Joseph Holland and the Idea of the Chaucerian Book
Author(s) -
Megan L. Cook
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
manuscript studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.117
H-Index - 3
eISSN - 2381-5329
pISSN - 2380-1190
DOI - 10.1353/mns.2016.0012
Subject(s) - fifteenth , glossary , poetry , classics , literature , art , history , medieval literature , history of the book , art history , philosophy , linguistics
The antiquarian Joseph Holland (d. 1605) owned a large, but damaged, Chaucerian manuscript from the early fifteenth century (now Cambridge University Library Gg.4.27). Holland recognized in the manuscript an effort to construct a collection based on Chaucerian authorship, and he repaired and added to it using a copy of the 1598 printed edition of Chaucer’s collected Works. From this edition, he took not only the text of Chaucer’s poems, but paratextual materials as well, including a glossary, biographical information, and a frontispiece. His activities reveal how a distinctly post-medieval understanding of what the collected works of Chaucer should look like shaped the history of this fifteenth-century manuscript, and underscore impact of later stages of transmission can have on the way medieval books are read and preserved.
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