Western Illuminated Manuscripts

Western Illuminated Manuscripts

Author: Paul Binski

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2011-03-31

Total Pages: 725

ISBN-13: 1139500600

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Cambridge University Library's collection of illuminated manuscripts is of international significance. It originates in the medieval university and stands alongside the holdings of the colleges and the Fitzwilliam Museum. The University Library contains major European examples of medieval illumination from the ninth to the sixteenth centuries, with acknowledged masterpieces of Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance book art, as well as illuminated literary texts, including the first complete Chaucer manuscript. This catalogue provides scholars and researchers easy access to the University Library's illuminated manuscripts, evaluating the importance of many of them for the very first time. It contains descriptions of famous manuscripts, for example the Life of Edward the Confessor attributed to Matthew Paris, as well as hundreds of lesser-known items. Beautifully illustrated throughout, the catalogue contains descriptions of individual manuscripts with up-to-date assessments of their style, origins and importance, together with bibliographical references.


The Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland

The Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland

Author: Elisabeth Leedham-Green

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2014-02-27

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781107650183

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This volume is the first detailed survey of libraries in Britain and Ireland up to the Civil War. It traces the transition from collections of books without a fixed local habitation to the library, chiefly of printed books, much as we know it today. It examines changing patterns in the formation of book collections in the earlier medieval period, traces the combined impact of the activities of the mendicant orders and the scholarship of the universities in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and the adoption of the library room and the growth of private book collections in the fourteenth and fifteenth. The volume then focuses upon the dispersal of the monastic libraries in the mid-sixteenth centuries, the creation of new types of library, and finally, the steps whereby the collections amassed by antiquaries came to form the bases of the national and institutional libraries of Britain and Ireland.


The Cambridge World History of Food

The Cambridge World History of Food

Author: Kenneth F. Kiple

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 1180

ISBN-13: 9780521402149

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A two-volume set which traces the history of food and nutrition from the beginning of human life on earth through the present.


The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain: Volume 7, The Twentieth Century and Beyond

The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain: Volume 7, The Twentieth Century and Beyond

Author: Andrew Nash

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2021-03-18

Total Pages: 784

ISBN-13: 9781009010474

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The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain is an authoritative series which surveys the history of publishing, bookselling, authorship and reading in Britain. This seventh and final volume surveys the twentieth and twenty-first centuries from a range of perspectives in order to create a comprehensive guide, from growing professionalisation at the beginning of the twentieth century, to the impact of digital technologies at the end. Its multi-authored focus on the material book and its manufacture broadens to a study of the book's authorship and readership, and its production and dissemination via publishing and bookselling. It examines in detail key market sectors over the course of the period, and concludes with a series of essays concentrating on aspects of book history: the book in wartime; class, democracy and value; books and other media; intellectual property and copyright; and imperialism and post-imperialism.