The Manuscript Book. A Compendium of Codicology - Agati Maria Luisa (Studia Archaeologica, 214)

di Maria Luisa Agati

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    Collane: Studia Archaeologica, 214

    Rilegatura: Brossura
     Pagine: 536, 120 ill. B/N, 1 ill. Col., 16 tav. f.t

    CoNTENTS

     Introduction 
     Prefac

     I. The Study of the Handwritten Book or Codicology 
     1. The Field of Study 
     2. Methodological Evolution
     3. Quantitative Codicology 
     4. Comparative Codicology. Areas of Reference
     Hebrew mss
     Islamic mss 
     Coptic and Ethiopic mss
     Armenian mss 
     Georgian mss
     Slavic mss
     Syriac mss 
     5. A Brief History of the Handwritten Book 
     II. Writing Supports before Paper
     1. The Oldest Supports 
     2. Papyrus 
     2.1. Overview
     2.2. Laboratory Analyses
     2.3. Types of Papyrus
     3. Parchment
     3.1. Overview
     3.2. Skin Sections 
     3.3. Animal Species and Costs
     3.4. Palimpsests

     3.5. Digital Reading of Palimpsests 
     3.6. Painted Parchment
     III. Paper 
     1. A History
     2. Paper in Byzantium and the Greek Area 
     3. Types of Paper and Respective Manufacturing Techniques 
     4. Characteristics of the Sheets with Reference to the Three Moulds
     4.1. The Format or Size 
     4.2. The Zigzag 
     5. The Watermark 
     5.1. Watermarking and Sizes 
     5.2. Filigranology

    This work has been conceived by the author as an enlarged version of the original volume Il libro manoscritto. Introduzione alla codicologia, already published in this series (n 124). At a time when the breaking down of political and ideological barriers has become an urgent necessity, investigating the science of the book before Gutenberg, i.e., Codicology, considered by the author in its entirety - the history of the ancient and medieval book and the relative manufacturing techniques up to its modern-day place of conservation, and the history of studies undertaken - goes beyond the confines of Greek and Latin civilizations of the western academic tradition. In an attempt at comparative methodology, allowing an improved reading of many artisanal book production phenomena, where possible, those cultures which have come into contact with our own are presented: from East to West, above all Byzantium, the age-old, multi-ethnic empire which gathered and salvaged both Roman and Greek civilizations, an inheritance which it enhanced with cultural and linguistic practices, as well as book and artistic techniques from a diversity of backgrounds.

    Maria Luisa Agati Was professor of Codicology at The University of Rome II. She has specialised in Byzantine studies and her interests span book culture of the Greek Middles Ages, and the material structure of the book. Among her many contributions, ranging from questions conceming the ninth and tenth centuries, to the connections between handwritten and printed letters in the sixteenth century: the monographs dedicated to "bouletée" minuscule (Vatican City, 1992) and to Giovanni Onorio da Maglie, Greek scribe (1535-1563) (Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Rome 2001), the identification and study of amanuenses like Pietro Devaris (mainly in The Greek Script in the 15th and 16th centuries, Athina 2000) or Daniel monk of Mount Athos (Scriptorium 2013) and others, and the Catalogo dei manoscritti greci della biblioteca dell'Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei e Corsiniana (Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Roma 2007). Her research activity at the moment concems the oriental Greek manuscript in the fourth and and fifteenth centuries.