describes the complementary websites the two libraries have launched: That these fragile artifacts have been so inaccessible, kept under glass and well away from insects, thieves, and vandals, now means they are in a condition to be digitally copied and uploaded in high resolution for close viewing, comparison, and careful study. Now they are also virtual public property, as it were, thanks to a grant from the Polonsky Foundation. Some of these are currently on display at the wildly popular, sold-out British Library exhibition Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms: Art, Word, War. Both institutions provided 400 manuscripts each for digitization. The situation has changed dramatically as libraries digitize their holdings. Last November, hundreds more rare, valuable medieval manuscripts became available to everyone when the British Library and the Bibliothèque nationale de France launched a joint project, making “800 manuscripts decorated before the year 1200 available freely” online, as the BL blog announced in 2016. Medieval manuscripts were locked away in rare book rooms and seen by very few. Not all books received this treatment but the “most luxurious,” notes the British Library, were “literally ‘lit up’ by decorations and pictures in brightly coloured pigments and burnished gold leaf.” For centuries, despite the explosion of image-making technologies of every kind, most of us, unless we were scholars or aristocrats, were in the same position vis-à-vis these stunning artifacts as the average medieval peasant. Most of the population could not read them, but they could, in rare instances when they might catch a glimpse, be deeply moved by the colorful, stylized images and lettering.įor the intellectual classes, illumination constituted a language of its own, framing and interpreting medical, classical, and legal texts, gospels and works by the church fathers. Many of those rare, scribal copies were not illustrated, they were “illuminated.” Their pages shone out into the darkness and fog. This was a time not only before mobile video, but when images of any kind were scarce, when every book was painstakingly copied by hand in careful, elegant script. Though the cause of this turns out to be dark magic, one can’t help thinking that a smartphone would immediately solve all their problems. In the day, they wander in a fog, unable to remember anything. Without it, their nights are pitch black. The couple at the center of the story spends several pages fretting over the loss of a candle, their only one. Or what it might feel like for us moderns, at least. Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel The Buried Giantbegins with an immersive depiction of what it might have been like to live in a European village during the middle ages.
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