, Brepols, 2023 Paperback, 524 pages, Size:178 x 254 mm, Illustrations:7 b/w, 19 col., 22 tables b/w., Language: English. ISBN 9782503602479.
Summary Collection and concealment were hallmarks of early medieval book culture. Materials of all kinds were collected, collated, concealed, condensed, correlated, paraphrased, reorganised, and repurposed in early medieval manuscripts. This volume of essays explores how knowledge was made in the early medieval book in the Latin West through two interrelated practices: collecting and concealing. It provides case studies across cultures and areas (e.g. exegesis, glossography, history, lexicography, literature, poetry, vernacular and Latin learning). Collectio underpinned scholarly productions from miscellanies to vademecums. It was at the heart of major enterprises such as the creation of commentaries, encyclopaedic compendia, glosses, glossaries, glossae collectae, and word lists. As a scholarly practice, collectio accords with the construction of inventories of inherited materials, the ruminative imperative of early medieval exegesis, and a kind of reading that required concentration. Concealment likewise played a key role in early medieval book culture. Obscuration was in line with well-known interpretative practices aimed at rendering knowledge less than immediate. This volume explores the practices of obscuring that predate the twelfth-century predilection, long recognised by historians, for reading that penetrates beneath the ?covering? (integumentum, involucrum) to reveal the hidden truth. Cumulatively, the papers spotlight the currency of two crucial practices in early medieval book culture - the practices of collection and concealment. They demonstrate that early medieval authors, artists, compilers, commentators, and scribes were conspicuous collectors and concealers of knowledge. TABLE OF CONTENTS Sin ad O'Sullivan, Collecting and Concealing in the Field of the World Anna A. Grotans, Understanding the Scope of Knowledge in Early Medieval St Gall Mariken Teeuwen, The Intertwining of Ancient and Late-Antique Authorities in the Margins of Carolingian Manuscripts Michael W. Herren, Philology and Mercury after the Wedding: Truth and Fiction in Three Didactic Works David Ganz, Latin Shorthand and Latin Learning Franck Cinato, Critical Cumulation? How Glossaries were Constituted in the Early Middle Ages (6th-8th Centuries) Patrizia Lendinara, Unveiling the Sources of the Glosses to the Third Book of the Bella Parisiacae Urbis by Abbo of Saint-Germain-des-Pr s Rosalind C. Love, ?But what Polybius the Greek Physician Says is More Correct?: Sources of Knowledge in the Glosses to Boethius's Consolation of Philosophy at Tenth-Century Canterbury Kees Dekker, Collecting Encyclopaedic Knowledge in the Vocabularius Sancti Galli Evina Stein, Early Medieval Catechetic Collections Containing Material from the Etymologiae and the Place of Isidore of Seville in Carolingian Correctio John J. Contreni, Hic continentur ista: Collecting and Concealing in an Early Ninth-Century Instruction-Reader (Laon, Biblioth que Municipale ?Suzanne Martinet,? MS 265) Ildar Garipzanov, Graphic Ciphers and the Early Medieval Practices of Collectio and Concealment Andy Orchard, Building a Splendid Library: The Background and Context of the Bibliotheca magnifica Michael James Clarke, Medieval Scholarship and Intertextuality: A Case Study of Saxo Grammaticus on the Giants Ciaran Arthur, Harvesting Wisdom from Books and the Beauty of the Unknown Index of Manuscripts General Index