Re-Using Manuscripts in Late Medieval England
English

About The Book

During the long fifteenth century (here 1375-1530) the demand for books in England flourished. The fast-developing book trade produced them in great quantity. Fragments of manuscripts were often repurposed as flyleaves and other components such as palimpsests; and alongside the creation of new books medieval manuscripts were also repaired recycled and re-used.<br/><br/>This monograph examines the ways in which people sustained older books exploring the practices and processes by which manuscripts were crafted mended protected marked gifted and shared. Drawing on the codicological evidence gathered from an extensive survey of extant manuscript collections in conjunction with historical accounts recipes and literary texts it presents detailed case studies exploring parchment production and recycling the re-use of margins and second-hand exchanges of books. Its engagement with the evidence in - and inscribed on - surviving books enables a fresh appraisal of late medieval manuscript culture in England looking at <i>how </i>people went about re-using books and arguing that over the course of this period books were made used and re-used in a myriad of sustainable ways.
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