Thank you π
@saracharles
Medieval manuscript practitioner, bringing the manuscript making process to life. Author of The Medieval Scriptorium. Cat lady. www.teachingmanuscripts.com PhD in medieval martyrologies. Editor of Historical Research journal.
Thank you π
Thrilled to find out I've been awarded a Bodleian Library Fellowship! I'll be taking up a Humfrey Wanley Visiting Fellowship in the autumn term, researching the residents of medieval Catte Street π #medievalmanuscripts @ihr.bsky.social @ies-sas.bsky.social @bodleian.ox.ac.uk
A really great - and urgent - discussion of the conditions of possibility for doing printing history today - and why we should keep going - given by Elizabeth Savage for @printinghistory.bsky.social.
printinghistory.org/awards/eliza...
The βmessyβ course returns to Londonβs palaeography summer school, 8-12 June. A chance to make your own medieval manuscript. Places are limited so book now (tell your friends)! #medievalsky taught by the amazing @saracharles.bsky.social @stevelawesarts.bsky.social ππ¨π«
palaeography.uk/study/short-...
Senate house in the sunshine
Everyone is London is absolutely giddy with the sunshine and I am totally here for it
Only if itβs the finest lapis lazuli π€
TEAM WELD forever
Thank you βΊοΈ
Oh thank you βΊοΈ
Iβll be talking about my recent research on the Bayeux Tapestry in a public lecture here in Bristol on Thursday 30 April. Attendance is FREE and includes a drinks reception π· Everybody welcome! Please join us if you can and help spread the word! #medievalsky #skystorians
I'll be talking about the messy and difficult (but fun!) processes for making medieval manuscripts on Wednesday. There will also be guest appearances from cats in my presentation πΊ #bookhistory #medievalsky @ihr.bsky.social @ies-sas.bsky.social
Copy of medieval miniature of dragon with tongue sticking out and wings raised on a brown rock. Original from Getty Museum, MS. Ludwig XV 3, fol. 89
Same image showing all the medieval pigments applied
Here's a cute little dragon I painted on calfskin (copied from a 13th century bestiary) using traditional medieval techniques and pigments (labelled in second image) #medievalmanuscripts #medievalscriptorium #bookhistory
Thanks π₯°
The amazing Michelle Brown is running her summer school course on Medieval Women at #LRBS this year. In person, in London, book now π #MedievalSky #BookSky #BookHistory
ies.sas.ac.uk/study-traini...
Looking forward to March 10th @ies-sas.bsky.social Iβll be talking further about 19th-century book collector, John Bellingham Inglis: his books, his activities, his personal life, his networks, his interests and why we should be interested in his place in #bookhistory
ies.sas.ac.uk/news-events/...
The peer review system is breaking down. Hereβs how we can fix it
theconversation.com/the-peer-rev...
Can historians benefit from creative works for historical research? In this @hsnatsci.bsky.social short piece, I share how I worked w/ different types of making to research and write my recent book on 17th-c. florilegia. Thank you @dominikhhh.bsky.social & @mbaldwin.bsky.social for the invitation!
That is gorgeous! β€οΈ
My amazing colleague @saracharles.bsky.social is giving this seminar on her fantastic experiments in medieval manuscript production on Wednesday 25 February at the IHR. Will be an absolute treat for anyone interested in the history of the book or in getting their hands dirty making things!
π
I am the extremely proud owner of number four π
St Peterβs church, Preston park
Medieval wall painting of the murder of Thomas Becket
Medieval wall painting of the nativity
Medieval wall painting of the weighing of souls
A lovely visit to the 13th century St Peterβs at Preston Park, with surviving wall paintings #medievalsky
Great - see you soon!
Oh - I would have come and said hello if Iβd known you were in SH! Hope you enjoyed the course
I'd been wanting to try this for ages, so thank you for giving me the excuse to do it! Congrats on the article π
Excerpt from article: I found him, for instance, one week-end, in his toolshed-scullery, boiling a brew of slimy barks which were, if mixed with oak-galls, vitriol and wine, to become an ink-powder. We boiled it till the Monday, and it turned into an adhesive stronger than birdlime, and entangled us both. (p. 509) Compare with Castorley describing the results of his test on the manuscript: βI took a wash, for analysis, from a blot in one corner β¦ and I got the actual ink of the period! Itβs a practically eternal stuff compounded on β Iβve forgotten his name for the minute β the scribe at Bury St Edmunds, of course! β hawthorn bark and wine. Anyhow, on his formula.β (p. 511)
I went down lots of rabbit holes on this one, but none so fun as chatting with @saracharles.bsky.social about hawthorn ink - which she then went and made/tested!
βNo wonder I got drunk that night. Iβd been Chaucer for a week!β
- my article on Kiplingβs Dayspring Mishandled, his entertaining and peculiar account of a Chaucerian forgery, is out now with the Review of English Studies! I absolutely *loved* working on this.
academic.oup.com/res/advance-...
And bursaries are available thanks to @bibsoc.bsky.social ies.sas.ac.uk/study-traini...
We made ink, quills, paintbrushes, and pigments. We did scribing and illuminating while Hildegard von Bingen played in the background. We did early medieval interlacing and bookbinding. It was such FUN!!! And weβre doing it all again this summer β¬οΈ
Returning to the London International Palaeography Summer School due to popular demand is our hands-on course that explores the materials and processes of manuscript production through experimentation π #MedievalSky
ies.sas.ac.uk/study-traini...