![]() ![]() ![]() On folio 183v the initial shows, in the background, a skin, pegged out onto a rectangular frame (Plate 3). Typically illustrations in medieval Bibles were sourced from biblical subject matter, but here, someone made the decision to depart from this norm, and inserted snap-shots from the production of an illuminated manuscript into the initials that preface the opening of the biblical books. The Hamburg Bible was made for Hamburg Cathedral in1255 and contains a series of distinctive historiated initials. From hereon a mid 13th-century German Bible provides useful insights into the remainder of the process. The skins were then rinsed in fresh water for two days to remove any traces of lime, and, once clean, were pegged, tightly stretched, onto a rectangular wooden frame. The lime opened up the pores and loosened the hair, so that after a week it was possible to slough off the unwanted pelt from the outside of the skin with a wooden paddle. Then they were transferred to wooden barrels partially filled with a solution of lime (chalk dust), and water. It began by immersing the skins in fresh running water for a day or so this was to cleanse them and was usually done by placing them in a shallow stream or river, weighed down by pebbles to prevent them from floating away downstream. The process by which animal skin was refined into parchment in the Middle Ages was relatively simple. The calf (Taurus) and sheep (Aries) in these 12th-century drawings of the constellations set the scene (Plates 2 and 2a). In England, Germany and France, this meant that most manuscripts were made from sheep or calf skin. Instead, parchment was made as a by-product from the skins of animals primarily bred for food. It was, and still is, possible to make parchment from the skin of any animal, whether a mouse, a squirrel, or a sheep, but since animals were expensive in the Middle Ages, they were not reared solely to be transformed into the pages of books. Strictly speaking “vellum” (the word derives from the Latin for calf, vitulum), should be used only with reference to calfskin. The latter is the more precise and useful term, since it denotes no specific animal and it is sometimes difficult to identify definitively the creature whose skin formed the pages of a book. ![]() This material is variously referred to today as “vellum” or “parchment”. The vast majority of books produced in Western Europe, prior to the end of the 14th century, when paper was introduced to the West, were made from animal skins, which had been transformed from hairy, slippery, distinctly smelly items, into smooth pages of stable, flat parchment that provided the perfect ground for inks and pigments. ![]() The riddle has two answers: it obviously refers to a book, but the opening line suggests an alternative solution an animal of some kind. Crossley-Holland, The Exeter Book Riddles,Penguin Classics, revised edition 1993) Of smiths, wound about with shining metal….” With gold thus I am enriched by the wondrous work (Part of the stream) and again travelled over me, Sprinkling useful drops it swallowed the wood dye An 11th-century Anglo-Saxon riddle, from the Exeter Book (Number 26) hints at the variety of skills necessary to transform animal skins into parchment copy texts paint and gild decoration and illustration, and bind folios between boards processes that reveal a great deal about medieval scribal and artistic practice.īit into me once my blemishes had been scraped away This lecture will explore how an illuminated book was produced, in the belief that an understanding of materials and techniques provides a firm foundation from which to pursue other avenues of investigation.Īnalysis of the word “manuscript”, literally meaning “written by hand”, conveys the fact that all the books considered here were hand-made, but their production involved much more than the expert penmanship practiced by scribes such as the man seated at his desk in this mid 12th-century illustration (Plate 1). A broad-brush approach might consider issues such as patronage, and function or a narrower focus concentrate on the scripts employed, the study of Palaeography, or the style of decoration and illustration, the discipline of Art History. They can be studied in a multitude of ways. Illuminated manuscripts are some of the most interesting, and aesthetically appealing artifacts to survive from the Middle Ages. ![]()
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