Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- The Composite Nature of Eleventh-Century Homiliaries: Cambridge, Corpus Christi College 421
- The Power and the Glory: Conquest and Cosmology in Edwardian Wales (Exeter, Cathedral Library 3514)
- Manuscript Production before Chaucer: Some Preliminary Observations
- The Ellesmere Manuscript: Controversy, Culture and the Canterbury Tales
- Vanishing Transliteracies in Beowulf and Samuel Pepys’s Diary
- Descriptive Bibliography and Electronic Publication
- Oxford, Bodleian Library, Bodley 647 and its Use, c.1410–2010
- The Idea of the Heart in Byzantium and the History of the Book
- Red as a Textual Element during the Transition Manuscript to Print from
- Problematising Textual Authority in the York Register
- Index
Oxford, Bodleian Library, Bodley 647 and its Use, c.1410–2010
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- The Composite Nature of Eleventh-Century Homiliaries: Cambridge, Corpus Christi College 421
- The Power and the Glory: Conquest and Cosmology in Edwardian Wales (Exeter, Cathedral Library 3514)
- Manuscript Production before Chaucer: Some Preliminary Observations
- The Ellesmere Manuscript: Controversy, Culture and the Canterbury Tales
- Vanishing Transliteracies in Beowulf and Samuel Pepys’s Diary
- Descriptive Bibliography and Electronic Publication
- Oxford, Bodleian Library, Bodley 647 and its Use, c.1410–2010
- The Idea of the Heart in Byzantium and the History of the Book
- Red as a Textual Element during the Transition Manuscript to Print from
- Problematising Textual Authority in the York Register
- Index
Summary
OXFORD, BODLEIAN LIBRARY, BODLEY 647 has always been central to forming perceptions of vernacular Lollardy; indeed, until just over twenty years ago and publication of a broader conspectus, this book stood as the primary example of Lollard polemical texts. The book was a major source of information for the founder of modern studies, Walter W. Shirley (1828–66), after a spell as maths tutor at Wadham College, Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History from 1863. Shirley had planned the contents, and received the endorsement of Clarendon Press, for several volumes of what he took to be the central texts, Select English Works of John Wyclif. However, owing to his premature death, these seminal volumes were only produced and finished by his amanuensis Thomas Arnold (see I: i–ii). Between them, Arnold's third volume and two items included in F. D. Matthew's later collection put into print nearly all of the book's English texts (the one exception is item 7 in the descriptive appendix below). The early publication and continued availability of these writings has always provided the primary evidence for vernacular Lollard interests.
I have treated this book before, somewhat peripherally in that context. I then associated the volume's production with that of two other important Wycliffite manuscript anthologies, Cambridge, Corpus Christi College 296 and Dublin, Trinity College 244. All of them, I argued, showed access to a common Lollard copying centre or ‘library’. There, a variety of materials, especially vernacular ones, were available, probably in thematically linked fascicles; from these, interested parties might produce further combinations of texts, to meet specific needs and interests.
Date and Origin of Bodley 647
The Bodley manuscript is, in the main, the work of two scribes, whose hands one would date s. xvin. The first is responsible for nearly all of Booklets 1–2, fols. 1–65v, text items 1–5, written in informal textura; the second, initially, for nearly all of Booklets 3–4, fols. 71–106, items 10–13, written in anglicana formata. The two scribes are, given similarities of format, probably partners: the first uses a writing area 150 x 95–100, with 29 or 30 long lines; the second, a writing area 142–4 x 97, with 31 long lines.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Textual CulturesCultural Texts, pp. 141 - 162Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2010