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The case for a West Saxon minuscule

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2008

Julia Crick
Affiliation:
University of Exeter

Extract

Julian Brown's famous analysis of what he termed the Insular system of scripts marked out a number of routes, now well trodden, through the debris of undated and unlocalized manuscript material from the pre-Viking-Age British Isles. Ever since, the best hope for students of palaeography seeking to date and localize examples of early Insular minuscule has been to follow Brown's classification and identify them as Type A or B, Northumbrian or Southumbrian, and Phase I or II. Brown's schema, however, offered orientation rather than a map. As with any typology, it depends on a very few fixed points, themselves unusual because of their lack of anonymity: gospelbooks from Ireland and Northumbria dated by the survival of rare colophons, manuscripts connected with St Boniface which show the operation of a unique editorial mind. Although Brown's system has been successfully applied to the output of scriptoria whose influences, practices, connections, even locations remain mostly unknown, complications inevitably arise. This article concerns one of them, the recycling in Phase II of a type of minuscule displaying the cursiveness and capriciousness characteristic of Phase I: Type B minuscule as illustrated by the script of St Boniface.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

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References

1 For example, in his unpublished Lyell lectures: ‘The Insular System of Scripts, c. 600 to c. 850’ (The James P. R. Lyell Lectures in Bibliography, University of Oxford, 1977).

2 ‘The Irish Element in the Insular System of Scripts to circa A.D. 850’, Die Iren und Europa im früheren Mittelalter, ed. Löwe, H., 2 vols. (Stuttgart, 1982) 1, 101–19Google Scholar, repr. in A Palaeographer's View. the Selected Writings of Julian Broom, ed. Bately, J., Brown, M. P. and Roberts, J. (London, 1993), pp. 201–20.Google Scholar

3 These have been whittled down still further by David Dumville's exposure of the fragility of the colophon in the Iindisfarne Gospels: ‘A Palaeographer's Review’ (forthcoming).

4 Brown himself seems to have adopted this usage in his Lyell lectures: Barker-Benfield, B. C., ‘The Insular Hand’, TLS (27 01 1978), p. 100.Google Scholar

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22 Script of this more informal sort can be found, for example, on 49r, 67r, 82r, and in the last few lines of other folios, for example 107v. Despite considerable change in the aspect of the script, at no point can this be attributed to the work of more than one scribe.

23 The condition of the parchment – less worn and fuzzy – may have some bearing on the aspect of the script.

24 Comparing the text of the Wilton endorsement which appears in both, one notices, for example, the distinctive spacing of letters in adducta and in uilla, the ductus of eius and itaque, and the cramped st-ligature in Alhstan. Aug. ii. 37, however, cannot be regarded as an exact facsimile of Aug. ii. 20 (for example, in ii. 37 the scribe favours uu over wyn and employs subscript i less frequently). It is notable that the script of the at Astran endorsement underwent no distortion when copied into the smaller format of Aug. ii. 37.

25 perdoes not appear at all in the Wilton endorsement in Aug. ii. 20.

26 This t and, for that matter, the 3-shaped g should not be confused with the forms of those letters which Keller and Kuhn regarded as indicative of Mercian script: Keller, W., Angelsächsische Palaeographie. Die Schrift der Angelsachsen mit besonderer Rücksicht auf die Denkmäler in der Volkssprache, 2 vols. (Berlin, 1906) 1, 20–1Google Scholar and Kuhn, S. M., ‘The Vespasian Psalter and the Old English Charter Hands’, Speculum 18 (1943), 458–83, at 458–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar These have a hooked topstroke which sits above the middle of the letter and does not extend above neighbouring letters. See also Lowe, E. A., ‘A Key to Bede's Scriptorium’, in his Palaeographical Papers 1907–1965, ed. Bieler, L., 2 vols. (Oxford, 1972) 11, 441–9, at 447.Google Scholar

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32 pro is not abbreviated in the Wilton endorsement of Aug. ii. 20.

33 This practice is found in the work of other scribes such as the Canterbury scribe 4: on whom see Brooks, The Early History, pp. 168, 323–4 and 360, n. 70.Google Scholar

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40 ‘The Irish Element’, p. 107Google Scholar (A Palaeographer's View, p. 207 and p. 191).Google Scholar

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68 I am indebted to the staff of the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, for access to M. 776, to the Finance Committee of my Department for a grant to help me get there, to Simon Keynes and Michael Swanton for advice on the charters and on the Old English glosses respectively, and to David Dumville for extensive discussion of all aspects of the argument, which improved it immeasurably.

69 Brock, E., ‘The Blickling Glosses’, The Blickling Homilies, with a Translation and Index of Words together with the Blickling Glosses, ed. Morris, R., EETS os 58, 63 and 73 (London, 18741880; repr. as 1 vol., 1967), 251–63.Google Scholar See also Sweet, , The Oldest English Texts, pp. 122–3Google Scholar and Collins, , ‘A Reexamination’.Google Scholar

70 Pulsiano, P. J., ‘Materials for an Edition of the Blickling Psalter’ (unpubl. PhD dissertation, SUNY Stony Brook, 1982).Google Scholar

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72 Taken from Le Psautier romain, ed. Weber.

73 See discussion above, pp. 65–7.

74 The Early History, pp. 323–5.Google Scholar