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Royal manuscripts, British Library

The Royal manuscripts are one of the "closed collections" of the British Library (i.e. historic collections to which new material is no longer added), consisting of some 2,000 manuscripts collected by the sovereigns of England in the "Old Royal Library" and given to the British Museum by George II in 1757. They are still catalogued with call numbers using the prefix "Royal" in the style "Royal MS 2. B. V".[1] As a collection, the Royal manuscripts date back to Edward IV, though many earlier manuscripts were added to the collection before it was donated. Though the collection was therefore formed entirely after the invention of printing, luxury illuminated manuscripts continued to be commissioned by royalty in England as elsewhere until well into the 16th century. The collection was expanded under Henry VIII by confiscations in the Dissolution of the Monasteries and after the falls of Henry's ministers Cardinal Wolsey and Thomas Cromwell. Many older manuscripts were presented to monarchs as gifts; perhaps the most important manuscript in the collection, the Codex Alexandrinus, was presented to Charles I in recognition of the diplomatic efforts of his father James I to help the Eastern Orthodox churches under the rule of the Ottoman Empire. The date and means of entry into the collection can only be guessed at in many if not most cases. Now the collection is closed in the sense that no new items have been added to it since it was donated to the nation.

Presentation miniature from the Talbot Shrewsbury Book with dedicatory verse under an illuminated miniature of John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury (identified by his Talbot dog), presenting the book to Queen Margaret of Anjou seated beside King Henry VI, Royal MS 15 E VI f. 2v
Author portrait of Vincent de Beauvais with borders decorated with the arms of Edward IV in Bruges, c. 1478-1480, Royal MS 14 E I vol 1 f3r

The collection is not to be confused with the Royal Collection of various types of art still owned by the Crown, nor the King's Library of printed books, mostly assembled by George III, and given to the nation by his son George IV, which is also in the British Library, as is the Royal Music Library, a collection mostly of scores and parts both printed (about 4,500 items) and in manuscript (about 1,000), given in 1957.[2]

The Royal manuscripts were deposited in 1707 in Cotton House, Westminster with the Cotton Library, which was already a form of national collection under trustees, available for consultation by scholars and antiquaries; the site is now covered by the Houses of Parliament. The collection escaped relatively lightly in the fire of 1731 at Ashburnham House, to which the collections had been moved. The Cotton Library was one of the founding collections of the British Museum in 1753, and four years later the Royal collection was formally donated to the new institution by the king. It moved to the new British Library when this was established in 1973. The 9,000 printed books that formed the majority of the Old Royal Library were not kept as a distinct collection in the way the manuscripts were, and are dispersed among the library's holdings.

The Royal manuscripts, and those in other British Library collections with royal connections, were the focus of an exhibition at the British Library "Royal Manuscripts: The Genius of Illumination" in 2011–2012.[3]

Highlights edit

The Old Royal Library edit

 
Detail of miniature from the Westminster Psalter, c. 1250, Royal MS 2 A XXII, f. 220

Before Edward IV edit

Edward IV is conventionally regarded as the founder of the "old Royal Library" which formed a continuous collection from his reign until its donation to the nation in the 18th century, though this view has been challenged.[4] There are only about twenty surviving manuscripts that probably belonged to the English kings and queens between Edward I and Henry VI,[5] though the number expands considerably when the princes and princesses are included. A few Anglo-Saxon manuscripts owned by royalty have survived after being presented to the church, among them a Gospel Book, Royal 1. B. VII, given to Christ Church, Canterbury by King Athelstan in the 920s, which probably rejoined the collection at the Dissolution of the Monasteries.[6] However these works are scattered among a variety of libraries. By the late Middle Ages luxury manuscripts would generally include the heraldry of the commissioner, especially in the case of royalty, which is an important means of identifying the original owner. There are patchy documentary records which mention many more, though the royal library was from about 1318 covered in the records of the "Chamber", which have survived far less completely than the pipe rolls of the main Exchequer. The careful inventories of the French royal library have no English equivalent until a list compiled at Richmond Palace in 1535.[7]

At the start of Edward III's reign there was a significant library kept in the Privy Wardrobe of the Tower of London, partly built up from confiscations from difficult members of the nobility, which were often later returned. Many books were given away, as diplomatic, political or family gifts, but also (especially if in Latin rather than French) to "clerks" or civil servants of the royal administration, some receiving several at a time, such as Richard de Bury, perhaps England's leading bibliophile at the time as well as an important figure in the government, who received 14 books in 1328. By 1340 there were only 18 books left, although this probably did not include Edward's personal books.[8]

 
Historiated initial "S" from Psalm 69, "Save me, O God for the waters are come in unto my soul ... I am come into deep waters, where the floods overflow me", Royal MS 1 E IX, most likely Henry IV's Biblia Magna

Despite the cultured nature of his court, and his encouragement of English poets, little is known of the royal books under Richard II, although one illuminated manuscript created in Paris for Charles VI of France to present to Richard, the Epistre au roi Richart of Philippe de Mézières (Royal 20. B. VI), was at Richmond in 1535, and is in the British Library Royal manuscripts.[9] The reign of Henry IV has left records of the building of a novum studium ("new study") at Eltham Palace finely decorated with more than 78 square feet of stained glass, at a cost of £13, and a prosecution involving nine missing royal books, including bibles in Latin and English, valued respectively at £10 and £5, the high figures suggesting they were illuminated.[10] The wills of Henry's son, Henry V refer to a Biblia Magna ("Big" or "Great Bible"), which had belonged to Henry IV and was to be left to the nuns of Henry V's foundation at Syon. This may be Royal MS 1. E. IX, with fine historiated initials illuminated in London by several artists from the school of Herman Scheerre of Cologne.[11] A considerable number of religious texts were left to family members, staff and his many chaplains.[12]

Two of Henry V's younger brothers were notable collectors. Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester (1390-1447), who had commissioned translations from Greek into Latin and gave most of his collection, 281 books, to the library at Oxford University, where the Bodleian Library later grew around Duke Humfrey's Library. At his death his remaining books mostly went to his nephew Henry VI's new King's College, Cambridge, but some illuminated books in French were kept for the royal library, and are still in the Royal manuscripts. John, Duke of Bedford took over as English commander in France after Henry V's death in 1422, and commissioned two important manuscripts which have reached the British Library by other routes, the Parisian Bedford Hours (Ms Add 18850, in fact presented to Henry VI in 1431) and the English Bedford Psalter and Hours (BL Ms Add 42131). He also used the dominant English position in France to buy the French royal library of the Louvre, from which a few examples remain in the Royal manuscripts.[13]

Edward IV to Henry VII edit

 
The death of Walter VI, Count of Brienne in 1356 at the Battle of Poitiers, from one of Edward IV's histories, Royal MS 14 E v f.499v

About fifty of the Royal manuscripts were acquired by Edward IV (1442-1483), a far larger and more coherent group than survive from any of his predecessors. He was not a scholarly man, and had to fight his way to the throne after inheriting the Yorkist claim to the throne at the age of eighteen after his father and elder brother died in battle. He reigned from 1461 until 1470, when machinations among the leading nobles forced a six-month period of exile in Burgundy. He stayed for some of this period in Bruges at the house of Louis de Gruuthuse, a leading nobleman in the intimate circle of Philip the Good, who had died three years before. Philip had the largest and finest library of illuminated manuscripts in Europe, with perhaps 600, and Gruuthuse was one of several Burgundian nobles who had begun to collect seriously in emulation. In 1470 his library (much of it now in Paris) was in its early stages, but must already have been very impressive for Edward. The Flemish illuminating workshops had by this date clearly overtaken those of Paris to become the leading centre in northern Europe, and English illumination had probably come to seem somewhat provincial. The Burgundian collectors were especially attracted to secular works, often with a military or chivalric flavour, that were illustrated with a lavishness rarely found in earlier manuscripts on such subjects. As well as generous numbers of miniatures, the borders were decorated in increasingly inventive and elaborate fashion, with much use of the heraldry of the commissioner.[14]

Many of Edward's manuscripts reflected this taste; like that of Philip, his court displayed an increase in ceremonial formality, and interest in chivalry. Most of his books are large-format popular works in French, with several modern and ancient histories, and authors such as Boccaccio, Christine de Pisan and Alain Chartier. They are too large to hold comfortably, and may have been read aloud from lecterns, though the large miniatures were certainly intended to be appreciated. The largest purchases were probably made from about April 1479, when a part-payment is recorded to a foreign ("stranger") "merchant" or dealer for £80 to "merchant stranger Philip Maisertuell in partie of paiement of £240 of certaine bokes by the said Philip to be provided to the kyngs use in the parties beyond the see." This was perhaps Philippe de Mazerolles, a leading illuminator who had moved from France to Flanders. At least six of Edward's Flemish books are dated to 1479 and 1480; such large books naturally took a considerable time to produce. Further payments totalling £10 are recorded in 1480 for binding eight books, for which other payments record the transport to Eltham in special pine chests.[15] Other manuscripts are no longer in the Royal collection, such as the "Soane Josephus" (MS 1, Sir John Soane's Museum), which remained in the collection until after an inventory in 1666.[16] One of the most splendid books made for Edward in Bruges in the 1470s is a Bible historiale in French in three volumes (Royal MS 15 D i, 18 D ix-x), which was probably begun for another patron, then completed for Edward.[17]

Edward's reign saw the beginning of printing, both in English in 1473-75 and in England itself from 1476, when William Caxton set up a press in Westminster. At the top end of the market the illuminated manuscript continued to retain a superior prestige for many decades. When Edward's brother in law, Anthony Woodville, 2nd Earl Rivers had Caxton print his own translation of the Dictes and Sayings of the Philosophers in 1477, the book he presented to Edward was a special manuscript copied from the printed edition, with a presentation miniature, implying "that a printed book might not yet have been regarded as sufficiently distinguished for a formal gift of this kind".[18]

Henry VII appears to have commissioned relatively few manuscripts, preferring French luxury printed editions (his exile had been spent in France). He also added his own arms to a number of earlier manuscripts, a common practice for those bought second-hand. One manuscript, Royal 19. C. VIII, was scribed at Sheen Palace in 1496 by the Flemish royal librarian, Quentin Poulet and then sent to Bruges to be illuminated, and another, Royal 16. F. II, appears to have been begun as a present for Edward IV, then left aside until completed with new miniatures and Tudor roses in about 1490, as a present for Henry.[19]

Henry VIII to Elizabeth edit

 
Psalter of Henry VIII, 1540s, Henry shown reading
 
Page with wolves from the Rochester Bestiary, Ms Royal 12. F. xiii, part of the spoils of the Dissolution of the Monasteries

By the time Henry VIII came to the throne in 1509, the printed book had become the norm, though the richest buyers, like Henry, could often order copies printed on vellum. But some manuscripts were still commissioned and illuminated, and Henry and his minister Cardinal Wolsey were the main English patrons in the 1520s. Henry retained a scribe with the title "writer of the king's books", from 1530 employing the Fleming Pieter Meghen (1466/67 1540), who had earlier been used by Erasmus and Wolsey.[20] Although some Flemish illuminators were active in England, notably Lucas Horenbout (as well as his father Gerard and sister Susanna), it seems that more often the miniatures and painted decoration were done in Flanders or France, even if the text had been written in England. Meghen and Gerard Horenbout both worked on a Latin New Testament, mixing the gospels in the Vulgate with translations by Erasmus of Acts and the Apocalypse, which has the heraldry of Henry and Catherine of Aragon (Hatfield House MS 324).[21] Henry also retained a librarian, paid £10 a year in both 1509 and 1534, who in both years was based at Richmond Palace west of London, which seems to have been the location of the main collection.[22] As well as more common northern European manuscripts, Henry also received Italian manuscripts illuminated in full-blown Renaissance style as gifts; at least three remain in the British Library.[23]

It was at Richmond that in 1535 a French visitor compiled the first surviving approach to a list of books in the royal library, though this was only covered the books there, and perhaps was not complete. He listed 143 books, which were nearly all in French, and included many of Edward IV's collection.[24] This was just before Henry's Dissolution of the Monasteries, which was to greatly increase the size of the royal library. In 1533, before the dissolution began, Henry had commissioned John Leland to examine the libraries of religious houses in England. Leland was a young Renaissance humanist whose patrons included Wolsey and Thomas Cromwell and was a chaplain to the king with church benefices, by papal dispensation as he was not yet even a subdeacon. He spent much of the following years touring the country compiling lists of the most significant manuscripts, from 1536 being overtaken by the process of dissolution, as he complained in a famous letter to Cromwell. A large but unknown number of books were taken for the royal library, others were taken by the expelled monastics or private collectors, but many were simply left in the abandoned buildings; at St Augustine's, Canterbury there were still some remaining in the 17th century. Those preserved were often not the ones that modern interests would have preferred.[25]

The monastic books were initially collected in libraries at the palaces of Westminster (later known as Whitehall), Hampton Court and Greenwich, though from around 1549 they were apparently all concentrated at Westminster. There is an inventory from April 1542 listing 910 books at Westminster, and there are press-marks on many books relating to this.[26] It is often impossible to trace the origin of monastic manuscripts in or passing through the royal library - a large number of the books initially acquired were later dispersed to a new breed of antiquarian collectors. The priory of Rochester Cathedral was the source of manuscripts including the Rochester Bestiary, famous for its lively illustrations, and an unillustrated 11th-century manuscript of the Liber Scintillarum (Royal 7. C. iv) with interlinear Old English glosses.

Very probably a good number of medieval liturgical manuscripts were destroyed for religious reasons under Edward VI. The librarian from 1549 was Bartholomew Traheron, an evangelical Protestant recommended by John Cheke.[27] In January 1550 a letter was sent out from the Council instructing the country to "cull out all superstitious books, as missals, legends, and such like, and to deliver the garniture of the books, being either gold or silver, to Sir Anthony Aucher" (d. 1558, one of Henry's commissioners for the Dissolution in Kent). Despite the additions from the dissolved monasteries, the collection that survived is very short of medieval liturgical manuscripts, and a high proportion of those that do remain can be shown to have arrived under Mary I or the Stuarts. There are no illuminated missals at all, only eight other liturgical manuscripts, eighteen illuminated psalters and eight books of hours.[28] Edward died at the age of 16, and was a solitary and studious boy, several of whose personal books are in the British Library. He seems to have centralized most of the library at Whitehall Palace, though Richmond still seems to have retained a collection to judge by the reports of later visitors.[29] The significant addition to the library of Edward's reign, though only completed after his death, was the purchase from his widow of the manuscripts belonging to the reformer Martin Bucer, who had died in England.

Mary I, who restored Catholicism, may have felt the lack of liturgical books, and was presented with at least two illuminated psalters, one the highly important English Queen Mary Psalter of 1310-1320 (Royal 2 B VII), confiscated from Henry Manners, 2nd Earl of Rutland after his arrest. This has in total over 1,000 illustrations, many in the English tinted drawing style. Another, Royal 2 B III, is a 13th-century production of Bruges, which was given by "your humbull and poore orytur Rafe, Pryne, grocer of Loundon, wushynge your gras prosperus helthe", as an inscription says.[30]

Stuarts edit

The son of James I, Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales (1594-1612), made a significant addition to the library by acquiring the library of John, Lord Lumley (c.1533-1609). Lumley had married the scholar and author Jane Lumley, who inherited the library of her father, Henry FitzAlan, 19th Earl of Arundel (1512-1580), which was among the most important private libraries of the period, with around 3,000 volumes, including much of the library of Archbishop Cranmer. A catalogue survives, a 1609 copy of an original of 1596 that is now lost; Lumley had also given many volumes to the universities in his last years. Soon after Prince Henry's death, the main royal library was moved to St James's Palace where his books had been kept.[31] The Lumley library included MS Royal 14. C. vii, with the Historia Anglorum and Chronica Maiora of Matthew Paris, which had passed from St Albans Abbey to Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester and later Arundel.[32] James I purchased much of the library of the classical scholar Isaac Casaubon who died in London in 1614, and was given the Codex Alexandinus, as explained above.

The royal library managed to survive relatively unscathed during the English Civil War and Commonwealth, partly because the well-known and aggressive figures on the Parliamentarian side of the preacher Hugh Peters (later executed as a regicide) and the lawyer and M.P. Sir Bulstrode Whitelocke were successively appointed as librarians by Parliament, and defended their charge. Whitelocke wanted the library turned into a national library accessible to all scholars, an idea already proposed by John Dee to Elizabeth I, and thereafter by Richard Bentley, the famous textual scholar who became librarian in 1693. There was a new inventory in 1666. The major purchase in the reign of Charles II was of 311 volumes in about 1678 from the collection of John Theyer, including the Westminster Psalter (Royal 2. A. xxii), a psalter of about 1200 from Westminster Abbey to which five tinted drawings were added some fifty years later, including the kneeling knight illustrated above.[33]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Record for Royal MS 2 B V, Manuscripts: Closed collections, British Library
  2. ^ Royal Music Library, British Library
  3. ^ Genius
  4. ^ Stratford, 255, and 266 where she suggests Henry IV and Henry V as alternatives; Backhouse, 267 regards Edward IV as "clearly identifiable as the founder of the Old Royal Library".
  5. ^ Stratford, 256
  6. ^ Brown, 52, 87
  7. ^ Stratford, 255-256
  8. ^ Stratford, 258-259
  9. ^ Stratford, 260
  10. ^ Stratford, 260-261
  11. ^ See:
    • "Detailed record of Royal MS 1 E IX". British Library. Retrieved 30 April 2016.
    • Scott, Kathleen L. (1996), Later Gothic Manuscripts 1390-1490, A Survey of Manuscripts Illuminated in the British Isles, vol. 6, Harvey Miller, ISBN 0905203046
    • Given-Wilson, Chris (2016), Henry IV, The Yale English Monarchs Series, Yale University Press, p. 388, ISBN 978-0300154191
  12. ^ Stratford, 263
  13. ^ Stratford, 266
  14. ^ Backhouse, 267-268; Kren & McKendrick, 68-71 and generally
  15. ^ Backhouse, 269
  16. ^ Kren & McKendrick, 292-294
  17. ^ Kren & McKendrick, 297-303
  18. ^ Backhouse, 269
  19. ^ Kren & McKendrick, 403; 398-400
  20. ^ Kren & McKendrick, 520
  21. ^ Alexander, 47-49
  22. ^ Carley (1999), 274; Doyle, 70-73
  23. ^ Alexander, 55
  24. ^ Carley (1999), 274; Doyle, 71-72
  25. ^ Carley (2002), 341-342, 346-347; Carley (1999), 274-275
  26. ^ Carley (1999), 275-276
  27. ^ "Traheron, Bartholomew" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  28. ^ Doyle, 73-75
  29. ^ Doyle, 73-75
  30. ^ Doyle, 75, and catalogue entries 82 and 85
  31. ^ Selwyn, 51-52
  32. ^ Chivalry, 390
  33. ^ Chivalry, 200; BL catalogue Westminster Psalter, who give a later date for the main MS.

See also edit

References edit

  • Alexander, J.J.G., Foreign illuminators and illuminated manuscripts, Chapter 2 in Hellinga and Trapp.
  • Backhouse, Janet, The Royal Library from Edward IV to Henry VII, Chapter 12 in Hellinga and Trapp. google books
  • Brown, Michelle P., Manuscripts from the Anglo-Saxon Age, 2007, British Library, ISBN 978-0-7123-0680-5
  • Carley, James P., ed., The libraries of King Henry VIII, British Library/British Academy (2000)
  • "Carley (1999)", Carley, James P., The Royal Library under Henry VIII, Chapter 13 in Hellinga and Trapp.
  • "Carley (2002)", Carley, James P., "Monastic collections and their dispersal", in John Barnard, Donald Francis McKenzie, eds., The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain: 1557-1695 (Volume 4), 2002, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-66182-X, 9780521661829
  • "Chivalry": Jonathan Alexander & Paul Binski (eds), Age of Chivalry, Art in Plantagenet England, 1200-1400, Royal Academy/Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London 1987
  • Doyle, Kathleen, "The Old Royal Library: 'A greate many noble manuscripts yet remaining'", in McKendrick, Lowden and Doyle, below.
  • "Genius": British Library Press Release for the exhibition "Royal Manuscripts: The Genius of Illumination" 11 November 2011- 13 March 2012
  • Hellinga, Lotte, and Trapp, J. B., eds., The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, Volume 3; 1400-1557, 1999, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-57346-7, ISBN 978-0-521-57346-7
  • Kren, T. & McKendrick, S. (eds), Illuminating the Renaissance: The Triumph of Flemish Manuscript Painting in Europe, Getty Museum/Royal Academy of Arts, 2003, ISBN 1-903973-28-7
  • McKendrick, Scott, Lowden, John and Doyle, Kathleen, (eds), Royal Manuscripts, The Genius of Illumination, 2011, British Library, 9780712358156
  • Selwyn, David, in Thomas Cranmer: churchman and scholar, Paul Ayris & David Selwyn (eds), Boydell & Brewer Ltd, 1999, ISBN 0-85115-740-8, ISBN 978-0-85115-740-5
  • Stratford, Jenny, The early royal collections and the Royal Library to 1461, Chapter 11 in Hellinga and Trapp

Further reading edit

  • Birrell, T.A., English Monarchs and their Books: From Henry VII to Charles II, 1987, British Library
  • Carley, James P., The Books of King Henry VIII and His Wives, 2004, British Library
  • Doyle, Kathleen; McKendrick, Scot, (eds), 1000 Years of Royal Books and Manuscripts, 2014, British Library Publications, ISBN 9780712357081
  • George F. Warner and Julius P. Gilson, Catalogue of Western Manuscripts in the Old Royal and King's Collections, 4 vols, 1921, British Museum - source (?) of the British Library online catalogue entries.

External links edit

  • Royal Manuscripts (c 1100-c 1800) finding aid (includes pdf for download)
  • Royal Manuscripts: The Genius of Illumination exhibition at the British Library from November 2011
  • British Library "typepad" Medieval and earlier manuscripts blog - several entries on individual manuscripts relating to the 2011 exhibition, with excerpts from the catalogue

royal, manuscripts, british, library, royal, manuscripts, closed, collections, british, library, historic, collections, which, material, longer, added, consisting, some, manuscripts, collected, sovereigns, england, royal, library, given, british, museum, georg. The Royal manuscripts are one of the closed collections of the British Library i e historic collections to which new material is no longer added consisting of some 2 000 manuscripts collected by the sovereigns of England in the Old Royal Library and given to the British Museum by George II in 1757 They are still catalogued with call numbers using the prefix Royal in the style Royal MS 2 B V 1 As a collection the Royal manuscripts date back to Edward IV though many earlier manuscripts were added to the collection before it was donated Though the collection was therefore formed entirely after the invention of printing luxury illuminated manuscripts continued to be commissioned by royalty in England as elsewhere until well into the 16th century The collection was expanded under Henry VIII by confiscations in the Dissolution of the Monasteries and after the falls of Henry s ministers Cardinal Wolsey and Thomas Cromwell Many older manuscripts were presented to monarchs as gifts perhaps the most important manuscript in the collection the Codex Alexandrinus was presented to Charles I in recognition of the diplomatic efforts of his father James I to help the Eastern Orthodox churches under the rule of the Ottoman Empire The date and means of entry into the collection can only be guessed at in many if not most cases Now the collection is closed in the sense that no new items have been added to it since it was donated to the nation Presentation miniature from the Talbot Shrewsbury Book with dedicatory verse under an illuminated miniature of John Talbot 1st Earl of Shrewsbury identified by his Talbot dog presenting the book to Queen Margaret of Anjou seated beside King Henry VI Royal MS 15 E VI f 2v Author portrait of Vincent de Beauvais with borders decorated with the arms of Edward IV in Bruges c 1478 1480 Royal MS 14 E I vol 1 f3r The collection is not to be confused with the Royal Collection of various types of art still owned by the Crown nor the King s Library of printed books mostly assembled by George III and given to the nation by his son George IV which is also in the British Library as is the Royal Music Library a collection mostly of scores and parts both printed about 4 500 items and in manuscript about 1 000 given in 1957 2 The Royal manuscripts were deposited in 1707 in Cotton House Westminster with the Cotton Library which was already a form of national collection under trustees available for consultation by scholars and antiquaries the site is now covered by the Houses of Parliament The collection escaped relatively lightly in the fire of 1731 at Ashburnham House to which the collections had been moved The Cotton Library was one of the founding collections of the British Museum in 1753 and four years later the Royal collection was formally donated to the new institution by the king It moved to the new British Library when this was established in 1973 The 9 000 printed books that formed the majority of the Old Royal Library were not kept as a distinct collection in the way the manuscripts were and are dispersed among the library s holdings The Royal manuscripts and those in other British Library collections with royal connections were the focus of an exhibition at the British Library Royal Manuscripts The Genius of Illumination in 2011 2012 3 Contents 1 Highlights 2 The Old Royal Library 2 1 Before Edward IV 2 2 Edward IV to Henry VII 2 3 Henry VIII to Elizabeth 2 4 Stuarts 3 Notes 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHighlights editCodex Alexandrinus a 5th century manuscript of the Greek Bible one of the four Great uncial codices Gospel Book British Library MS Royal 1 B VII an 8th century illuminated Insular Gospel Book closely related to the Lindisfarne Gospels Bald s Leechbook an Old English medical text probably compiled in the 9th century Westminster Psalter from Westminster Abbey with important miniatures from about 1200 and then 1250 Rochester Bestiary 13th century English Matthew Paris MS Royal 14 C VII contains his Historia Anglorum 1250 59 358 x 250 mm ff 232 also the last volume of the Chronica Majora and various other items Queen Mary Psalter a 14th century English psalter later owned by Mary I of England Talbot Shrewsbury Book a compilation of 15 secular texts in French made in Rouen Normandy in 1444 5 and presented by John Talbot 1st Earl of Shrewsbury d 1453 to the French princess Margaret of Anjou in honour of her betrothal to Henry VI Psalter of Henry VIII from the 1540sThe Old Royal Library edit nbsp Detail of miniature from the Westminster Psalter c 1250 Royal MS 2 A XXII f 220 Before Edward IV edit Edward IV is conventionally regarded as the founder of the old Royal Library which formed a continuous collection from his reign until its donation to the nation in the 18th century though this view has been challenged 4 There are only about twenty surviving manuscripts that probably belonged to the English kings and queens between Edward I and Henry VI 5 though the number expands considerably when the princes and princesses are included A few Anglo Saxon manuscripts owned by royalty have survived after being presented to the church among them a Gospel Book Royal 1 B VII given to Christ Church Canterbury by King Athelstan in the 920s which probably rejoined the collection at the Dissolution of the Monasteries 6 However these works are scattered among a variety of libraries By the late Middle Ages luxury manuscripts would generally include the heraldry of the commissioner especially in the case of royalty which is an important means of identifying the original owner There are patchy documentary records which mention many more though the royal library was from about 1318 covered in the records of the Chamber which have survived far less completely than the pipe rolls of the main Exchequer The careful inventories of the French royal library have no English equivalent until a list compiled at Richmond Palace in 1535 7 At the start of Edward III s reign there was a significant library kept in the Privy Wardrobe of the Tower of London partly built up from confiscations from difficult members of the nobility which were often later returned Many books were given away as diplomatic political or family gifts but also especially if in Latin rather than French to clerks or civil servants of the royal administration some receiving several at a time such as Richard de Bury perhaps England s leading bibliophile at the time as well as an important figure in the government who received 14 books in 1328 By 1340 there were only 18 books left although this probably did not include Edward s personal books 8 nbsp Historiated initial S from Psalm 69 Save me O God for the waters are come in unto my soul I am come into deep waters where the floods overflow me Royal MS 1 E IX most likely Henry IV s Biblia MagnaDespite the cultured nature of his court and his encouragement of English poets little is known of the royal books under Richard II although one illuminated manuscript created in Paris for Charles VI of France to present to Richard the Epistre au roi Richart of Philippe de Mezieres Royal 20 B VI was at Richmond in 1535 and is in the British Library Royal manuscripts 9 The reign of Henry IV has left records of the building of a novum studium new study at Eltham Palace finely decorated with more than 78 square feet of stained glass at a cost of 13 and a prosecution involving nine missing royal books including bibles in Latin and English valued respectively at 10 and 5 the high figures suggesting they were illuminated 10 The wills of Henry s son Henry V refer to a Biblia Magna Big or Great Bible which had belonged to Henry IV and was to be left to the nuns of Henry V s foundation at Syon This may be Royal MS 1 E IX with fine historiated initials illuminated in London by several artists from the school of Herman Scheerre of Cologne 11 A considerable number of religious texts were left to family members staff and his many chaplains 12 Two of Henry V s younger brothers were notable collectors Humphrey Duke of Gloucester 1390 1447 who had commissioned translations from Greek into Latin and gave most of his collection 281 books to the library at Oxford University where the Bodleian Library later grew around Duke Humfrey s Library At his death his remaining books mostly went to his nephew Henry VI s new King s College Cambridge but some illuminated books in French were kept for the royal library and are still in the Royal manuscripts John Duke of Bedford took over as English commander in France after Henry V s death in 1422 and commissioned two important manuscripts which have reached the British Library by other routes the Parisian Bedford Hours Ms Add 18850 in fact presented to Henry VI in 1431 and the English Bedford Psalter and Hours BL Ms Add 42131 He also used the dominant English position in France to buy the French royal library of the Louvre from which a few examples remain in the Royal manuscripts 13 Edward IV to Henry VII edit nbsp The death of Walter VI Count of Brienne in 1356 at the Battle of Poitiers from one of Edward IV s histories Royal MS 14 E v f 499v About fifty of the Royal manuscripts were acquired by Edward IV 1442 1483 a far larger and more coherent group than survive from any of his predecessors He was not a scholarly man and had to fight his way to the throne after inheriting the Yorkist claim to the throne at the age of eighteen after his father and elder brother died in battle He reigned from 1461 until 1470 when machinations among the leading nobles forced a six month period of exile in Burgundy He stayed for some of this period in Bruges at the house of Louis de Gruuthuse a leading nobleman in the intimate circle of Philip the Good who had died three years before Philip had the largest and finest library of illuminated manuscripts in Europe with perhaps 600 and Gruuthuse was one of several Burgundian nobles who had begun to collect seriously in emulation In 1470 his library much of it now in Paris was in its early stages but must already have been very impressive for Edward The Flemish illuminating workshops had by this date clearly overtaken those of Paris to become the leading centre in northern Europe and English illumination had probably come to seem somewhat provincial The Burgundian collectors were especially attracted to secular works often with a military or chivalric flavour that were illustrated with a lavishness rarely found in earlier manuscripts on such subjects As well as generous numbers of miniatures the borders were decorated in increasingly inventive and elaborate fashion with much use of the heraldry of the commissioner 14 Many of Edward s manuscripts reflected this taste like that of Philip his court displayed an increase in ceremonial formality and interest in chivalry Most of his books are large format popular works in French with several modern and ancient histories and authors such as Boccaccio Christine de Pisan and Alain Chartier They are too large to hold comfortably and may have been read aloud from lecterns though the large miniatures were certainly intended to be appreciated The largest purchases were probably made from about April 1479 when a part payment is recorded to a foreign stranger merchant or dealer for 80 to merchant stranger Philip Maisertuell in partie of paiement of 240 of certaine bokes by the said Philip to be provided to the kyngs use in the parties beyond the see This was perhaps Philippe de Mazerolles a leading illuminator who had moved from France to Flanders At least six of Edward s Flemish books are dated to 1479 and 1480 such large books naturally took a considerable time to produce Further payments totalling 10 are recorded in 1480 for binding eight books for which other payments record the transport to Eltham in special pine chests 15 Other manuscripts are no longer in the Royal collection such as the Soane Josephus MS 1 Sir John Soane s Museum which remained in the collection until after an inventory in 1666 16 One of the most splendid books made for Edward in Bruges in the 1470s is a Bible historiale in French in three volumes Royal MS 15 D i 18 D ix x which was probably begun for another patron then completed for Edward 17 Edward s reign saw the beginning of printing both in English in 1473 75 and in England itself from 1476 when William Caxton set up a press in Westminster At the top end of the market the illuminated manuscript continued to retain a superior prestige for many decades When Edward s brother in law Anthony Woodville 2nd Earl Rivers had Caxton print his own translation of the Dictes and Sayings of the Philosophers in 1477 the book he presented to Edward was a special manuscript copied from the printed edition with a presentation miniature implying that a printed book might not yet have been regarded as sufficiently distinguished for a formal gift of this kind 18 Henry VII appears to have commissioned relatively few manuscripts preferring French luxury printed editions his exile had been spent in France He also added his own arms to a number of earlier manuscripts a common practice for those bought second hand One manuscript Royal 19 C VIII was scribed at Sheen Palace in 1496 by the Flemish royal librarian Quentin Poulet and then sent to Bruges to be illuminated and another Royal 16 F II appears to have been begun as a present for Edward IV then left aside until completed with new miniatures and Tudor roses in about 1490 as a present for Henry 19 Henry VIII to Elizabeth edit nbsp Psalter of Henry VIII 1540s Henry shown reading nbsp Page with wolves from the Rochester Bestiary Ms Royal 12 F xiii part of the spoils of the Dissolution of the Monasteries By the time Henry VIII came to the throne in 1509 the printed book had become the norm though the richest buyers like Henry could often order copies printed on vellum But some manuscripts were still commissioned and illuminated and Henry and his minister Cardinal Wolsey were the main English patrons in the 1520s Henry retained a scribe with the title writer of the king s books from 1530 employing the Fleming Pieter Meghen 1466 67 1540 who had earlier been used by Erasmus and Wolsey 20 Although some Flemish illuminators were active in England notably Lucas Horenbout as well as his father Gerard and sister Susanna it seems that more often the miniatures and painted decoration were done in Flanders or France even if the text had been written in England Meghen and Gerard Horenbout both worked on a Latin New Testament mixing the gospels in the Vulgate with translations by Erasmus of Acts and the Apocalypse which has the heraldry of Henry and Catherine of Aragon Hatfield House MS 324 21 Henry also retained a librarian paid 10 a year in both 1509 and 1534 who in both years was based at Richmond Palace west of London which seems to have been the location of the main collection 22 As well as more common northern European manuscripts Henry also received Italian manuscripts illuminated in full blown Renaissance style as gifts at least three remain in the British Library 23 It was at Richmond that in 1535 a French visitor compiled the first surviving approach to a list of books in the royal library though this was only covered the books there and perhaps was not complete He listed 143 books which were nearly all in French and included many of Edward IV s collection 24 This was just before Henry s Dissolution of the Monasteries which was to greatly increase the size of the royal library In 1533 before the dissolution began Henry had commissioned John Leland to examine the libraries of religious houses in England Leland was a young Renaissance humanist whose patrons included Wolsey and Thomas Cromwell and was a chaplain to the king with church benefices by papal dispensation as he was not yet even a subdeacon He spent much of the following years touring the country compiling lists of the most significant manuscripts from 1536 being overtaken by the process of dissolution as he complained in a famous letter to Cromwell A large but unknown number of books were taken for the royal library others were taken by the expelled monastics or private collectors but many were simply left in the abandoned buildings at St Augustine s Canterbury there were still some remaining in the 17th century Those preserved were often not the ones that modern interests would have preferred 25 The monastic books were initially collected in libraries at the palaces of Westminster later known as Whitehall Hampton Court and Greenwich though from around 1549 they were apparently all concentrated at Westminster There is an inventory from April 1542 listing 910 books at Westminster and there are press marks on many books relating to this 26 It is often impossible to trace the origin of monastic manuscripts in or passing through the royal library a large number of the books initially acquired were later dispersed to a new breed of antiquarian collectors The priory of Rochester Cathedral was the source of manuscripts including the Rochester Bestiary famous for its lively illustrations and an unillustrated 11th century manuscript of the Liber Scintillarum Royal 7 C iv with interlinear Old English glosses Very probably a good number of medieval liturgical manuscripts were destroyed for religious reasons under Edward VI The librarian from 1549 was Bartholomew Traheron an evangelical Protestant recommended by John Cheke 27 In January 1550 a letter was sent out from the Council instructing the country to cull out all superstitious books as missals legends and such like and to deliver the garniture of the books being either gold or silver to Sir Anthony Aucher d 1558 one of Henry s commissioners for the Dissolution in Kent Despite the additions from the dissolved monasteries the collection that survived is very short of medieval liturgical manuscripts and a high proportion of those that do remain can be shown to have arrived under Mary I or the Stuarts There are no illuminated missals at all only eight other liturgical manuscripts eighteen illuminated psalters and eight books of hours 28 Edward died at the age of 16 and was a solitary and studious boy several of whose personal books are in the British Library He seems to have centralized most of the library at Whitehall Palace though Richmond still seems to have retained a collection to judge by the reports of later visitors 29 The significant addition to the library of Edward s reign though only completed after his death was the purchase from his widow of the manuscripts belonging to the reformer Martin Bucer who had died in England Mary I who restored Catholicism may have felt the lack of liturgical books and was presented with at least two illuminated psalters one the highly important English Queen Mary Psalter of 1310 1320 Royal 2 B VII confiscated from Henry Manners 2nd Earl of Rutland after his arrest This has in total over 1 000 illustrations many in the English tinted drawing style Another Royal 2 B III is a 13th century production of Bruges which was given by your humbull and poore orytur Rafe Pryne grocer of Loundon wushynge your gras prosperus helthe as an inscription says 30 Stuarts edit The son of James I Henry Frederick Prince of Wales 1594 1612 made a significant addition to the library by acquiring the library of John Lord Lumley c 1533 1609 Lumley had married the scholar and author Jane Lumley who inherited the library of her father Henry FitzAlan 19th Earl of Arundel 1512 1580 which was among the most important private libraries of the period with around 3 000 volumes including much of the library of Archbishop Cranmer A catalogue survives a 1609 copy of an original of 1596 that is now lost Lumley had also given many volumes to the universities in his last years Soon after Prince Henry s death the main royal library was moved to St James s Palace where his books had been kept 31 The Lumley library included MS Royal 14 C vii with the Historia Anglorum and Chronica Maiora of Matthew Paris which had passed from St Albans Abbey to Humphrey Duke of Gloucester and later Arundel 32 James I purchased much of the library of the classical scholar Isaac Casaubon who died in London in 1614 and was given the Codex Alexandinus as explained above The royal library managed to survive relatively unscathed during the English Civil War and Commonwealth partly because the well known and aggressive figures on the Parliamentarian side of the preacher Hugh Peters later executed as a regicide and the lawyer and M P Sir Bulstrode Whitelocke were successively appointed as librarians by Parliament and defended their charge Whitelocke wanted the library turned into a national library accessible to all scholars an idea already proposed by John Dee to Elizabeth I and thereafter by Richard Bentley the famous textual scholar who became librarian in 1693 There was a new inventory in 1666 The major purchase in the reign of Charles II was of 311 volumes in about 1678 from the collection of John Theyer including the Westminster Psalter Royal 2 A xxii a psalter of about 1200 from Westminster Abbey to which five tinted drawings were added some fifty years later including the kneeling knight illustrated above 33 Notes edit Record for Royal MS 2 B V Manuscripts Closed collections British Library Royal Music Library British Library Genius Stratford 255 and 266 where she suggests Henry IV and Henry V as alternatives Backhouse 267 regards Edward IV as clearly identifiable as the founder of the Old Royal Library Stratford 256 Brown 52 87 Stratford 255 256 Stratford 258 259 Stratford 260 Stratford 260 261 See Detailed record of Royal MS 1 E IX British Library Retrieved 30 April 2016 Scott Kathleen L 1996 Later Gothic Manuscripts 1390 1490 A Survey of Manuscripts Illuminated in the British Isles vol 6 Harvey Miller ISBN 0905203046 Given Wilson Chris 2016 Henry IV The Yale English Monarchs Series Yale University Press p 388 ISBN 978 0300154191 Stratford 263 Stratford 266 Backhouse 267 268 Kren amp McKendrick 68 71 and generally Backhouse 269 Kren amp McKendrick 292 294 Kren amp McKendrick 297 303 Backhouse 269 Kren amp McKendrick 403 398 400 Kren amp McKendrick 520 Alexander 47 49 Carley 1999 274 Doyle 70 73 Alexander 55 Carley 1999 274 Doyle 71 72 Carley 2002 341 342 346 347 Carley 1999 274 275 Carley 1999 275 276 Traheron Bartholomew Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Doyle 73 75 Doyle 73 75 Doyle 75 and catalogue entries 82 and 85 Selwyn 51 52 Chivalry 390 Chivalry 200 BL catalogue Westminster Psalter who give a later date for the main MS See also editKing s manuscripts British LibraryReferences editAlexander J J G Foreign illuminators and illuminated manuscripts Chapter 2 in Hellinga and Trapp Backhouse Janet The Royal Library from Edward IV to Henry VII Chapter 12 in Hellinga and Trapp google books Brown Michelle P Manuscripts from the Anglo Saxon Age 2007 British Library ISBN 978 0 7123 0680 5 Carley James P ed The libraries of King Henry VIII British Library British Academy 2000 Carley 1999 Carley James P The Royal Library under Henry VIII Chapter 13 in Hellinga and Trapp Carley 2002 Carley James P Monastic collections and their dispersal in John Barnard Donald Francis McKenzie eds The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain 1557 1695 Volume 4 2002 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 66182 X 9780521661829 Chivalry Jonathan Alexander amp Paul Binski eds Age of Chivalry Art in Plantagenet England 1200 1400 Royal Academy Weidenfeld amp Nicolson London 1987 Doyle Kathleen The Old Royal Library A greate many noble manuscripts yet remaining in McKendrick Lowden and Doyle below Genius British Library Press Release for the exhibition Royal Manuscripts The Genius of Illumination 11 November 2011 13 March 2012 Hellinga Lotte and Trapp J B eds The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain Volume 3 1400 1557 1999 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 57346 7 ISBN 978 0 521 57346 7 Kren T amp McKendrick S eds Illuminating the Renaissance The Triumph of Flemish Manuscript Painting in Europe Getty Museum Royal Academy of Arts 2003 ISBN 1 903973 28 7 McKendrick Scott Lowden John and Doyle Kathleen eds Royal Manuscripts The Genius of Illumination 2011 British Library 9780712358156 Selwyn David in Thomas Cranmer churchman and scholar Paul Ayris amp David Selwyn eds Boydell amp Brewer Ltd 1999 ISBN 0 85115 740 8 ISBN 978 0 85115 740 5 Stratford Jenny The early royal collections and the Royal Library to 1461 Chapter 11 in Hellinga and TrappFurther reading editBirrell T A English Monarchs and their Books From Henry VII to Charles II 1987 British Library Carley James P The Books of King Henry VIII and His Wives 2004 British Library Doyle Kathleen McKendrick Scot eds 1000 Years of Royal Books and Manuscripts 2014 British Library Publications ISBN 9780712357081 George F Warner and Julius P Gilson Catalogue of Western Manuscripts in the Old Royal and King s Collections 4 vols 1921 British Museum source of the British Library online catalogue entries External links editRoyal Manuscripts c 1100 c 1800 finding aid includes pdf for download Royal Manuscripts The Genius of Illumination exhibition at the British Library from November 2011 British Library typepad Medieval and earlier manuscripts blog several entries on individual manuscripts relating to the 2011 exhibition with excerpts from the catalogue Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal manuscripts British Library amp oldid 1219123503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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