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15 - The Canterbury Bible glosses: facts and problems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 May 2010

Michael Lapidge
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The ‘Leiden Glossary’, preserved in a late eighth- or early ninth-century manuscript from St Gallen (now Leiden, Bibliotheek der Rijksuniversiteit, Voss. lat. Q. 69, fols. 7–46, at 20ra-37ra, referred to hereafter as Ld.), is a primary source for the history of Anglo-Saxon education, since its chapters or lists of glossae collectae, many with Old English interpretations, give a conspectus of the books read in the school of Theodore and Hadrian at Canterbury, as Michael Lapidge pointed out in his pioneering article on that school. The linch-pin that connects the ‘Leiden Glossary’ with the school of Canterbury is the reference to Theodore in Ld. xii.40 (‘Cyneris: nablis idest citharis longiores quam psalterium nam psalterium triangulum fit theodorus dixit’), a gloss on the word cinyris in Ecclus. XXXIX.20. As one might expect from the nature of early medieval education, nearly half of Ld.'s forty-eight chapters are devoted to books of the Bible: chs. vii-xxv (23vb-27va) extend from Paralipomenon (Chronicles) through the rest of the Old Testament (including Jerome's prologues and most of the apocryphal books, but not Psalms and Maccabees) to the gospels, and ch. xxix (28vb-29rb) glosses Jerome's commentary on Matthew.

Although Ld. chs. vii-xxv begin and end without any gaps in the manuscript, it is a reasonable hypothesis that they are an incomplete copy of what earlier was a full set of Bible glosses. This hypothesis is supported by related sets of biblical glosses in several other manuscripts.

Type
Chapter
Information
Archbishop Theodore
Commemorative Studies on his Life and Influence
, pp. 281 - 333
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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