 
Ch. Ch. C. ; c. 1400, Meaux ; 1418, Peterhouse ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 
c. 1526, Syon. Frequently found). De Legibus (12 cent., Durh.). De 
Officiis (1202, Rochester; beg. 14 cent., Lanthony; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 
1372, August. Fr. York; 1418, Peterhouse; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; 1475, 
S. Cath. H. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; c. 1526, Syon). De Republica (Somnium 
Scipionis (c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 14 cent., Ramsey; 1418, Peterhouse; 
? 1482, Leicester; c. 1526, Syon). De Amicitia (c, 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 
1180, Whitby; 1195, Durh. ; 1217-18, Evesham ; 1248, Glastonbury ; beg. 
14 cent., Lanthony; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, August. Fr. York; 1391, 
Durh. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; c. 1526, Syon one of the commonest of 
classic works in the M.A.). Paradoxa (1217-18, Evesham; c. 1300, 
Ch. Ch. C. ; 1391, Durh. ; c, 1497, S. Aug. C. ; c. 1526, Syon). 7\isc*tlanae 
disputationes (beg. 14 cent., Lanthony; 1418, Peterhouse; c. 1497, 
S. Aug. C. ; 1524, Cant. Coll. ; 1526, Syon). De Inventione (Rhetorica) 
(c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 or 13 cent., Bury; 1372, August. Fr. York ; 1391, 
Durh. ; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; 1452, King's Coll. Camb. ; 1458, S. Paul's ; 1473, 
C. U. L. ; ? 1482, Leicester ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1524, Cant. Coll. ; 
c. 1526, Syon, nova rhetorica}. De Oratore (1477, Bp. Shirwood). Topica 
(c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C.). De Natura Deorum (c. 1526, 
Syon). De Finibus (1472, Bp. Shirwood). 

GELLIUS. Nodes Atticae (c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1391, Durh. ; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; 
1476, Bp. Shirwood; 1520, Wm. Grocyn; c. 1526, Syon). 

" HOMER. "(12 cent, Durh. ; 1180, Whitby). Iliad (c. 1526, Syon). 

HORACE. (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 or 13 cent., Bury; bef. 13 cent., Reading; 



2 6o OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

1202, Rochester; 1248, Glastonbury ; beg. 14 cent. , Lanthony ; 14 cent., 
Ramsey ; 1372, August. Fr. York ; 1452, King's Coll. Camb. ; c. 1480, 
Bp. Shirwood; ? 1482, Leicester; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1500, Jesus Coll., 
Rotherham ; c. 1526, Syon). Epistles (bef. 13 cent., Reading; 1372, 
August. Fr. York ; 1389, S. Mart. Dov.). 

JUVENAL. c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1180, Whitby ; 12 cent, Durh. ; 12 or 13 
cent., Bury; bef. 13 cent., Reading; 1217-18, Evesbam ; 1248, Glaston- 
bury; 1372, August. Fr. York; 1389, S. Mart. Dov. ; 1391, Durh. ; 1487, 
Bp. Shirwood; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1520, Wm. Grocyn ; c. 1526, Syon). 

LIVY. (1248, Glastonbury; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1443, Ox. U. L. ; 1475, 
Bp. Shirwood; 1508, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1520, Wm. Grocyn; c. 1526, Syon, 
epitome by Florus). 

LUCAN. (8 cent, York; c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 cent., Durh.; 1202, 
Rochester; 1217-18, Evesham ; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; beg. 14 cent, 
Lanthony; 14 cent, Ramsey; 1389, S. Mart. Dov.; 1418, Peterhouse ; 
1473, C. U. L. ; ? 1482, Leicester; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1524, Cant. Coll. ; 
c. 1526, Syon). 

LUCRETIUS. De Rerum natura (1520, Wm. Grocyn). 

MARTIAL (12 cent., Peterboro' ; 14 cent., Ramsey; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 
1372, August. Fr. York, Epigrammata marcii valerii, libri 15 ; c. 1400, 
Meaux ; 1418, Peterhouse; 1451, Henry Calder, vicar of Cookfield; 1476, 
Bp. Shirwood). 

OviD. (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 cent., Durh. ; beg. 14 cent., Lanthony; 1202, 
Rochester, Ovidius magmis ; 14 cent, Ramsey; c. 130x3, Ch. Ch. C. ; 
? 1482, Lejpster). Ars amatoria (12 cent., Durh. ; 1372, August. Fr. York ; 
1500, Jesus Coll., Rotherham). Remedia Amoris (12 cent., Durh. ; 1372, 
August. Fr. York ; 1438, T. Cooper, a scholar of Oxford ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 
1500, Jesus Coll., Rotherham). Mendicamina faciei (c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ). 
Metamorphoses (1372, August. Fr. York; 1389, S. Mart. Dov. ; 1443, Ox. 
U. L. ; 1452, King's Coll. Camb. ; 1470, Pembr. Coll. ; 1473, C. U. L. ; 
? 1482, Leicester, de mirabilibus tmmdi ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1500, 
Jesus Coll., Rotherham; c. 1526, Syon). Fasti (12 cent., Durh. ; 1202, 
Rochester; 1372, August. Fr. York; 1389, S. Mart. Durh. ; 1418, Peter- 
house; 1443, Ox. U. L.). Tristia (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 cent. Durh. ; 
1372, August. Fr. York ; 1389, S. Mart. Dov. ; 1418, Peterhouse; c. 1497, 
S. Aug. C.). Ibis (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 cent., Durh. ; 1372, August Fr. 
York; c. 1400, Meaux; c. 1497, S. Aug. C.). Heroides (1372, August. Fr. 
York). Ex Ponto(c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 cent. Durh. ; 1372, August. Fr. 
York; 1391, Durh. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C.). 

PERSIUS (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1180, Whitby; 12 cent., Durh.; 1202, 
Rochester; 1248, Glastonbury; beg. 14 cent., Lanthony; 1520, Wm. Grocyn). 

PLATO (1180, Whitby; bef. 13 cent., Reading; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1389, 
S. Mart. Dov.; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; ? 1482, Leicester; c. 1526, Syon). 
Timaeus (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 cent., Durh. ; 1248, Glastonbury; beg. 
14 cent, Lanthony; c. 130x3, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, August. Fr. York; 1418, 
Peterhouse; 1451, Hy. Caldey, vicar of Cookfield; 1478, Balliol Coll., 
new translation ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C.). Republic (1443, Ox. U. L., new 
translation; 1452, King's Coll., Camb.; 1475, S. Cath. H.). Euthyphro 
(1478, Balliol Coll., new translation). 



APPENDIX B 261 

PLAUTUS 12 or 13 cent., Bury [fames 1 , 27]; beg. 14 cent., Lanthony, Attlu- 

laria; 1481, Bp. Shirwood ; 1520, Wm. Grocyn. 
PLINY THE ELDER (8 cent., York; 1126-71, Glastonbury, de naturali 

historia; 12 or 13 cent., Bury; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C., Prima pars Plinii, 

et sectmda par s \ 1418, Peterhouse, Hist. nat. ; 1439, Ox. U. L., Plinius 

de naturis rerum; 1443, Ox. U. L., Physica; 1464, Bp. Shirwood; 

1520, Wm. Grocyn; c. 1526, Syon). Extracts, Medicina Plinii (c. 1300, 

Ch. Ch. C., Liber Plinii junioris [sic] de diversis medicinis}. 
PLINY THE YOUNGER. Letters (144$* Q X U. L.). 

PLUTARCH. Vitae (1480, Bp. Shirwood, printed, Latin; 1520, Wm. Grocyn). 
QUINTILIAN. Institutio oratorio, (12 cent., Durh. ; c. 1290, the La Fytes, 

scholars at Oxford; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1326-35, S. Albans ; 1389, 

S. Mart. Dov. ; 1391, Durh. ; 1418, Peterhouse ; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; 1475, 

S. Cath. H. ; 1478, Balliol Coll. ; c. 1497, S. Aug. C.) 
SALLUST (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 cent. Durh.; 1202, Rochester; 1248, 

Glastonbury; beg. 14 cent., Lanthony; c. 1400, Meaux ; 1418, Peterhouse). 

Bella (12 cent., Bury; 1452, King's Coll. Camb., de hello Cat.; 1500, 

Jesus Coll., Rotherham; c. 1526, Syon). 
SENECA THE YOUNGER c. 1170, Peterboro' ; 1260-9, S. Albans; 12 cent., 

Durh.; 14 cent., Ramsey; 1478, Balliol Coll.; 1520, Wm. Grocyn). 

Opera (c. 1497, S. Aug. C.). De Beneficiis (c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 

1395, Durh. ; c. 1400, Meaux;' 1418, Peterhouse). De dementia (c. 1300, 

Ch. Ch. C. ; 1395, Durh. ; 1418, Peterhouse; 1458, S. Paul's). Epistolae 

morales (12 cent., Peterboro'; 12 or 13 cent., Bury; bef. 13 cent., 

Reading; 13 cent., Rievaulx ; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, August. Fr. 

York; 1395, Durh. ; c. 1400, Meaux; 1418, Peterhouse; 1451, Hy. Caldey, 

vicar of Cookfield ; 1452, King's Coll., Camb.; c. 1497, S. Aug. C.). 

Naturales quaestiones (1418, Peterhouse; 1458, S. Paul's). Tragcediae 

(1372, August. Fr. York; 1439, Ox. U. L. ; 1452, King's Coll., Camb. ; 

c. 1480, Bp. Shirwood). Innumerable. 
STATIUS (8 cent., York ; 1180, Whitby ; 12 or 13 cent., Bury ; 1389, S. Mart. 

Dov. ; c. 1526, Syon). Thebais (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 12 cent., Durh. ; 

1418, Peterhouse; 1479, Bp. Shirwood). Achilleis (c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 

12 cent., Durh.; 1372, August. Fr. York; 1452, King's Coll. Camb.; 

c. 1497, S. Aug. C). Silvae (1478 Bp. Shirwood). 
SUETONIUS. De Vita Caesarum (12 or 13 cent., Bury; 1126-71, Glastonbury; 

c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, August. Fr. York ; c. 1400, Meaux ; 1443, 

Ox. U. L. ; 1458, S. Paul's; 1476, Bp. Shirwood; 1508, New Coll.; 

1520, Wm. Grocyn; c. 1526, Syon). 

TACITUS. De Oratoribus (1520, Wm. Grocyn ; 1526, Syon). 
TERENCE (12 cent., Durh.; 12 cent., Peterboro'; 12 or 13 cent., Bury; 

c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1202, Rochester; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; beg. 14 cent., 

Lanthony; 14 cent., Ramsey; 1326-35, S. Albans; 1372, August. Fr. 

York; 1389, S. Mart. Dov. ; 1391, Durh. ; 1443, Ox. U. L. ; 1471, Bp. 

Shirwood; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 1500, Jesus Coll., Rotherham; c. 1530, 

Wells Cath.). 
TROGUS, POMPEIUS (8 cent, York; 1095, Durh.; 12 cent., Durh.; 1391, 

Durh, ; 1443, Ox. U. L. ; 1465, Bp. Shirwood). 
VALERIUS MAXIMUS. Facta et dicta memorabilia (13 cent., Bury; 1391, 



262 OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

Durh. ; 1418, Peterhouse ; 1420-40, S. Albans ; 1452, King's Coll. Camb. ; 
1520, Wm. Grocyn ; c. 1526, Syon). 

VARRO. De Lingua Latina (1443, Ox. U. L. ; c. 1526, Syon). 

VIRGIL (8 cent., York; 12 or 13 cent., Bury; 12 cent., Durh.; c. 1150, 
Lincoln Cath. ; c. 1170, Ch. Ch. C., Virgilius totus; 14 cent, Ramsey; 
1326-35, S. Albans; ? 1482, Leicester;^. 1526, Syon, Opera). Biuolics 
(12 cent., Durh. ; 1180, Whitby ; bef. 13 cent, Reading; 1202, Rochester; 
1248, Glastonbury ; 1372, August Fr. York; 1389, S. Mart. Dov. ; 1391, 
Durh.; 1418, Peterhouse; 1452, King's Coll. Camb., Virgilius in buco- 
licis cum ceteris ; 1458, S. Paul's; c. 1497, S. Aug. C.). Georgics 
(12 cent., Durh. ; bef. 13 cent., Reading; 1202, Rochester; 1248, Glaston- 
bury; 1372, August. Fr. York; 1391, Durh.; c. 1497, S. Aug. C.). 
Aeneid (1202, Rochester; 1248, Glastonbury; c. 1300, Ch. Ch. C. ; 1372, 
August Fr. York; 1391, Durh. ; 1418, Peterhouse; c. 1497, S. Aug. C. ; 
1524, Cant. Coll.). 

NOTE. 

In compiling the above list use has been made of Bateson ; Becker ; Brad- 
shaw; C.A.S. ; Chron. Mon. de Melsa, iii. ; Dugdale, Hist, of S. Paul's ; 
E.H.R. iii.; James; James 1 ; James 2 ; James 9 ; James 10 ; Mun. A cad.; Robin- 
son ; Sur. Soc. vii. ; Archaeologia Cantiana ; Fasciculus loanni Willis Clark 
dicatus (art. by Dr. M. R. James), and other works. 



APPENDIX C 

LIST OF MEDIEVAL COLLECTIONS OF BOOKS 

Note. This list aims (i) to bring together in brief form a number of records 
which are better removed from the main text of this book, and (ii) to present in 
chronological order facts carefully selected to show the variety of medieval 
libraries, in size and character. 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



778 ; Alcuin's library at York. Aristotle, Virgil, 
Lucan, Statins, Cicero, Aldhelm, 
Bede, etc. 

10 c. Books given to Peterborough by Ethel- 
wold. Bede in Marcum, Liber 
Miraculoruin, Expositio Hebraeorum 
nominum, De Literis Graecorwn, etc. 
About 20. 

10 c. King Athelstan gave some nine books to 
S. Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury : 
Persius, Isidore, Bede(?), etc. 

c. 1034 " Many " books on theology and grammar 
given to Evesham Abbey by Bp. 
Aelfward. 

1045 Two books bequeathed to Glastonbury 
by Bp. Brithwold. 



c. 1060 At St. Peter's Exeter books given by 
Bp. Leofric ; Exeter Book, Leofric 
Missal, etc. 

1077-93 Church books given to S. Albans by 
Abbot Paul. 

1078-99 Bp. Osmund collected and wrote books 
for Old Sarum Church. 



263 



Alcuin, De Pont. Eccle. 
Ebor., 1535-61 ; 
Becker, 2. 

Dugdale, i. 382. 



B. M. Cott., A I. viii. 
fo. 56 b ; James, Ixix. 



Chron. Abb. de E. 
( Rolls S.), 83. 



Wm. of Malm. , De Ant. 
Glaston., Wharton, 
AngL Sacra (1691), 
i. 578-83. 

Dngdale, ii. 527. 



Gesta...S. Album, i. 58. 



W. of Malm., Gesta 
Pont., 183. 



264 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



c. 1080 



1095 



12 C. 



12 C. 



1104 



1119-46 



1126-71 



1130 



II5O 



Abbot Walter made many books for 
Evesham. 



Bp. William de Carilef gave about 52 
books to Durham [not Lindisfarne, as 
in Becker]. 

Nearly 370 pieces at Durham Priory : 
Quintilian, Plato's Timaeus, Sallust, 
Cicero (de Legibus, de Amic., de 
Senectute], Terence, Virgil, Ovid (Epp., 
Tristia, Ars amandi, Remedia amoris 
de Fastis], Lucan, Juvenal ; grammar, 
rhetoric, arithmetic, geometry, medicine; 
some English books. 

At Burton-on-Trent Abbey, after 1175, 
there were 78 vols. Incl. Augustine, 
Gregory, Bede, Anselm, etc. 

Catalogue of 68 pieces belonging probably 
to one of the great Southern abbeys. 

Abbot Peter gave many books to 
Gloucester Abbey. 



Abbot Geoffrey gave church books to S. 
Albans. 



At Glastonbury Abbot Henry had 54 
books transcribed, incl. Pliny's Nat. 
Hist., Suetonius De Vita Caesarum, 
Gesta Britonum, Gesta Anglomm. 



Abbot Reginald acquired for church of 
Evesham Ab. books and ornaments. 



Hugh of Leicester gave books to Lincoln 
Cath. 42 vols. and map of world in 
library now ; 31 added soon after. Some 
parts of Bible given by Bp. Alexander ; 
9 books given by Bp. Chesney. Library 
included Augustine, Gregory, Bede, 
Ambrose, Jerome, Virgil, Vegetius (de 
re Militari). 



Chron. Abb. de E. 
(Rolls S.), 97. 

Surtees Soc. , vii. 1 1 7-8 ; 
Becker, 172. 



Surtees Soc., vii. i-io. 



B. M. Add. MS. 23944, 
fo. 157; Zentralblatt, 
ix. 201-3. 

MS. Bodley,i63,f. 261; 
Becker, 216. 

Hist, et cart. nion. 
Glouc., i. xx iv. 

Gesta... S. Alb., i. 94. 



Adam de Domerham, 
Hist. , ed. Hearne 
(1727), ii. 317-18; 
Hearne, Hist, and 
Ant. of G. (1722), 
I4I-3- 



Chron. Abb. de E. 99. 



Girald. Cambrensis 
(Rolls Ser.), vii. 165. 



APPENDIX C 



265 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



c. 1170 



c. 1177 
c. 1180 

1184 
12 or 13 c. 

13 c. 

13 c. 

13 c. 
13 c. 

13 c. 



Over 223 volumes in Christ Church, 
Canterbury : catalogue, which is but a 
fragment, contains books of grammar, 
rhetoric, music, arithmetic, poetry, 
logic, astronomy, geometry Donatus 
in Greek, Donatus in English, Cicero's 
Rhetoric, de Senectute, de Amicitia (2), 
Plato's TimaeuSy Terence (5 volumes), 
Sallust (8 volumes), Virgil (8 volumes), 
Horace (8), Lucan (5), Statius (6), 
Juvenal (4), Persius (9), Cato (2), 
Ovid (5). 

Nearly 80 books in Peterboro' Abbey 
Seneca, Terence, Martial. 



74 pieces in Whitby Abbey 42 theology, 
15 history: Cicero (de Amicitia, de 
Senectute\ Homer, Juvenal, Plato, 
Sedulius, Statius, Virgil? (Bucolica), 
Persius, etc. 

Bp. Bartholomew left books to church at 
Crediton and to another church. 

At Bury S. Edmunds Abbey there was 
a fair library at this period ; including 
average number of classics. 

Before this Reading Abbey had 228 
volumes Seneca, Aristotle, Virgil, 
Juvenal ; Gesta R. Henrici sectmdi, 
Ystoria JRading, Hist. Anglorum. 

At Lanthony there were 486 volumes, 
including Plato, Plautus, Cicero, Sallust, 
Persius, Ovid, Lucan, Horace, Terence. 

Prior John de Marcle gave 6 treatises on 
law to Evesham Abbey. 

At Leominster church, a dependency of 
Reading Abbey, 130 books: Rotula 
cum vita sancti Guthlaci anglice scripta, 
Medidnalis unus anglicis litteris 
scriptuS) Liber qui appellatiir landboc. 

At Rievaulx there was a large library of 
the usual medieval character : inch 
Seneca, Justinian. 



James, 7. 



Hist. Angl. Script. 
Varii [Sparke], 98- 
9; Merryweather, 96- 
97 ; Becker, 238. 

Becker, 226. 



B.M. Cotton Roll. II., 
II (at end). 

James 1 , 23. 



E. H. R. (1888), 117- 
23- 



B. M. Harl. MS. 460, 
ff.3-ii; Zentralblatt, 
ix. 207-22. 

Chron. Abb. de E. 
(Rolls Ser.), xxiin. 

.#.tf.( 1888), 123-5. 



James 9 , 45-56. 



266 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



13 c. Flexley or Dene Abbey owned 79 
volumes : incl. three English books. 

About 46 writers used as authorities by 
Ralph of Diss for his Abbreviationes 
Chronicoriim . 

1 202 At S. Andrew's Priory, Rochester, there 
were about 280 volumes, many includ- 
ing several distinct treatises. Scrip- 
tures, liturgical and devotional books, 
Fathers, schoolmen, philosophical and 
medical treatises, grammatical works : 
Horace, Virgil, Sallust, Terence, 
Persius, Lucan, Ovid, Aristotle's Or- 
ganon, Cicero. 

1208 Eight books presented to King John by 
the sacristan of Reading, all scriptural 
and theological. 

1222 Peterborough receives 7 books, incl. 
2 Psalters, from Abbot R. de 
Lyndesheye. 

1215 At Glastonbury, 14 or 15 books were 
written for Prior Thomas : books of 
the Bible, missals. 

1217-18 Prior Thos. de Marleberge gave a "large 
collection" including law, medicine, 
philosophy, poetry, theology, gram- 
mar ; Cicero (de Amicitia, de Seiuctute, 
Paradoxa), Lucan, Juvenal to Eve- 
sham Abbey. 

1226 At Peterborough a dozen books were 
left by Abbot Alex, de Holdernesse. 

1245 At Peterborough about 2O books, ordinary 
in character, were left by Abbot Walter 
de St. Edmund. 

1240 Bp. Ralph of Maidstone gave service 
books and a Legend to Hereford 
Cathedral. 

1245 35 vols. at St. Paul's Cathedral ; ordinary 
medieval character. 

124748 At Glastonbury there were nearly 5 
books. Incl. much theology, chronicles, 
classics. Aristotle, Livy, Sallust, Virgil, 
Cicero, Plato, Persius, Horace, Juvenal. 



Zentralblatt, ix. 205-07. 



R. de Diceto, Op. Hist. 
i. 20. 



Arch&ologia, Cantiana, 
iii. 47-64 (1860). 



Sussex Archaol. Collec- 
tions, ii. (1849), 
134-5. 

Dugdale, i. 354. 



Adam de Domerham, 
Hist. ed. Hearne 
(1727), ii. 441. 

Chron. Abb. de E. 
(Rolls Ser.), 267. 



Dugdale, i. 354. 
Ibid., i. 355. 



Archceologia, \. 496. 

Joh. Glaston, Chron. , 
ed. Hearne (1726), 
II. 423-44' 



APPENDIX C 



267 



DATE 



1249 
1253 

' 1255 
1258-59 

1259 

1260-90 
1262 

1266 
1274 

1295 

1280-1303 
1285-1331 



DESCRIPTION 



Peterborough receives 5 books from 
Abbot Wm. de Hotot. 

Richard de Wyche, Bp. of Chichester, left 
a number of books to the friars : chiefly 
glossed books of the Bible, a glossed 
psalter, the Sentences, etc. 

John of Basingstoke imports Greek MSS. 
from Athens. 

Prior Jno. of Worcester gave a number of 
books to Evesham Abbey. Grammar, 
logic, physics, theology, canon and 
civil law. 

Master of Sherborne Hospital left church 
books, and a liber phisica to the 
Hospital. 

Many books, including Seneca, given to 
S. Albans by Abbot Roger. 

Peterborough receives 5 books from Abbot 
J. de Kaleto. Incl. Testamenttim xii. 
Patriarcharum 



SOURCE 



Roger de Thoris gave books 
Friars' Convent, Exeter. 



to Grey 



Abbot R. de Sutton left some 17 books to 
Peterborough. Incl. psalters, canon 
law, liber Naturalium Aristotelis. 

Abbot R. de London leaves 10 books to 
Peterborough. Boethius de Consola- 
tione philosophiae, Nova logica, psalters, 
etc. 



Bp. Richard of Gravesend. 
volumes, worth about ^IO 



Over 100 



Library of about 1850 volumes now at 
Christ Ch., Canterbury. A fine collec- 
tion. Many classics. English books : 
Genesis Anglice depicta, Boethius de 
Consolatione, Herbarius Anglice de- 
pictus, Chronica vetustissima, Chronica 
Latine et Anglice, etc. 



1287-1345 I Richard of Bury owned a large library. 



Dugdale, i. 356. 



Sussex Archceol. Coll., 
i. (1848) 168-187. 



Gasquet 3 , 158-59; Ste- 
venson, 224, 227. 

Chron. Abb. de E. 
(Rolls Ser.), xxiin. 



Surtees Soc. , ii. 6. 

Gesta...S. Alb., i. 483. 
Dugdale, i. 356. 



Oliver, Mon. D. Exon. 
(1846), 322-33. 

Dugdale, i. 357. 



Dugdale, i. 357. 



Misc. of Philobiblon S. 
1856 ; Edwards, i. 
373- 

James, 13-142. 



R. de B., passim. 



268 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1290 



1295 



1299 



1299-1300 



Late 13 c. 



14 c. 



14 c. 
14 c. 

140. 

14 c. 
14 c. 



John of Taunton added 40 works to 
Glastonbury Library. Ordinary. 



13 Gospels and other parts of the Scrip- 
tures, and a commentary of Aquinas at 
S. Paul's Cathedral. 

Abbot W. de Wodeforde left 18 books to 
Peterborough. Liturgical, theological, 
and law. 



Joh. Glast. Hist., ed. 
Hearne (1726), ii. 
251 - 52; A. de 
Domerham, Hist. t '\\. 
574-75- 



Dugdale, i. 358. 



Edward i. owned a few books; including Edwards, i. 391. 
book of romance. 

Galfridus de LawaS, rector of the church i James 10 , 158. 
S. Magnus, London, had 49 books. | 
Canon law, grammar, logic, medicine, 
theology. 



Chron. Abb. Ram. 
356 ( Rolls Sen). 



More than 600 books and 170 service 
books in Ramsey Abbey. Aristotle, 
Plato (Timaeus), Greek Psalters, Ars 
Loquendi Linguam Graecam, Greek and 
Latin Psalter ; Virgil, Ovid, Martial, 
Terence, Lucan, Prudentius, Seneca ; 
French Bible, three Hebrew books, 
Hebrew Psalter, two parts of Hebrew 
Bible, Liber expositionum dictionum 
Hebraicum, glossary of Hebrew Bible, 
Expositio nominum Hebraeorum^ Inter - 
pret at tones Hebraicorum, Ars loquendi 
et intelligendi in Lingua Hebraica. 

Small and unimportant collection at St. , Oliver, Mon. D. Exon., 
Andrews Priory, Tywardreath. 36. 



Richard of Stowe gave to St. Peter's, 
Gloucester, 7 vols., including Boethius 
de Consolatione P. 

John de Bruges wrote 33 books, ordinary 
in character, for Coventry Priory. 
Incl. Palladius, de Agricultura. 



B. M. Harl. MS., 627, 
fo. 8 a. 



Hearne, Hist, and Ant. 
Glast., App. 291-93 
(1722) ; Dugdale, iii. 
186. 



23 books at Deeping Priory, Lincolnshire : Dugdale, iv. 167. 
including Gesta Britonum. 



About 350 vols. at Peterboro' : including 
Aristotle, Cicero, Virgil, Ovid, Seneca, 
Sallust ; a good deal in French. 



Gunton, Hist, of Ch. 
of Peterboro" (1686), 
173-224. 



APPENDIX C 



269 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1300 

1313 
1315 

1315 

1315 
1321 

1322 

1325 
1327 

1327 
1327 



1335 
1335 



Bp. Bek had a number of books which he i SurteesSoc.,\\\. 121-22. 
refused to return to the Prior of 
Durham; included Historia Anglorum, 
and Liber qui vocatur Liber S. Cuth- 
berti, in quo seer eta Do /nits scribuntur, 

15 works, chiefly theological, beq. by 
Bp. Baldock to St. Paul's Cathedral. 

Church books and Bibles in Christ 
Church, Canterbury (list). 



Guy de Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, left 
books to Bordesley Abbey : French 
romances, etc. 



Some 40 volumes at Durham College, 
Oxford ; sent from Durham. Chiefly 
theology ; Aristotle. 

Abbot Godfrey de Croyland left about 
a dozen books to Peterborough. 
Theology, law, etc. 

Abbot Walter of Taunton gave 7 volumes 
to Glastonbury. 

A small collection of church books at St. 
Edmund's Hospital, Gateshead. 

Abingdon Abbey had 100 Psalters, 100 
Graduals, 40 Missals ; 22 codices, 
probaby not church books. 

About 230 volumes at Exeter. Civil and 
canon law, theology. 

Bp. Cobham bequeathed his books and 
350 marks to found common library at 
Oxford. 

Prior Henry Eastry bequeathed 80 books 
to Christ Church, Canterbury 26 
theology, 29 canon law, 14 civil law, 
1 1 church books. 

Abbot Adam de Sodbury gave 7 vols. to 
Glastonbury. 

4 books given and 32 sold to Richard of 
Bury from S. Albans Abbey. 



/-fist. MSS., 9th Rep., 
Pt. i. 46 a. 

Dart, Cath. of Cant. 
(1726), App. vi., 



Todd, ///. of Lives of 
Gower and Chaucer 
(1810), 161, 162; 
Merry weather, 193- 
4 ; Edwards, i. 375-6. 

0. H. S., 32, Collect. 
36. 



Dugdale, i. 358-59. 

Williams, 81. 
Surtees Soc., ii. 22. 
Ibid., vii. xxxiii. 



Oliver, Lives of Bps. of 
E., 301-10. 

Mun. Acad., i. 227. 



James, 143. 



Joh. Glaston. Hist., ed. 
Hearne (1726), 265. 

Gesta...S. Alb.> ii. 200. 



270 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1335-49 
1336 

1337 

1338 

1343 

1345 (6) 

1349-96 
1350 

1353 

1355 
1353 
1358 
1360 



Books given to S. Albans by Abbot 
Michael. 

Bp. Stephen Gravesend bequeathed books 
to four colleges, Merton, University, 
Balliol, Oriel. 

93 books missing at Christ Church, 
Canterbury. Many books of offices ; 
includes Brutus in French. 

Abbot Adam de Botheby left about a 
dozen books on canon law, theology, 
and liturgical books to Peterborough. 

Hinton Priory lent about 23 books to 
another house Gospels, homilies, lives 
of saints, etc. 



Ibid., ii. 363. 



Lyte, 181, 



James, 146. 



Dugdale, i. 360. 



Hunter, 17 ; Surtees 
Soc., vii. xxxviii. 



Over 50 volumes in Lichfield Cathedral W. Salt Arch. S. vi., 

all church books, except 2 martyr- ! pt. 2, Sacrist's roll, 

ologies, 4 quires of lives of saints, and 211. 
Degestis Angloriim. St. Chad's Gospels. 

Abbot Thomas' study or library at St. 
Albans enlarged ; many books added. 

Trinity Hall, Cambridge, receives 84 
vols. from founder, Dr. Bateman : 
Canon law (32), civil law (10), theology 
(28), chapel books (14). 

Abbot de Morcote left some 1 1 books to 
Peterborough : Canon law, a Catholicon. 

Elizabeth de Clare bequeathed to Clare 
Hall, a few books : including Hugutio. 



John Trevaur, Bp. of St. Asaph. 
ecclesiastical books. 



Chiefly 



Gesta...S. 
389 ; cf. ii. 399. 

C. A. S. (1864), ii. 73- 
78; Clark, 138. 



Dugdale, i. 360^ 



Edwards, i. 374. 



B. M. 
25459, 



Add. 
fo. 291. 



MS. 



Thomas de la Mare, wealthy canon of 
York, owned some six law books. 

Bp. Grandisson of Exeter appears to have 
owned a good library. He gave 4 
books to Exeter ; Aquinas' works to 
Black Friars of Exeter ; I to Windsor 
Chapel ; remainder to his Chapter, to 
the collegiate churches of Ottery, 
Crediton, and Boseham, and Exeter 
College, Oxford. His copy of Anselm's 
Letters is now in Brit. Mus. 



Surtees Soc.^ iv. 69. 



APPENDIX C 



27 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1361 Peterborough received 7 books from 

Abbot Robt. Ramsey. Canon law. 

1362 A small collection, nearly all church 

books, at Coldingham Priory. 

1368 Simon of Bredon bequeathed books to six 
Oxford Colleges. 

1370 A Chaplain (Adam de Stanton) left 4 
books, including one of romance. 

1372 i At York the Friars Eremites of S. 
Augustine owned 646 books. Bibles 
and glossed books of Bible, Greek 
Psalter, patristic and later church 
writers (91), logic and philosophy (100), 
astronomy and astrology (36), civil law 
(14), canon law (35), grammar and 
Latin poets (50), medicine (22), 
sermons (42), arithmetic, music, geo- 
metry, perspective. 

1374 Archbp. W. Whittlesey bequeathed his 

library to Peterhouse. 

1375 Nearly 100 volumes at Oriel College, 

Oxford ; half the collection theology and 
philosophy ; translations of Aristotle. 

1376 116 books bequeathed to Westminster 

Abbey by Simon Langham, Archbp. 
of Canterbury. Valued at 1 12 1 francs 
and 14 shillings. Chiefly theology. 

1377-1400 In the Royal Chapel of Windsor Castle 
34 books were chained up, incl. Catho- 
licon, Hugutio, Legenda Aurea, two 
French romances, one " Romaunce de 
la Rose, et alius difficilis materiae." 
Also liturgical and Scriptural books. 

1378 Sir John de Foxle left a large missal and 
a few service books. 



1378 Thos. de Farnylaw, Chancellor of York, 
left Bible and concordances to St. 
Nicholas' Church, Newcastle ; a book 
of sermons to Embleton Church ; other 
books to Vicar of Waghen ; others to 
Merton and Balliol. 



Dugdale, i. 361. 



Surtees Soc,, xii., App. 
xl. 

Hist. MSS., 9th Rept., 
pt. i., 46. 

Cam. Soc., Bury wills 
(1850), i. 

Fasciculus J. W. Clark 
dicatus, 2-96. 



Hook, Archbps., iv. 
242-43. 

O. H. S. 5, Collect., 
i. 66. 



Robinson, 5-7. 



Dugdale, vi., pt. 3, 
1362. 



Archaol. Cantiana, iii. 
267 ; Archaol. Jour., 
xv. (1858), 267. 

Surtees Soc. , iv. 102-03. 



272 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



1379 



c. 1380 



1387 



1387 



1387 



1387 



1387 



1389 



1389-1435 



1390 



c. 1390 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



Wm. de Feriby, canon of York, archd. Ibid., iv. 103-04. 
of Cleveland. " Item lego ad novam 
fabricam Ecclesiae Ebor. xx marcas et 
omnes libros, qui fuerint domini mei 
domini Willielmi de Melton." Several 
law books specifically mentioned. 

Bp. Reed left many manuscripts to O. H. S., 32, Collect. 
Merton College. 214. 

William of Wykeham furnished New lbid. t 223. 
College with over 240 books 135 
(138) theology, 28 philosophy, 41 canon 
law, 36 civil law. 

52 books added to New College by some- Ibid., 223. 
body unnamed : 37 medicine. 

63 books given to New College by Bp. | Ibid., 223. 
Reed : 58 theology, 2 philosophy, 3 
canon law. 



Sir Simon Burley owned a few romances. 



Hy. Whitefield left books and money to 
buy books for Exeter College, and 
Burley on logic and Aristotle's Ethica 
and Topica were bought and chained 
up in library. 

450 volumes at S. Martin's Priory, Dover 
Bibles, theology, civil and canon law, 
logic, philosophy, rhetoric, medicine, 
chronicles, romances (le Romonse du 
roy Charles, le Romonse de Athys, le 
Romonse de la Rose, etc.), poetry, 
grammar, dictionaries. Plato, Aris- 
totle, Horace, Statius, Ovid, Virgil, 
Juvenal, Terence, Lucan. 

John, Duke of Bedford, bought portion of 
French Royal Library. 

14 books given to Evesham Abbey by 
John de Brymesgrave, sacrist. 



96 books given to Evesham Abbey by 
Prior Nich. Herford ; not the Lollard 
of this name. 



B. M. Add. MS. 25459, 
fo. 206. 



O. H. S., 27, Boase, 7. 



James, xc. 407. 



Delisle, Le Cabinet des 
manuscrits. 

Chron. Abb. de E. 
(Rolls Ser.), xxii n. ; 
Dugdale, ii. 7 n. 

Chron. Abb. de E. 
(Rolls Ser.), xxiin. 



APPENDIX C 



273 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



Peterborough received 8 books, incl. 
Catholicon, from Abbot Henry de 
Overton. 

508 volumes in common case within 
spendiment and in inner room of 
spendiment at Durham Priory Bibles, 
theology, logic, philosophy, medicine, 
grammar, law. Seneca, Cicero, Quin- 
tilian, Valerius Maximus, Palladius 
(de Agricultura), A. Gellius, Juvenal, 
Terence, Virgil, Ovid, Aristotle. 

The Rector of Adell Church, Thos. de 
.Halton, left 5 books of canon law. 

John Percyhay of Swynton left small col- 
lection of books, incl. Brut in French. 

Robert de Roos, a soldier, left church 
books, and several volumes in French : 
incl. Roumans de Sydrach (a curious 
medley of medieval mystery and science, 
in prose). 

King's Hall, Cambridge, had a library of 
87 volumes. 

John Hopton, a chaplain, left a few books, 
four mentioned : incl. Gospels in English. 
(? Wyclh's). 

John de Pykering, rector of S. Mary's, 
Castlegate, York, left small collection 
of church books. 

Thomas of England, an Augustinian, 
bought MSS. in Italy. 



4H volumes in common library, for re- 
fectory, and in case of novices at Durham 
Priory. Theology, law, history ; Seneca, 
Aristotle, Galen, Hippocrates. 

Johnde Scardeburgh, rector of Tichmarsh, 
left over 26 books : incl. Brut in French, 
Mannedevile "in paupiro" in French. 

i 79 volumes at Hulne. Theology, history, 
grammar, logic, law, church books. 



Dugdale, i. 361. 



Surtees Soc., vii. 10-39. 



Ibid., iv. 156. 
Ibid., iv. 164. 
2 bid., iv. 178. 



Willis, Arch. Hist, of 
Camb,, ii. 442. 

Stir tees Soc., iv. 196. 



Ibid., iv. 194. 



Gherardi, Statuti della 
Univ. e Studio Fior- 
entino, 364 ; Ein- 
stein, 15 ; Sandys, 
ii. 220. 

Surtees Soc., vii. 46-84. 



Ibid., xlv. 6. 



Ibid* i vii. 131-35. 



18 



274 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1396 

1396 
1397 

1399 



15 c. 



1400 



c. 1400 



1400 



1403 



1404 



1409 



c. 1410 



Walter de Bragge, canon of York, left small 
collection of theology and service books : 
incl. Piers Plowman and Catholicon. 

Abbot Nich. Elmstow left liturgical and 
law books to Peterborough. 

Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester, 
left a collection of books, theological and 
French. 

Eleanor of Gloucester, left about 15 books, 
mostly in French ; richly bound. 



1 58 titles given to Pembroke College, Cam- 
bridge, by various donors. Aristotle, 
Seneca, Aulus Gellius, Ovid. 

Robert de Wycliff, rector of Hutton 
Rudby in Cleveland, left 5 books : incl. 
Catholicon. 

326 volumes at Titchfield Abbey. 102 
liturgical volumes. Theology, canon 
and civil law, English law, medicine, 
grammar, logic and philosophy. 18 
French books. 

Meaux Abbey had nearly 350 books, not 
counting church books : incl. Historia 
Anglorum, Martial, Seneca, Ovid, 
Plato, Suetonius, Cicero. 

Thos. de Dalby, archdeacon of Richmond, 
left a few church books ; Decretals, 
Catholicon. 

John de Scarle, Lord Chancellor, left a 
few books : Bible, missal, psalter, 
breviary, Speculum Sacerdotum. 

Bp. Skirlaw of Durham gave 6 books to 
University College, Oxford, where he 
had endowed Fellowships. Left 13 
church books when he died. 

Wessington sent 20 books Bible, com- 
mentaries, etc. to Durham College, 
Oxford ; 19 books bought in their stead. 

Robert Rygge, Chancellor of the University 
of Oxford, left books to Exeter College, 
Oxford 



Stir lees Soc., iv. 207. 



Dugdale, i. 361. 



B. M. Add. 25459, fo. 
212-16. 



Nicolas, Testamenta 
vettista, i. 146 ; Ed- 
wards, i. 385. 

C. A. S., ii. (Svo ser.) 
13-21; James 10 , xiii.- 
xvii. 

Surtees Soc., ii. 66 ; iv. 
405- 



Madan, 78-79. 



Chron. man. de Melsa 
(Rolls Ser.) iii. 
Ixxxiii. 



Surtees Soc. , xlv. 1 3. 



Ibid.) xlv. 22. 



vii. 127 ; iv. 319. 



Ibid., vii. 39-41 ; cp. 
O. H. S., 32, 
Collect. 39-40. 

O. H. .,27, Boase, n. 



APPENDIX C 



275 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1411 
1412 

1413 
1414 

1416 

1416 

1416 
1418 

1418 
1418 



1419 



34 books added to Christ Church, Canter- 
bury, during time of Prior Chillenden : 
all canon and civil law. 



Lit. Cant. (Rolls Ser.), 
iii. 121 ; James, 150- 



Roger de Kyrkby, vicar of Gainford, left ! Siirtees Soc. , ii. 54. 
a few books : Legenda Aurea, Gemma | 
Ecclesiae, and others not named. 



N. de Lyra chained in chancel of St. Mary's 
Church, Oxford. 

Archbp. Arundel left many books : 
' ' ornamenta oratorii " and books valued 
at over ^352. 

Catalogue of Durham library bears this 
date, but it is either the foundation of 
the catalogue of 1391 or a copy of it. 
This inventory has been used to take 
stock. 

William de Waltham, canon of York, left 
a collection of books, only a few of 
which are mentioned. Chiefly law- 
books. 

St. Mary Redclyffe Church, Bristol, had 
2 books of canon law. 

Stephen Scrope, Archdeaconof Richmond, 
Chancellor of Cambridge University, 
left a few books of canon law ; also 
Catholicon. 

John de Newton left books to Church of 
York, and to Peterhouse, Cambridge. 
Bibles, commentaries, theology : incl. 
Richd. Hampole, Petrarch's de 
Remediis utritisque fortunae, Seneca, 
Valerius Maximus. 

380 volumes now at Peterhouse. Theo- 
logy (124), natural and moral philosophy 
and metaphysics (53)> canon and civil 
law (66), grammar and poetry (23), logic 
(20), medicine (18), astronomy (13), 
alchemy, arithmetic, music, geometry, 
rhetoric. Aristotle, Plato, Cicero, 
Ovid, Lucan, Statins, Sallust, Quin- 
tilian, Seneca, Virgil, Petrarch's Epistles. 

Wm. Cawod, canon of York, left 13 
books, uninteresting in character. 



Mtm. A cad., 270. 

Hook, Lives of Abps., 
iv. 527. 



Surtees Soc., vii. 85- 
116. 



Surtees Soc., xlv. 57-59. 



Cox and Harvey, Eng. 
Ch. Furnitiire, 331. 

Surtees Soc., iv. 385. 



Hunter, Notes of Wills 
in Registers of York, 
15 ; Edwards, i. 386. 



James 3 , 3-26; Mullin- 
ger, 324; Clark, 139- 
41 ; cf. Camb. Lit., ii. 
362-67. 



Stirtees Soc. , iv. 395-96. 



2 7 6 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1420-40 
1420-60 

1421 

1422 

1422 
1423 

c. 1424 
1424-40 

1425 
H30 

1432 
1432 

1432 



49 volumes added to S. Albans in Abbot 
Whethamstede's time : incl. some books 
for the choir, and other books of the 
Abbot's own compilation. 

The library of Winchester College was a 
large collection of liturgical books ; 
philosophy, chronicles, canon and civil 
law, grammar. 

Thos. Greenwood, canon of York, left 
books valued at ^31, 45. Canon and 
civil law. 

Roger Whelpdale, Bp. of Carlisle, left a 
small number of books to Balliol 
College, Oxford. 

9 books sent from Durham to cell of Stam- 
ford, which was in control of Durham. 

Henry Bowet, Archbp. of York, left 33 
books, worth ^33. Bible, theology, 
law. 

10 volumes given to Wells Cathedral by 
Bp. Stafford. Canon law, etc. 



122 volumes in Cambridge University 
Library. Theology (69), natural and 
moral philosophy (17), canon law (23), 
medicine, logic, poetry, grammar, 
history. 

Sheriff Wm. Chichele bequeathed 10 for 
books to Guildhall Library. 

Robert Ragenhill, advocate of court of 
York, left 5 law books and N. de Lyra 
to Church of York. 

George Darell de Seszay left 5 books : 
incl. Mandeville. . 



j John Raventhorpe, a chaplain, left service 
books and grammatical books ; also 
Liber Angliae de Fabulis et Narra- 
cionibus. 

Robert Wolveden, treasurer of Church of 
York, left theological books to Church 
of York. Cato glossed and Golden 
Legend also left. 



Ann. mon. S. Alb. a J. 
Amund., ii. 268-71. 



Archesol. Jour., xv. 
(1858), 62-74. 



Surtees Soc., xlv. 64. 



Ibid., xlv. 67. 



Ibid., vii. 1 1 6. 



Ibid., xlv. 76; Histo- 
rians of^ York (Rolls 
Ser.), hi. 314. 

Hist. MSS., 3rd Rep., 
App. 363 ; Archceo- 
logia, Ivii. 208. 

C. A. S. Comm., ii. 
242-57 ; Bradshaw, 
19-34- 



L. A. R., x. 382. 
Surtees Soc., xlv. 89. 

Ibid., xxx. 27, 28. 
Ibid., xxx. 28-29. 

Ibid., xlv. 91. 



APPENDIX C 



277 



DATE 

1432 
i43 2 
1434 
1435 
M35 

1435-36 
1436 
1438 
M39 

1439 

1440 
1440 

1441 
M43 



DESCRIPTION 



Dr. Thos. Gascoigne gave 6 books to 
Lincoln College, valued 17, IDS. 

Robert Semer, sub-treasurer of Church of 
York, left 5 books, unimportant. 



SOURCE 



Clark, Lincoln College, 



Surtees Soc., xlv. 91 n. 



J. de Manthorp, vicar of Hayton, left a Ibid., xxx. 36. 
few church books. 



Sylvius saw Latin translation of 
Thucydides in S. Paul's Cathedral. 

T. Hebbeden, dean of Collegiate Church 
of Auckland, left a few books ; 6 
mentioned, incl. Guido delle Colonne, 
Lancelot in French. 



Creighton, Papacy, iii. 
53 n - 

Sitrtees Soc. , ii. 82. 



Robert Fitzhugh, Bp. of London, left 13 Simpson, W.S., Regis- 
books, incl. Textus moralis philosophiae I trum . . . Eccl. Cath. 

S. Pauli(i%K\ 399. 



Thomas Langley, Bp. of Durham, left j Surtees Soc., vii. 119. 
over 40 books. Theology, civil and 
canon law, N. de Lyra. 

Thomas Cooper of Brasenose Hall left 6 j Mun. Acad., 515. 
books : incl. Boethius, book on geo- 
metry, Ovid's Remedia Amoris. 



Thomas Markaunt, presented to Corpus 
Christi College, Cambridge, 76 books, 
worth about ^104. 



Humfrey, Duke of Gloucester, gave 129 
books to Oxford University Library. 
See p. 140. 

23 books given to All Souls' College by 
Henry VI. Civil and canon law, 
theology, philosophy. 

Robert Alne, an officer in the ecclesiastical 
court of York, left about a dozen books. 
Canon law, etc. ; Petrarch, de Remediis 
utriusque fortitnae. 

Andrew Holes, political agent of Henry Sandys, ii. 222. 
vi, bought many manuscripts in Italy. 



C. C. C. MS., 232 ; 
C. A. S. Misc. 
comm., 4to ser., No. 
14, pt. I, 16-20. 

Mun. Acad., 758-65. 



B. M. Add. MS., 4608; 
Vickers, H. Duke of 
Gloucester, 404. 

Surtees Soc., xxx. 78- 
79- 



Humfrey, Duke of Gloucester, gave 135 
volumes to Oxford University Library. 
See p. 142. 



Mun. A fad., 765-72. 



278 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1443 
1443 

1445 

M47 
1448 

1448 



1449 
145 
145 
MS 1 

I45 1 

H5 2 

MS 2 



John Carpenter bequeathed books to 
Guildhall Library, London. 

John Brette, student at Oxford, owned 
i book, de Forma dictandi, and a 
pamphlet, worth together is. lid. 

as. Hedyan, Bachelor of canon and civil 
law, principal of Eagle Hall, Oxford, 
owned 8 books of law. 

Reginald Mertherderwa, a rector, owned 
6 books: grammar, book of civil law, etc. 

Ralph Dreff, of Broadgates Hall, Oxford, 
owned 23 books. Bible, law. 

At the Hospital of S. Mary within 
Cripplegate, called Elsingspitel, Lon- 
don, there were 63 volumes. Bible, 
theology, canon law ; Hippocrates, 
Galen. 



Thomas Morton, canon of York, left a 
small number of church books. 

107 volumes at Lincoln Cathedral at this 
time. 

Robert Hoskyn, rector, left a small 
collection. Church books, canon law. 

Henry Caldey, vicar of Cookfield, left 25 
books. Theology, law. Seneca, ad 
Lucilium, Martial, Plato. Value 
5, os. 6d. 

John Moreton, chaplain, left 6 physical 
books. 

Richard Browne or Cordone, Archdeacon 
of Rochester, left more than 30 books. 
Theology and law. 

Wm. Duffield, canon of York, left 40 
volumes, worth 46, i6s. Theology, 
law ; Catholicon. 



L. A. R., x. 382. 
Mun. Acad., 531. 

Ibid., 544- 

Ibid., 559-6i. 
Ibid., 582. 



B. M. Cott. Roll., xiii. 
10 ; Malcolm, Lon- 
dinium Redivivwn 
(1807), i. 27; Viet. 
Hist, of London, i. 
536. 

Surtees Soc., xlv. no. 



Clark, in. 

Mun. Acad., 605-06. 

Ibid., 609. 

Ibid., 613. 
Ibid., 639-53. 

Surtees Soc., xlv. 132-33. 



APPENDIX C 



279 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



H53 



H54 

1454 

1454 

H5S 
H55 

1457 
1457 

1457 
1457 

1457 
c. 1458 



King's College, Cambridge, had a 
library of 174 volumes: philosophy, 
theology, medicine, astrology, mathe- 
matics, canon law, grammar, classical 
and general literature, inclu. Aristotle, 
Plato, Cicero, Seneca, Sallust, Caesar, 
Ovid, Virgil, etc. 



Richard Plane, rector, left a few church 
books. 

Cardinal John Kempe left books worth 
^263, Ss. lod. Theology, canon and 
civil law, etc. 

Wm. Brownyng, canon of Exeter, left 
books to be chained in library of 
Exeter College. 

John Lassehowe, a scholar, left six books : 
grammar, sermons, breviary. 

Thomas Spray, chaplain, left 2 books : 
Liber Sermonum Magdalenae, Mani- 
pulus curatorum. 

Thomas Aleby, rector of Kirkby in 
Cleveland, left 6 church books. 

John Edlyngton, rector of Kirkby 
Ravensworth, left small collection. 
Bible, liturgical books, Legenda Aurea, 
Polichronicon, etc. 

John Seggefyld, M.A., Fellow of Lincoln 
College, left two books, Boethius de 
Consol. philos. in English, one of 
Richard Rolle's works. 

Doctor Thos. Gascoigne, Chancellor of 
Oxford, left books and "quires" 
written on paper to Syon Monastery, 
Isleworth. 

John Baringham, treasurer of York, left a 
small number of liturgical books. 

John Tiptoft, Earl of Worcester, bought 
many manuscripts in Italy. 



James 2 , 72-83. 



Surtees Soc., xxx. 180. 



Hook, Lives of Abps., 
v. 267. 



0. H. S., 27, Boase, 
xxxviin. 



Mim. A cad., 663. 
Ibid., 660. 

Surtees Soc., xxx. 210. 
Ibid., xxvi. 2, 3. 

Mun. Acad., 666. 



Mun. Acad., 671 ; 
Bateson, xxv. 



Stir tees Soc., xxx. 203. 



0. H. S. 36, Anstey, ii. 
354, 390. 



280 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 
H58 


DESCRIPTION 


SOURCE 


171 books at S. Paul's Cathedral. 
Grammar (6), philosophy (5), classics 
(7) medicine (6), history (8), canon 
law (21), remainder Bible commen- 
taries, theology. Cicero, Virgil, Seneca, 
Suetonius, Hippocrates, Galen. 


Dugdale, Hist, of 8. 
JPaufs(iSiS), 392-98. 


1458 


Nicholas Holme, canon of the collegiate 
Church of Ripon, left 15 books. Litur- 
gical, Richard Rolle of Hampole, I 
book of medicine. 


Surtees Soc., xxx. 219. 


H58 


Wm. Port gave books to New College, 
Oxford. 


0. H. S. 32, Collect. 
232-33- 


1463 


John Baret, lay officer in Bury Abbey, left 
3 books, Disce mori, ' f book of ynglych 
and latyn with diuerse maters of good 
exortacons, wretyn in papir," Lyd- 
gate's Story of Thebes. 


Cam. Soc., Bury Wills, 
35, 41, 246. 


1464 


Wm. Downham, chaplain of York, left a 
few books. 


Surtees Soc. , xxx. 268. 


1464 


St. Mary's Church, Warwick, had 5 
books. Bible versified, Pharetra de 
Auctoritatibus, etc. 


Notices of Churches of 
Warwickshire ', i. 15- 
16. 


1464 


Books bequeathed by John Rowe to Exeter 
College, Oxford ; also Ralph Morewell. 


0. H. S. 27, Boase. 


1464-67 


William Selling, Benedictine monk, col- 
lected Greek and Latin books in Italy. 


James, li. ; Sandys, ii. 
225. 


1466 


John Fernell, chaplain, left a few gram- 
matical and other books. 


Surtees Soc., xxx. 275. 


1466 At Ewelme Almshouse, Oxford, were de- 


Hist. ^SS., 8th Kept., 



livered some liturgical books, 4 French 
books, a ' ' boke of English, in paper, of 
ye pilgrymage, translated by dom John 
Lydgate out of frensh," and other 
books. 



1468 I Elizabeth Sywardby left 8 books, several 

in English. 

1469 Sir Richard Willoughby of Woollaton, 

left to parish church of Woollaton 
liturgical books and Crede mihi. 

1469 | Sir Edward Bethum gave books for chain- 
ing in church of Lytham Cell, Lanes. 



pt. i. 629 a. 

Surtees Soc., xlv. 163. 
Ibid., xlv. 171. 

/bid., vii. 126. 



APPENDIX C 



281 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1471-72 j Wm. Hawk, rector of Berwick in Elmet, 
left i psalter. 

1472-73 J Queens' College, Cambridge, had 224 
volumes in the library. Theology, law. 
Aristotle. Catholicon. 



Siirtees Soc., xlv. 22on. 



C. A. S. Coinin., ii. 
(1864) 165-81. 



1472 | John Hamundson, master of grammar Surtees Soc., xlv. 198- 
school attached to York Minster, left 99. 
book of Chronicles in English, Papias, 
a book called Horsehede. 

*473 i Cambridge University Library comprised | C. A. S. Comm., ii. 
330 volumes. Lucan, Ovid, Aristotle, (1864) 258-76. 
Seneca, Cicero. Petrarch, de Remediis. 



1473 j 68 books, mostly Scriptural commentaries, 
given to University College, Oxford, by 
an old Fellow, Wm. Aspylon. 



Carr, Univ. Coll. 
(1902), 68. 



1470-75 j Thomas Rotherham gave many books to i Willis, Camb., iii. 25. 
the University Library, Cambridge. 



1474-75 Robert Est, possibly chantry-priest in Surtees Sac., xlv. 159. 
York Minster, left to parish church of 
Brigsley, Lines., a small collection : 
incl. Legenda Sanctomm, liber de Gestis 
Romanorum cum aliis fabulis Jsopi et 
mult is narrationibus. 

I 475~76 Thos. Worthington, vicar of Sherburn in Ibid., xlv. 220 n. 
Elmet, left 3 volumes to Balliol College, 
Oxford ; unimportant. 



H75-76 Robt. Echard, rector of East Bridgeford, Ibid., xlv. 219. 
left 10 books, several liturgical, the rest j 
unimportant. 



1475 104 volumes in library at S. Catharine's 

College, Cambridge. Plato, Aristotle 
(Ethica and Politico), Cicero, Petrarch, 
de Remediis (2 copies), Boccaccio, de 
Cast's viroritin illustrium, in English. 

1476 : John Hurte, vicar of S. Mary's, Notting- 

ham, left 21 books. Liturgical books, 
theology, astronomy, Guido delle 
Colonne's Troy book. 



C. A. S.,'\. (1840) i-ii, 



Surtees Soc. , 

220-22. 



xlv. 



282 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 



1478 



1479 
1479-80 

c. 1480 

1481 

1481 

1481 
1482 



DESCRIPTION 



1483 
1483 
1486 



Bp. William Grey gave 200 books to 
Balliol College, Oxford. Nearly all 
were collected in Italy. Plato ( Timaeus 
and EutkyphrO) new translations), the 
Golden Verses of Pythagoras, Cicero, 
incl. some hitherto unknown speeches, 
Quintilian, Seneca. Petrarch's Letters, 
orations of Poggio Bracciolini, Leonardo 
Bruni, and Guarino da Verona. 

Thomas Pynchebek of York left 4 books : 
incl. Richard Rolle of Hampole. 

Robt. Lythe, chaplain, left 6 books, and 
John Burn, another chaplain, 5 unim- 
portant. 

Bishop John Shirwood of Durham owned 
a good library, including a fair collec- 
tion of the classics, and Theodore 
Gaza's Greek grammar. 

William of Waynflete gave 800 books to 
Magdalen College, Oxford. 

Sir Thos. Lyttleton left a Catholicon, 
Constitution.es Provinciales, and Gesta 
Romanorum to Halesowen Church, 
Worcester. 

Dr. John Warkworth gave 55 books to 
Peterhouse. Terence, Statins : Liber 
Cronic' in Anglicis, Liber in Gallicis ; 
much theology. 

At Leicester Abbey there were over 350 
books in the library. Bibles and com- 
mentaries, medieval schoolmen, gram- 
mar, sermons, Lucan, Ovid, Horace, 
Virgil, Cicero, Plato, French books, 
Mandevile, Gower ; logic, astronomy, 
physics. 

Robert Flemming left books, which he 
had collected in Italy, to Lincoln 
College, Oxford. 

Church of S. Christopher le Stocks, 
London, had a collection of church 
books only. 

At this time only 52 volumes were in St. 
Paul's Cathedral ; chiefly liturgical. 



SOURCE 



Coxe, Cat. Cod. Oxon.- 
Balliol ; Mullinger, 
Hist, of Univ. of 
Camb., 397- 



Sttr tees Soc., xlv. iggn. 
Ibid., xlv. 199 and n. 

E. H. R., xxv. 455. 



Warren, Magd. Coll., 
18. 

Library, i. 411. 



James 3 , 23-26. 



Nichols, Hist, of Leice- 
ster (1815), i. pt. 2, 
App. 102-08. 



Einstein, 23. 



Archaologia, xlv. (1880) 
118. 



Dugdale, Hist, of S. 
Paul's, 399. 



APPENDIX C 



283 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1486 
1488 
1489 

1489-94 

1491 
1491 
1491 

1493 
c. 1497 



1498 



John Lese of Pontefract left 5 theological 
books. 



31 books presented to Oxford University 
Library by an old scholar. 



1 28 volumes presented to Oxford University 
Library by Dr. Litchfield, archdeacon of 
Middlesex. 



John Auckland, Prior, presented to 
Durham Priory, some 33 books; ordinary 
medieval character. 



Richard Lovet, vicar of Ruddington, left 
a few theological books. 



Thomas Symson of York left 7 theological 
books. 



Over 40 books given to All Souls College, 
Oxford, by John Stokys, Warden. 

Roger Drury left "ij Ingyshe bocks, called 
Bochas, of Lydgat's makyng." 

St. Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury, con- 
tained 1837 books. Scriptures, theol- 
ogy, natural history, history, philosophy, 
music, geometry, astronomy, medicine, 
logic, grammar, poetry, alchemy, canon 
law. Plato ( Timaetts), Aristotle (a great 
deal: Metaphysica, Physica, Rhetorica, 
Ethica, Politico,, new trans, of Historia 
naturalium), Terence, Cicero, Horace, 
Virgil (Aeneid, Georgics, Bucolics], 
Ovid, Lucan, Seneca (incl. Tragedies), 
Juvenal, Quintilian, Statius ; French 
books Charlemagne, Historia Brit- 
onum, Guy of Warwick, Lancelot, Per- 
ceval of Galles, Holy Graal, Guillaume 
le Marshal, etc. 

Collegiate Church of Auckland possessed 
some 40 volumes. Bible, theological 
and liturgical books, canon law ; 
Cicero's Letters. 



S^lrtees Soc,, xlv. 220- 
21 n. 



Mun. Acad., 357. 



Rudd, Codd. MSS. 
Eccles. Cath. Dun. 
CataL, 1825, passim. 

Surtees Soc., xlv. 221 n. 



Ibid., xlv. i6on. 



Robertson, All Souls 
(Coll. Hist.), 33. 

Cam. Soc., Bury Wills, 
246. 

James, Ivii. 173. 



Surtees Soc., ii. 101-03. 



284 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



DATE 

1498 

1499 
1500 



1506 
1508 

1508 
1509 

1519-20 



1519 



DESCRIPTION 



John Gunthorpe, Dean of Wells, be- 
queathed to Jesus College, Cambridge, 
some manuscripts collected in Italy. 

William Holcombe left books to Exeter 
College and to friends : including 
Hugutio, Gesta Alexandri. 



Archbp. Rotherham left to Jesus College, 
Rotherham, some hundred volumes. 
Chiefly theology. Terence, Cicero's 
Orations, ad Familiares, Horace, 
Sallust's Catilina and Jugurtha, Ovid's 
Metamorphoses, Ars amandi, Remedia 
Amoris, etc., Petrarch (de Vita soli- 
taria, de Reuiediis iitriusque fortunae\ 



363 volumes in Exeter Cathedral. 



306 books repaired at Christ Church, 
Canterbury. Theological, homiletic 
and law books. Livy, Liber grecorttm. 



Abp. Warham gave books to New College. 



Christ's College, Cambridge, received 57 
liturgical books bequeathed by the 
Lady Margaret. 



William Grocyn's Library comprised 105 
printed books and 17 manuscripts. 
Much theology ; leading Latin classics. 
Greek and Latin New Testament. 
Petrarch, Boccaccio, Ficino, Filelfo, 
Lorenzo della Valle, Aeneas Sylvius, 
Perotti. Adagia of Erasmus. 



Robert Same, chaplain, bequeathed i 
book to Wetheringsett Church. 

292 books at Canterbury College, Oxford, 
theology, law, philosophy. Aristotle 
(incl. Ethica newly translated) ; Cicero, 
Horace, Virgil, Lucan ; Boccaccio, 
Lorenzo della Valle. 



SOURCE 



James 16 , 13, 



Oliver, Man. D. Exon., 
278. 



James 13 , 5-8. 



Oliver, 366-75. 



James, 152. 



O. H. S. 32, Collect 
232-33- 



C. A. S., iii. 
8vo), 361. 



(N.S., 



Leland, ii. 3 1 7 ; O.H.S. 
1 6, Collect 319-23. 



Cam. S0c., Bury Wills, 
253- 

James, 165. 



APPENDIX C 



285 



DATE 



DESCRIPTION 



SOURCE 



1504-26 



At least 1421 volumes in Syon Monastery, 
Isleworth. Of the rough classification 
Miss Bateson wrote : ' ' Generally speak- 
ing A includes grammar and classics (77 
volumes) ; B, medicine, astrology, a few 
classics (55) ; C, philosophy (46) ; D, 
commentaries on the Sentences (128) ; 
E, Bibles and concordances (75) ; F-I, 
commentaries on the Old and New 
Testament (232) ; K, History (65) ; L, 
dictionaries (58) ; M, Lives of the Saints 
(121) ; N, Fathers (88) ; O, devotional 
tracts (98) ; P to S, chiefly sermons, 
over 70 books in each class ; T, canon 
law (104); V, civil law (21)," p. vii. 
Of Latin Renascence literature there 
are worksby Coluccio Salutati, Leonardo 
Bruni, Poggio, Bessarion, Platina, 
Poliziano, Pico della Mirandola ; and 
translations from the Greek by Her- 
molaus Barbarus, Gaza, Erasmus, and 
others. Also Petrarch (Psalmi poeni- 
tentiales], Boccaccio (de geneal. deor. 
gent.), Savonarola (de virtute jidei}^ 
Reuchlin. This catalogue is of the 
men's library only : there was another 
library for women. Many of the books 
were printed ; nearly 400 editions have 
been identified. 



Bateson, passim. 



APPENDIX D 

LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL WORKS REFERRED TO FOR 
THIS BOOK 



ADAMNAN . . . Adamnan. Vita S. Columbae. Ed., Reeves. 1874. 

ALLEN . . . Allen, J. R. Celtic Art. 1904. Antiquary's books. 

ARCH/EOLOGIA . . Archseologia, various volumes ; especially vol. xliii. 
and vol. Ivii. (Church, Rev. C. M., Library of Wells 
Cathedral). 

ARCHDALL . . . Archdall, M. Monasticon Hibernicum. 2 vols. 1786. 

*BATESON . . . Bateson, Mary, ed. Catalogue of the Library of Syon 
Monastery, Isleworth. 1898. 

*BECKER . . . Becker, G. Catalogi Bibliothecarum antiqui. Bonn, 
1885. 

*BiBLiO. Soc. . . Bibliographical Society's Transactions and Mono- 
graphs. Especially Monogr. 10 and 13, Strickland 
Gibson, early Oxford bindings ; and G. J. Gray, 
earlier Cambridge stationers. 

BOTFIELD . . . Botfield, B. Notes on the Cathedral Libraries of 
England. 1849. 

BRADLEY . . . Bradley, J. W. Dictionary of Miniaturists, Calli- 
graphers, and Copyists. 3 vols. 1887-9. 

BRADSHAW. . . Bradshaw, H. Collected papers. 1889. 

BRADSHAW Soc. . . Henry Bradshaw Society. Customary of the Bene- 
dictine Monasteries, Canterbury. 2 vols. 1902. 

B. M. COTT. CLAUD., E. iv. 

B. M. COTT. DOMIT., A. viii. 

B. M. COTT. GALBA, C. iv. 

B. M. COTT. NERO, D. vii. 

B. M. REG. 2, E. ix. 

B. M. REG. 13, D. iv. 

BRYCE 

BURY . 

CAMBRIDGE STAT. 



C. A. S. 



CAM. Soc. 



Bryce, W. M. Scottish Grey Friars. 2 vols. 1909. 
Bury, J. B. Life of Saint Patrick. 1905. 
Documents relating to the University and Colleges. 

3 vols. 1852. 
Cambridge Antiquarian Society. Publications and 

communications. Various volumes. 
Camden Society Publications. Various volumes. 
286 



APPENDIX D 



287 



CAMB. LIT. . 



*CLARK . 
COOPER 
DAVENPORT 
DELISLE 

D. C. B. . 

D. N. B. . 

*DUGDALE . 

EDWARDS . 

EDWARDS 2 . 
EDWARDS 3 . 

EINSTEIN . 

E. H. R. . 

FLOYER 

FLOYER 
GASQUET . 

GASQUET 2 . 
GASQUET 3 . 
GASQUET 4 . 

*GOTTLIEB . 

GRACE B. 



HADDAN 
HARDY 



HEALY 

HIST. MSS. 
HUNTER 



Cambridge History of English Literature, vols. i. iv. 
1907-9. Especially vol. i. ch. ii., Runes and MSS., 
and ch. x. , English Scholars of Paris and Franciscans 
of Oxford; vol. ii. ch. xv., English and Scottish 
Education; vol. iii. ch. i., Englishmen and the 
Classical Renascence ; vol. iv. ch. xix., Foundation 
of Libraries. [And bibliographies to these chapters.] 

Clark, J. W. Care of Books : Essay on the Develop- 
ment of Libraries and their Fittings. 1909. 2nd ed. 

Cooper, C. H. Annals of Cambridge. 5 vols. 1842- 
[531, 1908. 

Davenport, C. The Book : Its History and Develop- 
ment. 1907. 

Delisle, L. Le Cabinet des manuscrits de la Biblio- 
theque Imperiale. 1868-74. 

Dictionary of Christian Biography. 

Dictionary of National Biography. 

Dugdale, Sir W. Monasticon Anglicanum. Ed., 
Caley, Ellis, and Bandinel. 9 vols. 1817-30. 

Edwards, E. Memoirs of Libraries. 2 vols. 1859. 
Free Town Libraries. 1869. 
Libraries and Founders of Libraries. 



Edwards, E. 
Edwards, E. 

1864. 
Einstein, L. 



New 



Italian Renaissance in England. 

York, 1892. 

English Historical Review. 
Floyer, Rev. J. K. Catalogue of MSS. preserved in 

the Chapter House of Worcester Cathedral. 1906. 
Floyer, Rev. J. K. Thousand Years of a Cathedral 

Library. Reliqtiary, Jan. 1901. 
Gasquet, F. A. English Monastic Life. 1905. 

Antiquary's Books. 

Gasquet, F. A. Eve of the Reformation. 1909. 
Gasquet, F. A. Last Abbot of Glastonbury, etc. 1908. 
Gasquet, F. A. Old English Bible and other Essays. 

1897. 
Gottlieb, T. Ueber Mittelalterliche Bibliotheken. 

Leipzig, 1890. 
Grace Books A and I. Proctor's Accounts and Other 

Records of the University of Cambridge. Ed., 

Leathes and Bateson. 1897. 
Haddan, A. W. Remains. 1876. 
Hardy, Sir T. D. Descriptive Catalogue of MSS. 

relating to the History of Great Britain and Ireland. 

4 vols. Rolls Series. 
Healy, J. Ireland's Ancient Schools and Scholars. 

4th ed. 1902. 

Historical MSS. Commission Reports. 
Hunter, J. English Monastic Libraries. 1831. 



288 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



HYDE . 
*JAMES 



JAMES 2 

*JAMES 3 . 

JAMES 4 

JAMES 5 

JAMES 6 . 

JAMES 7 

JAMES 8 

JAMES 9 
JAMES 10 
JAMES 11 

JAMES 12 

JAMES 13 
JAMES 14 
JAMES 13 

JAMES 16 
JAMES 17 

JAMES 18 

JOYCE. 

LECOY DE LA MARCHE 



LELAND 

LELAND 2 



Hyde, D. Literary History of Ireland. 1899. Library 

of Literary History. 
James, M. R. Ancient Libraries of Canterbury and 

Dover. 1903. 

James, M. R. Abbey of St. Edmund at Bury. 1895. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

the Library of King's College. 1895. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

the Library of Peterhouse. 1899. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the Western 

MSS. in the Library of Emmanuel College. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the Western 

MSS. in the Library of Christ's College. 1905. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

the Library of Trinity Hall. 1907. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the Western 

MSS. in the Library of Clare College. 1905. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

the Library of Gonville and Caius College. 2. vols. 

1907-8. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

the Library of Jesus College. 1895. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

the Library of Pembroke College, Cambridge. 1905. 
James, M. R. The Western MSS. in the Library of 

Trinity College : Descriptive Catalogue. 4 vols. 

1900-04. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the Western 

MSS. in the Library of Queens' College, Cambridge. 

1905. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

the Library of Sidney Sussex College. 1895. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

the Library of Eton College. 1895. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

the Fitzwilliam Museum. 1895. 
James, M. R. Archbishop Parker's MSS. 1899. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the MSS. in 

Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Part I. 1909. 
James, M. R. Descriptive Catalogue of the Manu- 
scripts in the College Library of Magdalene College, 

Cambridge. 1909. 
Joyce, P. W. Social History of Ancient Ireland. 

2. vols. 

Lecoy de la Marche, A. Les Manuscrits et la Minia- 
ture. [1884.] Bibliotheque de 1'Enseignement des 

Beaux-Arts. 

Leland, J. Collectanea. 6 vols. 1715. 
Leland, J. Itinerary. Ed., Smith. 1907-8. 



APPENDIX D 



289 



LELAND 3 . 

LIBRARY . 
L. A. R. . 
LYTE .... 

MACLEAN . 
MAC RAY 
MADAN 

*MAITLAND 
MERRYWEATHER 

*MON. FR. . 
*MUN. ACAD. . 
MULLINGER 

OXFORD STAT. . 

O. H. S., 27, BOASE . 

O. H. S., 35, 36, 

ANSTEY 
O. H. S., 5, i6and 32, 

COLLECT. 
O. H. S., 20, LITTLE. 

PlETAS 

PUTNAM 
RASHDALL . 

R. DE B. . 
ROBINSON . 

ROGERS 
ROUVEYRE . 

R. H. S. . 

*SANDYS . 

S. H. R. . 

STEVENSON 
STOKES (G. T.) . 
STOKES (M.) 
STOKES (M) 2 
STOKES (M.) 3 . 



Leland, J. De Scriptoribus Britannicis. 1709. 
The Library, vols. i.-x. New series, vols. i.-x. 
Library Association Record, vol. i. to date. 
Lyte, H. C. Maxwell. History of the University of 

Oxford to 1530. 1886. 

Maclean, M. Literature of the Celts. 1902. 
Macray, W. D. Annals of the Bodleian Library. 1890. 
Madan, F. Books in Manuscript. 1893. Books 

about Books. 

Maitland, S. R. The Dark Ages. 1844. 
Merryweather, F. S. Bibliomania in the Middle Ages. 

1849. 
Monumenta Franciscana. Ed., Brewer. 1858. Rolls 

series. 
Munimenta academica. Ed., Anstey. 2 vols. 1858. 

Rolls series. 
Mullinger, J. B. University of Cambridge to 1535. 

1873- 

Statutes of the Colleges of Oxford. 3 vols. 1853. 
Oxford Historical Society, vol. xxvii. Boase, C. W. 

Registrum Collegii Exoniensis. 
O. H. S. Anstey, H. Epistolae academicae. 2 vols. 

1898. 
O. H. S. Collectanea. Series 1-3. 1885, 1890, 

1896. 

O. H. S. Little, A. G. Grey Friars in Oxford. 1892. 
Pietas Oxoniensis in Memory of Sir Thomas Bodley. 

1902. 
Putnam, G. Books and their Makers in the Middle 

Ages. 2 vols. 1896-7. 
Rashdall, H. Universities of Europe in the Middle 

Ages. 2 vols. 1895. 

Richard of Bury. Philobiblon. Ed., Thomas. 1888. 
Robinson, J. A., and James, M. R. The MSS. of 

Westminster Abbey. 1909. 
Rogers, J. E. T. History of Agriculture and Prices. 

6 vols. 1866-87. 
Rouveyre, Edouard. Connaissances necessaires a un 

bibliophile. 10 vols. 1899. 
Royal Historical Society. Transactions. 
Sandys, J. E. History of Classical Scholarship. 

Vols. i. (2nd ed., 1906) and ii. 
Scottish Historical Review. 
Stevenson, F. S. Robert Grosseteste. 1899. 
Stokes, G. T. Ireland and the Celtic Church. 1886. 
Stokes, Margt. Early Christian Art in Ireland. 1887. 
Stokes, M. Six Months in the Apennines. 1892. 
Stokes, M. Three Months in the Forests of France. 

1895. 



2 9 o OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 

STOKES (W.) . . Stokes, W., ed. Tripartite Life. 2 vols. 1887. 

Rolls series. 
STOW .... Stow, J. Survey of London. Ed., C. L. Kingsford. 

2 vols. 1908. 
*SuRTEES Soc. . . Surtees Society Publications. Various volumes ; 

especially vol. vii., Catalogi veteres librorum. 

1840. 
TAYLOR . . . Taylor, H. O. Classical Heritage of the Middle Ages. 

New York, 1901. 
THOMPSON . . . Thompson, Sir E. M. Greek and Latin Palaeography. 

3rd ed. 1906. 

WARTON . . . Warton, T. History of English Poetry. 4 vols. 1871. 
WATTENBACH . . Wattenbach, W. Das Schriftwesen im Mittelalter. 

3rd ed. Leipzig, 1896. 

WILLIAMS . . . Williams, J. W. Somerset Medieval Libraries. 
WORDSWORTH . . Wordsworth, C., and Littlehales, H. Old Service 

Books of the English Church. Antiquary's Books. 
ZENTRALBLATT . , Centralblatt fiir Bibliothekswesen. Various volumes. 



NOTE. Books marked with an asterisk * are important. 



INDEX 



Abdy Robert, 150-151 Augustine, St., 14, 24 

Abingdon Abbey, 33, 39, 41, 78, 87, Augustine, Irish Monk, 8 



, 97, 98, 269 

Abyssinian libraries, 18 

Academic libraries, 133 seqq. ; Cam- 
bridge, 155 seqq. ; Character of 
books in, 222 seqq. ; economy, 
165 seqq. ; Oxford, 133 seqq. 

Acca, Bp., 34 

Adam de Brome, 135 

Aelfric, 44, 85 

Aelfric, Abp., 44 

Aelfward, Abbot, 44, 263 

Aeneas Silvius, 120, 277 

Aethelwold, 40-41, 263 

Aidan, St., 30 

Aileran, 8 

Albinus, 25, 28 

Alcuin, 9, 10, 35-36, 78, 80, 263 

Aldfrith of Northumbria, 9, 31 

Aldhelm, 8, 28-29, 31 

Aleby, Thomas, 279 

Alfred the Great, 37-39 

All Souls College, 147, 149, 151, 153, 
165, 166, 167, 168, 170, 186, 277, 
283 

Alne, Robert, 156, 277 

Annalists, monastic, 231-232 

Anselm, 83, 214 

Antiphonaries, value of, 246 

Antiphonary of Bangor, 1 1 

Arabian works imported, 217-218 

Aristotle, works introduced, 53, 217- 
222 ; influence, 240 

Armagh, Book of, 14, 15, 16, 19, 20 

Armagh monastery, 4, 9, 12 

Armaria, 91 

Armaritts, 96-97 

Arnoul of Metz, Gospels of, 20 

Arundel, Abp., 139, 190, 275 

Asser, 38 

Assicus, Bp., 20, 21 

Astronomical text-books, 225 

Athelney monastery, 39 

Athelstan, King, 263 

Audit of books in monasteries, 102-103 



Aumbries, 91, 92 

Austin Friars' libraries, 55, 56, 67-68, 
103, 271 

Bacon, Friar, 178, 216, 218-219, 220- 

221 

Baldock, Ralph, 119-120, 269 

Bale, John, 66-67 

Balliol College, 54, 146, 148, 150, 153, 
186, 192, 193, 281, 282 

Balsham, Hugh of, 158 

Bangor monastery, 7 

Baret, John, 280 

Baringham, John, 279 

Barking nunnery, 33 

Basil the Great, 2 

Basingstoke, John of, 219-220, 267 

Bateman, Bp. William, 158-159, 270 

Battle Abbey, 62 

Beauchamp, Guy de, 177, 269 

Beaufort, Card., 188, 190 

Beaufort, Sir Thomas, 162 

Beaulieu Abbey, 93 

Becket, Thomas a, 89 

Beckford Cell, 47 

Bede, 26 n., 27, 32-33; his library, 
33 n. ; Ecclesiastical History, 
MSS., 15, no; Apocalypse MS., 

IIO-III 

Bedford, Duke of. See John of 

Lancaster 

Bedyll, Thomas^ 68 
Bek, Bp., 269 
Bekynton, Bp., 123;?., 190 
Benedict Biscop, 31-32, 33, 86 
Benedictines, use of books among, 23- 

24, 49, 63 

Benedictional of Abp. Robert, 42 
Benedictional of Ethelwold, 42, 43 
Bethum, Sir Edward, 280 
Beverley Minster, 128 
Bible, Latin, correcting text, 58 ; 

circulation, 239; prices of, 243- 

244 
291 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



Biblical literature in monasteries, 210- 

212 

Bicchieri, Guala, Card., 86-87 

Bicester Priory, 175 

Binding, 107-108 ; prices, 256-257 

Birkenhead Priory, 73, 74 

Bishop Auckland Church, 194, 277 

283 

Black Death, 138, 138;*., 159 
Black Friars' books, 55 
Bobio, 8, 10, 87 
Bodleian Library, 113 
Bohun, Eleanor, of Gloucester, 177 
Bolton, S. Mary's Church, 129 
Boniface, 34 

Book-boxes, 113-114, 123 
Bookrooms, in colleges, 149-151, 164, 
1 86 ; in churches, 1 12, 115, 117, 
118, 119, 120, 121, 122-123, J 24, 
126, 128, 130, 186; in monas- 
teries, 12, 63, 93-96 
Books, care of, 97-98; extent of 
circulation, 232-241 ; destruction 
and dispersal, 59 seqq. t 152-154, 
157-158 ; prices of, 243 seqq. 
Booksellers, 199 seqq 
Book-trade in Oxford, 133 seqq. 199 
seqq. ; Cambridge, 155, 205 seqq. ; 
London, 207 

Bordesley Abbey, 67, 67 n. 
Boston Church, 129 
Boston, John, 59 

Bowet, Abp., 123., 178, 189, 276 
Bragge, Canon, 177, 274 
Brantingham, Bp., 149, 150*. 
Brasenose College, 168 
Bredon, Simon de, 146, 271 
Brensall-in-Craven, S. Wilfrid's, 129 
Breviaries, prices of, 244-245 
Brigsley Church, 129 
Bristol, S. Mary RedclifTe, 128, 275 
Browne (Cordone), Archdeacon, 123, 

129, 139, 189, 278 
Brownyng, William, 279 
Bubwith, Nicholas of, 123 
Buckfast Abbey, 90 
Burley, Sir S., 272 
Burton-on-Trent Abbey, 264 
Bury, R. de, 50, 58, 60-6 1, 170-172, 

11% seqq., 267, 269 

Bury St. Edmunds Abbey, 44, 49, 59, 
61, 63, 68., 69, 71, 84, 86, 88, 
90, 96, 162, 265 

Caedmon, 30 
Calami, 85 
Caldey, Henry, 278 
Calligraphy. See Writing 



Cambridge, book-trade, 155, 205 seqq. ; 
college libraries, 158 seqq. ; Uni- 
versity Library, 70, i^seqq., 164, 
276, 281. See also names of 
Colleges 

Cambuskenneth monastery, 57 
Candida Casa, 7 

Canterbury (Christ Church), 46, 46 n. , 
49, 63, 64, 65, 70, 71, 76, 80, 89, 
95, 100, 101, 102, 150, 177, 190, 
196-197, 220, 239, 265, 267, 269, 
270, 275, 284 

Canterbury (S. Augustine's), 9, 14, 24, 

25, 26, 28, 29, 31, 33, 40, 47, 49, 

69, 70, 71, 83, 88, 89, 95, 96., 

103, 104, 175, 178, 263, 283 

Canterbury College, Oxford, itfn., 

150, 195, 284 
Capsae, ign. 

Carilef, William de, 90, 264 
Carmelite Friars' libraries, 54, 55 
Carpenter, Bp. John, 115 
Carpenter, John, 187, 278 
Carrells, 75-77, 92 
Cathach Psalter. See Columba's 

Psalter 

Catalogues of monastic books, 103-107 
Cathedral libraries, 109 seqq. 
Catholtcon, 132, 224 
Cawod, William, 275 
Ceadda (Chad) 30 
Cedd, 30 

Chace, Thomas, 150 
Chad, St., 30 ; Gospels of, 14 
Chained books, 109, 112, 117 
Charles the Great, 35, 107 
Charleton, Bp., 116 
~haucer, Geoffrey, 85, 174, 182-184, 

240 

haundler, Thomas, 190 
Chertsey Abbey, 33 
Chester, Richard, 160 
Chester, S. Werburgh's, 61, 76, 92 
Chesterton Church, 87, 87 n. 
"hests for books, 91 
Chichele, Abp. Henry, 95 
Chichele, William, 187, 276 
hrist Church, Oxford, 151 n. 
hrist's College, Cambridge, 164, 284 
Church, Canon C. M., no, 121, 124;;. 
Church libraries, 109 seqq. 
Ciaran, St., 13, 22 
Circulation of books, extent, 232-241 
Clare College, 138;*., 158, 164 
Clare, Elizabeth, 158, 177, 270 
Clark, Dr. J. W., 92,95, 113 
Classical literature in monasteries, 212- 
215, 258 seqq. 



INDEX 



293 



Clement, 10, II 

Clergy and books, 177-178 

Clifford, J. de, 177 

Clonard, 5 

Cluni Abbey, 103 

Cobham, Bp. , 134-136, 269 

Cockersand Abbey, 73 

Codex Exoniensts, 87, no, 113 

Codex Vercellensis, 87, 87 ;/. 

Coldingham, 34, 271 

College libraries, 145 seqq., \<J$> seqq. 

Columba, St., 5, 6, 17 ; Psalter, 6, 16, 

17,21 

Columban, St., 7 
Coopertoria librorwn, 19 w. 
Corbie, 78, 89 
Corpus Christi College, Camb., 70, 

1 10, 113, 138 ., 159, 163, 164, 

277 
Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 70, 

151 ., 154, 170, 227 
Correctoria, 58, 85 
Corvey, 89 
Coventry Priory, 268 
Cronan, St., 21, 22 
Croucher, John, 156 
Crowland, 33, 37 
Culross, 56 

Cumdachs, 4, 12, 19, 19 n, 
Cummian, St., 8 
Cupboards for books, 91 
Cuthbert, Abbot, 80 
Cuthbert, St., 31 



Dalby, T. de, 274 

Daniel, Bp. of Winchester, 34 

Darell, G., 276 

Deeping Priory, 268 

Derby, All Saints, 130 

Despenser, Hugh le, elder, 177 

Dicuil, ii 

Dimma's Book, 21, 22 

Domnach Airgrid (S. Patrick's Gospels), 

17, 20 
Donatus, II 
Dover, S. Martin's Priory, 70, 71, 90, 

105, 106, 272 
Downham, W., 280 
Dreff, Ralph, 189, 278 
Drury, Roger, 283 
Duffield, Canon W., 189, 278 
Dungal, 10, n 
Dunstan, 40, 41, 41 . 
Durham, Book of (Lindisfarne Gospels), 

15, 17 
Durham Hall, Oxford, 54, 148, 150, 

170, 179, 269, 274 



Durham Priory, 63, 73, 75, 80, 91, 
103, 107, 162, 211, 217, 264, 269, 
273, 275, 276, 283 

Durrow, Book of, 16, 20 

Eastern monachism, 1-3 

Easton Card.. 90 

Eastry Prior, 70, 89, 95, 216, 269 

Ebesham, W., 207-208 

Ecgberht, 9 

Echard, R., 281 

Edlyngton, J., 279 

Edward II., 176 

Eleanor of Gloucester, 274 

Electio librorum> i66., 167 

Eltisle, T. de, 159 

Ely Priory (cathedral), 33, 86, 88, IOI 

Embleton Church, 128, 271 

Emmanuel of Constantinople, 194-195 

English monastic libraries, 23 seqq. 

English scholars in Ireland, 8, 9 

Erghome, John, 56 

Erigena, or Scotus, John, n, 39 

Ernulf of Rochester, 47 

Est, R., 129, 281 

Ethelwold, 40, 41, 263 

Eton College, 144, 159-160, 161 

Evesham Abbey, 33, 44, 47, 76, 88, 

90, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 272 
Exeter Book, 87, no, 113 
Exeter Cathedral, 44, 110-114, r 86, 

263, 269, 284 
Exeter College, Oxford, 87, 111-112, 

113 n., 146, 148, 149-150, I5i> 

166, i66.. 168, 1 86, 272, 274, 

279, 280, 284 

Exeter, Grey Friars, 54, 267 
Explicitus, 81-82 

Fairs, selling books at, 200, 206-207 

Farnylaw, T. de, 128, 271 

Fastolf, Sir J., 188 

Felton, Sir W. de, 146 

Feriby, W. de, 124 w., 177, 272 

Fernell, J., 280 

Fiacc, 4, I3. 

Finnian of Moville, 5, 6, 17 

Fitzhugh, Bp. R., 156, 277 

Fitzralph, Abp., 57 

Flemrning, Robert, 147, 153, 193, 282 

Fleury Abbey, 88 

Flexley Abbey, 266 

Floyer, Rev. J. K., 115 

Foxe, Bp., 194 

Foxle, Sir J. de, 271 

Francis, St., 52-53 

Franciscan libraries, 52 seqq. 

Free, John, $* 192, 193 



294 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



Friars, bibliographical work, 58-59 ; 
as book-collecters, 57-58 ; correc- 
tion of texts, 58 ; libraries, %z'_seqq. 

Furness Abbey, 94 

Gascoigne, Dr. T., 54, 147, 148, 153, 

277, 279 

Gateshead, S. Edmund's Hospital, 269 
Gaul, Irish missionaries in, 7~8, 10 
Gaul, monachism in, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8 
Geoffrey of Monmouth, 240 
Gerbert of Bobio, 78, 87 
Germanus of Auxerre, 3 
Gildas, 9 
Glastonbury Abbey, 34, 39, 41, 45 w., 

48, 63, 64, 263, 264, 266, 268, 

269 
Gloucester Abbey, 34, 48, 63, 76, 96, 

264, 268 
Gloucester, Duke of. See Humfrey 

of Gloucester 

Golden Book of Edgar, 42 
Gonville and Caius College, 158, 159, 

164 

Gower, John, 182 
Grammatical text-books, 223-224 
Grandisson, Bp., in, inn., 112, 113, 

150, 270 

Gravesend, Bp. R. de, 146, 178, 267 
Gravesend, Bp. S. de, 270 
Greek books imported, 194-198, 217- 

222 ; in monasteries, 26, 64 
Greek, knowledge of, in monasteries, 7, 

10, II, 195-198, 217-222 
Greeks in England, 194-195, 219-220 
Greenwood, T., 178, 276 
Gregory the Great's books, 24 
Grey Friars' libraries, 52 seqq. 
Grey, Bp. William, 150, 153, 192-193, 

282 

Grimbald, 38 

Grocyn, William, 198, 226-227, 284 
Grosseteste, Robert, 53, 54, 57, 86, 220 
Gunthorpe, Dean, 123 ., 192-193, 

284 

Hadley, Wm., 195 
Hadrian, 26, 28, 29 
Halesowen Church, 129 
Halton, T. de, 273 
Hamo, Chancellor, 118 
Hamundson, John, 281 
Harris, J., 156 
Hawk, W., 281 
Healy, Dr. John, 5 
Hebbeden, T., 277 

Hebrew books in Friars' libraries, 54, 
56 ; in Ramsey Abbey, 268 



Hedyan, J., 278 

Henry II., 176 

Henry vi., 148, 159-160 

Hereford Cathedral, 116-117, 162, 

1 86, 266 

Herrys, John, 156 
Hiberno-Saxon writing, 15, 46 
Hild, 30, 31 
Hinton Priory, ioij 270 
Holcombe, W., 284 
Holes, Andrew, 192 ., 277 
Holme, Canon N., 129, 280 
Holme, Richard, 156 
Hopton, J., 273 
Hoskyn, Robert, 278 
Hugh of Balsham, 158 
Hugh of Leicester, 118, 264 
Hulne, 273 
Humfrey of Gloucester, 139-143, 144, 

154, 160, 181, 190-191, 191 ., 

192, 277 

Hurte, John, 164, 281 
Hyde Abbey. See Winchester (New 

Minster) 

Iceland, Irish in, 7 
Illuminating, prices for, 255-256 
Illumination, Irish, 15 ; Winchester, 

42 

Illuminators, 79, 199 seqq. 
lona, 5, 7, 9, 30, 31 
Ireland, English scholars in, 8, 9 
Irish illumination, 15 
Irish manuscripts on the Continent, 8 ., 

n, ii n. 

Irish missal, satchel of, 19 
Irish missionaries, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 
Irish monasteries, use of books in, I seqq. 
Irish satchels, 17, 18, 19 
Irish scribes, 12, I2n 
Irish writing, 13-15 
Italian influence in England, 189 seqq. 
Italian scholars, 191 

James, Dr. M. R., 46, 47, 49, 67, 70, 
71, 89, 95, 102, 163, 195, 196 

Jarrow, 31, 33, 37 

Jerome, St., 2 

Jesus College, 164, 284 

John, King, 176, 266 

John of Beverley, 30 

John of Corvey, 38 

John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford, 
139, 181, 188, 272 

John of London, 89, 178, 221-222 

John Scotus Erigena, 1 1 , 39 

Kells, Book of, 14, 15, 16, 20 



INDEX 



295 



Kelso Abbey, 99 

Kempe, John, Card., 103, 145, 188, 

279 
King's College, Camb., 144, 156, 159- 

161, 279 
King's Hall, Camb. See Trinity 

College 

King's Norton Church, 129 
Kirkstall Abbey, 94 
Kyrkby, R. de, 275 

Lacy, Bp., 150 

Lane, Dr. T., 162 

Lanfranc, 45, 46, 47, 85, 101, 213 

Langham, Simon, 90, 178, 271 

Langley, Bp. T., 277 

Lanthony Priory, 68, 265 

Lassehowe, J., 279 

Lastingham, 30, 37 

Laudian Acts, 26 n., 27 

Law books in Middle Ages, 215-217, 
226-227 

Layton, Dr., 152 

Leather, 107, cost of, 257 

Leicester Abbey, 282 

Leicester Codex, 195 

Leland, John, 69, 131 

Lending monastic books, 98, 101 

Leofric, Bp., 44, no-Ill, 113, 263 

Leofric Missal, in 

Leominster church, 265 

Lerins, 3, 31 

Lese,J.,28 3 

Librarian, University, 136, 137 

Librarians, monastic, 12, 96-97 

Librarii, 199 

Libri distribuendi, 1 66, 169 

Lichfield Cathedral, 126, 186, 270 

Linacre, Thomas, 197-198 

Lincoln Cathedral, 118-119, 186, 264, 
278 

Lincoln College, 54, 147, 148, 149, 
151, 153, 165, 1 66, 1 86, 193, 277 

Lindau, Gospels of, 21, 108 

Lindisfarne, 30, 31, 33, 37 

Lindisfarne Gospels (Book of Dur- 
ham), 15, 17 

Litchfield, Dr., 145, 283 

Logical text-books, 225 

Lombard's Sentences, 215, 239-240 

London book-trade, 207 

London, Friars' libraries, 55-56 

London, Guildhall Library, 186-187, 
276, 278 

London, S. Christopher-le-Stocks, 131, 

282 

London, S. Mary's Hospital, Cripple- 
gate, 278 



London, St. Michael's, Cornhill, 131 
London, S. Peter's, Cornhill, 131, 

131 n. 
London, S. Paul's, 119-120, 186, 266, 

268, 269, 280, 282 
London, S. Stephen Magnus, 268 
Longarad legend, 6, 7 ., 12, 18 
"Losinga," Herbert, 86, 213 
Lovet, Richard, 283 
Lowe, Prior, 55 
Lytham Cell, 280 
Lythe, R., 282 
Lyttleton, Sir T., 129, 282 

MacRegol, Gospels of, 14, 15 
Magdalen College, Oxford, 147, 149, 

151, 154, 166, 168, 170, 175, 186, 

282 

Magdalene College, Cambridge, 164 
Malmesbury Abbey, 29, 33, 66, 108 
Manthorp, J. de, 277 
Mare, Thomas de la, 270 
Mare, William de la, 58 
Marisco, Adam de, 53, 57, 85, 86 
Markaunt, Thomas, 163, 163 n , 277 
Marleberge, T. de, 90, 266 
Marmoutier, 2, 3 
Marshall, Dr. R., 162 
Meaux Abbey, 63, 94, 274 
Medulla grammatice, 132 
Melrose Abbey, 31, 34, 37 
Mendicants' libraries, 52 seqq. 
Mertherderwa, R., 278 
Merton College, 138, 146, 148, 149, 

153, 166, 168, 170, 272 
Michelham Priory, 62 
Millyng, Thomas, 197 
Minstrels, 173 seqq. 
Missals, prices of, 244 
Molaise's Gospels, 21 
Moling, Book of St. , 21 
Molyneux, Adam de, 139, 190 
Monachism, Eastern, I 
Monachism in England, progress, 48 ; 

decline, 59-60; dissolution, 65 

seqq. 

Monachism in Ireland, I seqq. 
Monastic libraries, English, 45 seqq. ; 

economy, 73 seqq. ; decline and 

dispersal, 59 seqq., 100 ; saving 

books, 69 seqq. ; catalogues, 102- 

107 

Monastic libraries, Irish, 5 seqq. 
Monte Cassino, 97, 217 
Montford, Simon of, 176-177 
Moreton, J., 278 
Morley, Daniel of, 218 
Morton, T., 278 



296 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



Neville, Abp., 195 

Newcastle, S. Nicholas' Church, 128, 
271 

New College, 69, 138, 138 ., 147, 
148, 149, 151. ! 52, 165, 166, 169, 
175, 186, 197, 272, 280, 284 

Newstead Priory (Notts), 100 

Newton, J. de, 125, 162, 178, 275 

Nicholas of Bubwith, Bp., 123 

Nicholas the Greek, 219-220 

Northumbria, learning in, 30, 31, 

37 

Norwich Priory, 62, 90 
Notarii, 199 
Nottingham, S. Mary's Church, 129 

Ordericus Vitalis, 80 

Oriel College, 54, 135, 138, 146, 148, 

151, 154, 166, 168, 169, 271 
Osmund, Bp., 117, 263 
Oswald of Northumbria, 9, 30, 31 
Oxford, academic libraries, 133 seqq. 
Oxford, book-trade, 133, 199 seqq. 
Oxford, decrease of students at, 152 
Oxford, Ewelme Almshouse, 280 
Oxford, Friars' libraries, 53, 54, 58, 

75 

Oxford, monastic libraries, 51 
Oxford, St. Mary's Church, 129, 133, 

134, IS3 275 
Oxford scholars' libraries, 189, 236- 

237 
Oxford University library, 133 seqq. ; 

151-154, 186, 269, 283 
Oxford. See also under Names of 

Colleges 

Pachomius, St., 2 

Palladius, 3 

Parchment, 84 ; cost of, 257 

Parker Abp., 26, 70, 113 

Paternoster Row, 207 

Patrick, St., 3, 4, 5, 17; Gospels of 

(Domnach Airgrid), 17, 20 
Pembroke College, Cambridge, 69, 

103, 107, 158, 163, 164, 167, 168, 

170, 1 86, 274 
Pennae, 85 

Percyhay, John, 177, 273 
Peter of Gloucester, Abbot, 48, 264 
Peterborough Abbey, 33, 37, 48, 216, 

263, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 

271, 273 
Peterhouse College, 100, 158, 162, 

164, 165, 166, 167-168, 169, 186, 

271, 275 
Philobiblon, 179 
Piers Plowman, 182, 240 



Pius II. (^Eneas Sylvius), 120, 277 
Plane, Richard, 279 
Plegmund, Abp., 38, 38 n. 
Poggio Bracciolini, 190, 191 
Polatres, 9, 13, 13^. 
Precentor's duties, 80, 96, 97, 98 
Prices of books, 243 seqq. 
Processionals, value of, 246 
Psalters, value of, 245-246 
Pudsey, Hugh, 90, 107 
Pynchebek, Thomas, 282 

Queen's College, Oxford, 146, 148, 

149. I5 1 * J 53 J 66 
Queens' College, Cambridge, 162, 164. 

1 86, 281 

Ragenhill, R., 125, 276 
Ralph de Diceto, 119, 266 
Ralph of Maidstone, 116, 266 
Ramsey Abbey, 54, 63, 68, 89, 220, 

Raventhorpe, J., 276 

Rayleigh, 131 

Reading Abbey, 64, 176, 265, 266 

Reading aloud, 173 seqq. 

Redmarshall Church, 129 

Reed, Bp., 148, 149, 272 

Registrum librorum Angliae, 58-59 

Reichenau, monastery of, 8 n. 

Repyngton, Bp., 139 

Rhetoric, books of, 224-225 

Richard de Bury, 50, 58, 60-61, 170- 

172, ijSseyy., 267, 269 
Richard de Wyche, bequests to friars, 

54-55 

Richard of Stowe, 268 
Rievaulx, 265 

Rochester Priory, 47, 99, 130, 266 
Romance literature, 227-231 
Roos, Sir R, de, 177, 273 
Rotherham, Jesus College, 284 
Rotherham, Thomas, 130, 157, 163, 

281, 284 

Rous, John, 127, 128 n. 
Ruddington Church, 130 
Runes, 13 
Rygge, R.,274 

St. Albans Abbey and library, 44, 49 
seqq., 63, 73, 78, 88, 91, 96, 98, 
105, 108, 179, 219, 263, 264, 267, 
269, 270, 276 
St. Albans' chroniclers, 50 
St. Catherine's Hall, 161, 164, 281 
St. Gall, 8, 8n., 10, 21, 73, 94, 97 
St. John's College, Cambridge, I5i., 
164, 1 86 



INDEX 



297 



Salisbury Cathedral, 117-118, 186, 263 

Same, Robert, 284 

Satchels, book, 6, 17, 18, 19 

Scardeburgh, J. de, 273 

Scarle, J. de, 274 

Scot, Michael, 53, 218 

Scotland, monachism in, 5, 7 

Scotland, Friars' libraries, 56-57 

Scotus Erigena, John, n, 39 

Scribes, 199 seqq. ; monkish, 73 seqq. ; 

Irish, 12, 12 n. ; tools, 85 
Scriptorium, 50, 51, 73-77, 80, 82, 88 
Scrope, Archd. S., 125, 159, 275 
Sedulius, II 
Seggefyld, J., 279 
Selling, William of, 26, 64, 66, 66 n., 

76, 95> 195-197, 280 
Semer, R., 277 
Servatus Lupus, 85, 87 
Sherborne Hospital, 267 
Skirwood, Bp., 194, 282 
Shrines for books, 4, 12, 19, ign. 
Signs used for books, 82-83 
Simon, Abbot, 50, 91 
Skirlaw, Bp., 123 ., 148, 274 
Smart, William, 69 
Somersett, John, 139, 143 
Spray, T., 279 
Stafford, Bp. E. de, 150 
Stafford, Bp. J. de, 123, 123 ., 276 
Stamford Cell, 276 
Stationers, 199 seqq. 
Stationers Co., 207 
Stirling, Friars' library, 56 
Stokys, J., 283 
Stow, John, 70 
Stowe Missal, 20 
Stratford, Abp. J., 177 
Symson, Thomas, 283 
Syon monastic library, 63, 83, 90 ., 

104, 105, 106, 285 
Sywardby, Elizabeth, 280 

Talbot, R., 69 
Textus Roffensis, 47 
Theodore, 8, 26, 26 ., 28, 31 
Theological books in monasteries, 210- 

212 

Thomas, Abbot, 178 

Thomas of England, 191, 273 

Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Glou- 
cester, 274 

Thompson, Mr. Yates, 107 

Thoris, R. de, 54, 267 

Tiptoft, John, Earl of Worcester, 139, 
192, 279 

Titchfield Abbey, 95, 105, 274 

Tobias, Bp., 28 



Trevaur, Bp., 270 

Trinity College (King's Hall), Cam- 

bridge, 159, 164, 273 
Trinity College, Oxford, i$on. 
Trinity Hall, Cambridge, 138 ., 158, 

164, 169, 216, 270 
Twyne, Brian, 70 
Twyne, John, 69 
Tynemouth, 37 
Tywardreath Priory, 268 

University College, Oxford, 138, 145- 

146, 148, 149, 165, 167, 168, 170, 

186, 274, 281 
University Hall, Cambridge. See 

Clare College 
University libraries. See Oxford and 

Cambridge 

Vellum, 84 ; cost of, 257 
Vercelli Book, 87, 87 n. 
Vicario, 216 
Vitelli, Cornelius, 197 

Wallets, book, 17, 18, 19 

Walter of Evesham, 47, 264 

Waltham, William de, 275 

Warham, Abp., 284 

Warkworth, J., 162, 282 

Warwick, S. Mary's Church, 127, 280 

Wax tablets, 9, 13, I3., 18, 83, 84 

Wearmouth, 31, 33, 37 

Wells Cathedral, no, 121-124, 186, 
276 

Werfrith, Bp., 37, 38, 114 

Westminster Abbey, 64, 71, 88, 90, 
99, 112, 271 

Wetheringsett Church, 130, 284 

Whalley Abbey, 94 

Whelpdale, Roger, 148, 276 

Whethamstede, Abbot, 49, 51-52, 139, 
153, 181 

Whitby Abbey, 30, 37, 48, 88, 265 

White Friars' libraries, 54, 55 

Whitherne (Candida Casa), 7 

Whittington, Richard, 55, 186-187 

Whittlesey, Abp., 271 

Wigmore Abbey, 62 

Wilfrid, St., 31 

William of Waynflete, 143, 147, 282 

William of Wykeham, 147, 272 

Willibrord, St., 9 

Willoughby, Sir R., 129, 280 

Wimborne nunnery, 33 

Winchelsey, Dr. T., 56 

Winchester College, 175, 276 

Winchester (Hyde Abbey, New Min- 
ster), 38, 42, 86, 174 



298 



OLD ENGLISH LIBRARIES 



Winchester (S. Swithin's, Old Minster), 

42, 88, 96, 175 
Winchester illumination, 42 
Windsor Collegiate Church, 126, 271 
Wodelarke, Dr. R., 162 
Wolveden, R., 125, 276 
Woollaton Church, 129 
Worcester College, 51 
Worcester Priory (Cathedral), 76, 92, 

96, 114-116, 162, 234 
Worthington, T., 281 
Writing: Irish, 13; Hiberno-Saxon, 

15, 46 ; payments for, 254-255 



Writing-rooms, 50, 51, 73-77, 80, 82, 

88 

Wyche, R. de, 54-55, 267 
Wymondham Abbey, 62 

York Abbey and Cathedral, 33, 35, 36, 

124-125, 186, 263 
York, All Saints, Peseholme, 129 
York, Austin Friars' library, 56, 67, 

68, 103, 271 

York, Holy Trinity, Goodramgate, 128 
York, S. Mary's, Castlegate, 128. 

273 



^rinted by MORRISON & GIBB LIMITED, Edinburgh 



A SELECTION OF BOOKS 

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"Complete" Series . . 16 

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Handbooks of English Church 

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Illustrated Pocket Library of 

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Library of Devotion . . 18 

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Little Galleries ... iy 

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Little Quarto Shakespeare . 31 

Miniature Library . . 21 

New Library of Medicine . 21 

New Library of Music . 22 

Oxford Biographies . . 22 

Romantic History . . 22 

Handbooks of Theology . 22 

Westminster Commentaries 23 



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Novels of Alexandre Dumas 29 

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Addleshaw (Percy). SIR 

SIDNEY. Illustrated. Second Edition. 
Demy Zvo. IQJ. 6d. net. 

Adeney (W. F.), M.A. See Bennett 
(W.H.). 

Ady (Cecilia M.). A HISTORY OF 
MILAN UNDER THE SFORZA. Illus- 
trated. Demy Zvo. ior. 6d, net. 

Aldis (Janet). THE QUEEN OF 
LETTER WRITERS, MARQUISE DE 
S&VIGNE, DAME DE BOURBILLY, 1626-96. 
Illustrated. Second Edition, Demy Zvo. 
12*. 6d. net. 

Allen (M.). A HISTORY OF VERONA. 
Illustrated. Demy Zvo. I2J. 6d. net. 

Amherst (Lady). A SKETCH OF 
EGYPTIAN HISTORY FROM THE 
EARLIEST TIMES TO THE PRE- 
SENT DAY. Illustrated. A New and 
Cheaper Issue. Demy Zvo. 7*. 6d. net. 

Andrewes (Amy G.) THE STORY OF 
BAYARD. Edited by A. G. ANDREWES, 
Cr. Zvff. f. 6d. 

Andrewes (Bishop). PRECES PRI- 
VATAE. Translated and edited, with 
Notes, by F. E. BRIGHTMAN, M.A., of 
Pusey House, Oxford. Cr. &vo. 6s. 



Anon. THE WESTMINSTER PRO- 
BLEMS BOOK. Prose and Verse. Cora- 
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Gazette Competitions, 1904-1907. Cr. %vo. 
3-r. 6d. net. 

VENICE AND HER TREASURES. Illus- 
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Aristotle. THE ETHICS OF. Edited, 
with an Introduction and Notes, by JOHN 
BURNET, M.A. Cheaper issue. Demy &vo. 
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Atkinson (C. T.), M.A., Fellow of Exeter 
College, Oxford, sometime Demy of Mag. 
dalen College. A HISTORY OF GER- 
MANY, from 1715-1815. Illustrated. Demy 
&V0. 12$. 6d. net. 

Atkinson (T. D.). ENGLISH ARCHI- 
TECTURE. Illustrated. Fcap.Zvo. y.6d 
net. 

A GLOSSARY OF TERMS USED IN 
ENGLISH ARCHITECTURE. Illus- 
trated. Second Edition. Fcap. Svo. 3*. 6d. 
net. 

Atteridge (A. H.). NAPOLEON'S 
BROTHERS. Illustrated. Demy Bvo. 
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Aves (Ernest). CO-OPERATIVE IN- 
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Bagot (Richard). THE LAKES OF 
NORTHERN ITALY. Illustrated. Fcap. 
Bvo. . net. 



GENERAL LITERATURE 



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OF POLAND AND HIS CONTEM- 
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Balfour (Graham). THE LIFE OF 
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. Illus- 
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Baring (The Hon. Maurice). RUSSIAN 
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OLD COUNTRY LIFE. Illustrated. Fifth 
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SONGS OF THE WEST: Folk Songs of 
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A BOOK OF BRITTANY. Illustrated. 
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Barker (E.), M.A., (Late) Fellow of Merton 
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Baron (R. R. N.), M.A. FRENCH PROSE 
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BastianCH. Charlton), M.A., M.D..F.R.S. 

THE EVOLUTION OF LIFE. Illus- 
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Batson (Mrs. Stephen). A CONCISE 

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MARIE ANTOINETTE. Illustrated. 

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Body (George). D.D. THE SOUL'S 
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Braid (James) and Others. GREAT 
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Brailsford (H. N.> MACEDONIA : ITS 
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Butlln (F. M.). AMONG THE DANES. 
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Carlyle (Thomas). THE FRENCH 
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THE LETTERS AND SPEECHES OF 
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AIMS AND IDEALS IN ART. Eight 
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A CHANGE OF AIR. 

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Montresor (F. F.). THE ALIEN. 



FICTION 



Morrison (Arthur). 
THE WALL. 



THE HOLE IN 
THE RED HOUSE. 



Nesbit (E.). 

Norris (W. E.). HIS GRACE. 
GILES INGILBY. 

THE CREDIT OF THE COUNTY. 
LORD LEONARD THE LUCKLESS. 
MATTHEW AUSTEN. 
CLARISSA FURIOSA. 

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SIR ROBERT'S FORTUNE. 
THE PRODIGALS. 
THE TWO MARYS. 

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LAVILETTES. 

WHEN VALMOND CAME TO PONTIAC. 
THE TRAIL OF THE SWORD. 

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OF A THRONE. 
I CROWN THEE KING. 

Phillpotts (Eden). THE HUMAN BOY. 
CHILDREN OF THE MIST. 
THE POACHER'S WIFE. 
THE RIVER. 



Couch). THE 



'Q' (A. T. Quiller 
WHITE WOLF. 



Ridge (W. Pett). A SON OF THE STATE. 

LOST PROPERTY. 

GEORGE and THE GENERAL. 



ERB. 

Russell (W. Clark). ABANDONED. 
A MARRIAGE AT SEA. 
MY DANISH SWEETHEART. 
HIS ISLAND PRINCESS. 



THE MASTER OF 



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MR. SPONGE'S SPORTING TOUR. 
ASK MAMMA. 

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COUSINS. 

THE BABY'S GRANDMOTHER. 

TROUBLESOME DAUGHTERS. 

Wallace (General Lew). BEN-HUR. 
THE FAIR GOD. 



Watson (H. B. Marriott). 

TURERS. 



THE ADVEN- 



*CAPTAIN FORTUNE. 

Weekes (A. B.). PRISONERS OF WAR. 

Wells (H. G.). THE SEA LADY. 

White (Percy). A PASSIONATE PIL- 
GRIM. 



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Old English Libraries