Workshop on the Medieval Bible in Scotland

Workshop on the Medieval Bible in Scotland
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This is a past event

This workshop will examine the unique features of the Late Medieval Bible, based on the Library's own manuscript collection.

Late Medieval Bibles (1230-1500) are the first mass-produced pandects, or single-volume Bibles.  They were written by professional scribes and artists who produced a revolutionary small and portable books. These new Bibles spread quickly across Europe, and within few decades appeared from Spain to Bohemia, from Italy to Germany.  They follow a distinctive and remarkably similar layout, which was replicated in Gutenberg’s celebrated 42-line Bible and has influenced Bibles down to the present day. 

Their uniformity, length and the sheer number of surviving manuscripts (more than 1,500), have hindered their scholarly analysis.  This workshop will examine the unique features of the Late Medieval Bible, based on the Library's own manuscript collection.  It will then present new means for their analysis, part of an ongoing research project: The Medieval Bible in Scotland.

 

Speaker
Dr Eyal Poleg, Centre for the History of the Book, University of Edinburgh
Hosted by
Special Collections Centre
Venue
Special Collections Centre Seminar Room Lower Ground Floor, University Library
Contact

Attendance is free but spaces are limited.

Please contact speclib@abdn.ac.uk to reserve a place.