During the final century of the Anglo-Saxon state, the use of written English reached remarkable heights. Yet, while the make-up and contents of the many books and documents surviving from the period have been fully catalogued, less attention has been devoted to those who produced them. This is the first comprehensive annotated list of the scribal hands whose work survives from the time of the Benedictine Reform under King Edgar to that of the generation succeeding the Norman Conquest. More than a thousand hands are listed, together with details of their work, which ranges from a few words or sentences in marginalia to multiple volumes. The result is a reference tool which will allow further research not only into palaeographical issues but also into the writing habits and grammar of individuals and groups of related scribes and into patterns of education in some of the larger cultural centres.
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Author(s): Donald Scragg
Series: Publications of the Manchester Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies, 11
Publisher: D. S. Brewer
Year: 2012
Language: English
Pages: XXII+94
City: Woodbridge
List of Illustrations viii
Acknowledgements ix
Abbreviations x
Introduction xi
Notes on the Plates xvi
The Plates xvii
Map of Locations Associated with Scribal Hands xxii
The Conspectus 1
Appendix: Relative Dates of Scribes 87
Index of Names 89
Index of Places 90
Subject Index 91