Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- A Personal Recollection
- List of publications of Gale R. Owen Crocker
- Part I Textile
- Part II Text
- Part III Intertext
- 10 Weaving Words on the Ruthwell Cross
- 11 Fates of the Apostles and Tituli
- 12 Weaving and Interweaving: The Textual Traditions of Two of Ælfric's Supplementary Homilies
- 13 Invisible Things in London, British Library, Cotton Vitellius A. xv
- 14 Redacting Harold Godwinson: The Vita Haroldi and William of Malmesbury
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
13 - Invisible Things in London, British Library, Cotton Vitellius A. xv
from Part III - Intertext
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2016
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- A Personal Recollection
- List of publications of Gale R. Owen Crocker
- Part I Textile
- Part II Text
- Part III Intertext
- 10 Weaving Words on the Ruthwell Cross
- 11 Fates of the Apostles and Tituli
- 12 Weaving and Interweaving: The Textual Traditions of Two of Ælfric's Supplementary Homilies
- 13 Invisible Things in London, British Library, Cotton Vitellius A. xv
- 14 Redacting Harold Godwinson: The Vita Haroldi and William of Malmesbury
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
Summary
London, British Library, MS Cotton Vitellius A. xv is both highly visible and invisible. This is, one could argue, despite the best efforts of editor Kevin Kiernan to be fair to the codex in his digital rendition of the whole. The Electronic Beowulf contains not only images, descriptions, and scholarly interpretation of Part II, the early eleventh-century Beowulf-manuscript or Nowell Codex, but also Part I, the twelfth-century Southwick Codex. For fifteen years, then, since the first edition of Electronic Beowulf, the whole book has been available for scrutiny – years prior to the manuscript's Open Access virtual rendition on the British Library Digitised Manuscripts website. My essay will concern Vitellius A. xv, but with a focus on Part I of the codex in order to draw attention to the interesting features of this book that deserve to be further studied.
As Cotton Vitellius A. xv now exists, its Table of Contents lists the following items (here with the British Library's foliation):
(fols i–ii): marbled end-leaf and fly-leaf with bibliographical and curatorial Notes
[fol. 1]: excised Psalter leaf
(fol. 2rv): 17th-century Cottonian Table of Contents with British Museum stamp
(fol. 3rv): end-leaf with notes or offsetting and, fol. 3v, medieval French memoranda
(i) fols 4r–59v: Augustine of Hippo, Soliloquies (in English, acephalous and atelous) [a now lost Life of St Thomas?]
(ii) fols 60r–86v: The Gospel of Nicodemus (in English)
(iii) fols 86v–93v: The Debate of Saturn and Solomon (in English)
(iv) fol. 93v: Homily on St Quintin (in English, fragment of the text's opening)
(v) fols 94r–98r: English Homily on St Christopher (in English, acephalous)
(vi) fols 98v–106v: English Marvels of the East (in English)
(vii) fols 107r–131v: Letter of Alexander to Aristotle (in English)
(viii) fols 132r–201v: Beowulf (in English, title added in pencil, because omitted from original Table of Contents)
(ix) fols 202r–209v: Judith (in English, acephalous. Six lines of an early Modern hand finish fol. 209v.)
(fols iii–v verso): modern flyleaves with curatorial notes; marbled end-leaf
In this Table of Contents, as in the seventeenth-century list of texts at fol. 2r, what is now called the Southwick Codex (items i–iv) is obviously considered on a par with the Nowell Codex (items v–ix), both volumes part of the same, composite manuscript.
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- Textiles, Text, IntertextEssays in Honour of Gale R. Owen-Crocker, pp. 225 - 238Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2016