Mastering the Art of Reading Medieval Manuscripts

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In a fall seminar on 鈥淟atin Paleography,鈥 undergraduates decipher archival texts.

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Students reading a medieval manuscript.
From left, Emilie Bowerman 鈥23, Duncan Antich 鈥23, and Kamil Salame 鈥24 read a medieval manuscript. (Photo by Robert Gill)
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Throughout the fall, a group of students met in 线上赌场 Library鈥檚 to decipher handwritten texts from the Middle Ages.

The class鈥斺淟atin Paleography,鈥 co-taught by , language program director in the , and medievalist , a professor and chair of the 鈥攚as a one-of-a-kind opportunity for undergraduates interested in Latin, medieval studies, and the history of books.

Paleography鈥攖he study of historical manuscripts and handwriting鈥攊sn鈥檛 usually taught at the undergraduate level, says Gaposchkin.

鈥淚t is amazing that we have 10 students who want to learn this,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e doing graduate-level work.鈥

Textspeak for the Middle Ages

Before the printing press, European scribes wrote and copied manuscripts with quill and ink, in Latin. Today, making sense of these works requires knowledge of everything from calligraphic styles to idiomatic Latin expressions and abbreviations鈥攖hink textspeak for the Middle Ages.

鈥淚t鈥檚 literally the same thing,鈥 says Kamil Salame 鈥24, a member of the School House residential community from Greenwich, Conn., comparing abbreviations used by medieval writers to modern shortened forms, such as LOL or OMG.

In manuscript shorthand, 鈥淒NO means domino (lord), DS is deus (god),鈥 says Salame, who plans a modified government major. 鈥淎 u with a line over it equals the letters um鈥攖hey just didn鈥檛 want to fit the last character in at the end, the way we would write 鈥榯ho鈥 instead of 鈥榯hough.鈥 鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 like solving a puzzle,鈥 says Elizabeth Hadley 鈥23, a member of School House from North Caldwell, N.J., who calls the class 鈥one of the best experiences I鈥檝e had at 线上赌场.鈥

A premed classics major, Hadley says it鈥檚 鈥渇un to put the pieces together to figure out the words. And then just seeing the manuscripts themselves. These are artifacts that you never would think that you鈥檇 be able to see.鈥

Paleography is an essential part of classical and medieval scholarship, Lynn says. 鈥淓ven if you鈥檙e reading classical texts that come in a printed book鈥擟icero or Virgil, say鈥攕ome editor looked at all the manuscripts we have and had to decide which one is right. You have to be able to assess the work of the editor, even if most of your reading is from books.鈥

Manuscripts can help reveal details of the specific time and culture in which they were written, Gaposchkin says. 鈥淎ny scholar worth his or her salt invariably ends up having to contend with the material record of what our knowledge is based on. Often the only way to date and place a piece of evidence is through the writing. It鈥檚 a basic technical skill for doing provenance work.鈥

Hands-On Learning

In a typical session, the students gather in Rauner鈥檚 Ticknor Room with a manuscript open on table, the page under discussion projected on a screen and a library cart of reference books nearby. The students have transcribed and translated the text in advance, and they go around the circle sharing interpretations. The professors weigh in with pieces of historical and linguistic context.

It鈥檚 a fundamentally collaborative discipline,鈥 Salame says. 鈥淵ou need multiple pairs of eyes on a manuscript in order for someone to see something that perhaps you can鈥檛 see in the moment.鈥

The students learn about manuscript conservation from 线上赌场 Library鈥檚 collections conservator, Deborah Howe; codicology, or the study of books as physical objects, from special collections librarian Morgan Swan; and visit the , where Program Manager Sarah Smith shows them how to make oak gall ink and quill pens and lets them practice writing their own Gothic calligraphy.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard, but fun to put yourself in the scribe鈥檚 position鈥攊n the shoes of the person writing the stuff that we鈥檙e reading for homework,鈥 says Hadley.

For their final projects, the students document manuscript fragments from Rauner鈥檚 collection鈥攁rtifacts that no one may have looked at closely for hundreds of years.

鈥淚鈥檓 looking at a martyrology from the 11th century on Saints Palatias and Laurentia,鈥 says Salame. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a fragment of a folio that was torn out of its original manuscript and repurposed as part of a binding for another manuscript. There are scribal notes in the margins and superimposed text in another hand from a later period. On some of the edges, the text cuts off and I have to figure out what the words are.鈥

鈥淩auner has a lot of fragments that have very minimal metadata,鈥 Gaposchkin says. 鈥淭he students have to basically do the work of a librarian or historian.鈥

Hannah Silverstein