Chapter 29: Book production in the Carolingian empire and the spread of Caroline minuscule
SeriesThe New Cambridge Medieval History c.700-c.900
Volume 2The New Cambridge Medieval History
Chapter TitleChapter 29: Book production in the Carolingian empire and the spread of Caroline minuscule
Publication Date1995
AuthorDavid Ganz
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)10.1017/CHOL9780521362924.032
Overview
The reigns of Charlemagne and Louis the Pious saw a remarkable expansion in the copying of manuscripts throughout the Carolingian empire and a steady increase in uniformity about the choice of scripts in which texts were copied. Some 500 manuscripts survive from Merovingian Gaul copied before c. 750: some 7000 manuscripts survive copied in the Carolingian empire between c. 750 and 900. Without this expansion, patristic, classical and vernacular writings would not have been studied in the ninth century or read in our own. Because many of the kinds of books and the literary standards of the Roman empire, with its booksellers, law-schools and letter-writers, were replaced, most of our reconstruction of that earlier literary culture relies on extrapolation from stray references in hagiographical and other sources and scanty manuscript survivals. But since every Carolingian manuscript of an earlier text was a copy, to ignore the implications of the discarded exemplars is to misread this evidence. What is clear is that these exemplars were disparate. Only after the ninth century could readers in the lands of the Carolingian empire find a recognisable and accessibly uniform Latin word in the manuscripts which they used. The diversity of scripts which had characterised Europe in 700 was restricted by Carolingian policies. The choice of scripts, and the extent and nature of book production in Spain, Britain and southern Italy, serve as a reminder of what might have happened without the resources of Carolingian faith and Carolingian power.
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How to cite (Modern Language Association style)
Ganz, David. "Book production in the Carolingian empire and the spread of Caroline minuscule." The New Cambridge Medieval History. Ed. Rosamond McKitterick. Cambridge University Press, 1995. Cambridge Histories Online. Cambridge University Press. 22 November 2009 DOI:10.1017/CHOL9780521362924.032
