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10 - Libraries and scriptoria

from Part II - Structure and materiality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2012

Mette Birkedal Bruun
Affiliation:
University of Copenhagen
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Summary

Some fifty years after Robert of Molesme and his twenty-one companions had founded the New Monastery in 1098 – the Novum Monasterium which would become the abbey of Cîteaux – the Order enacted legislation which specified the minimum number and nature of the books which each abbey was required to possess. The list appears in the Institutes of the General Chapter (Instituta Generalis Capituli), dating from about 1147, and the list is brief: apart from the Rule of St Benedict (the fundamental guide to Cistercian life), it includes only liturgical volumes necessary for the daily worship of God, the opus Dei: Missal, Epistolary (Epistle Book), Evangeliary (Gospel Book), Collectary (which contained the collects and other formulae for the celebration of the Divine Office), Gradual (containing the mass chants), Antiphonary (containing the Office chants), Hymnal, Psalter, Night-Office Lectionary and Martyrology. A little later, as part of the process of updating, the Book of Usages (Liber usuum) was added to the list.

This is not to say, however, that these were the only books required in any Cistercian monastery. Chapter 48 of the Rule of St Benedict stipulates that every religious – monk or nun – should be given a book from the common collection at the start of Lent and read it through from beginning to end, and it follows from this that any monastery must have had in its collection at least as many books as there were religious. From the foundation of the Order until about the end of the twelfth century, a library of sixty to eighty books would not have been uncommon.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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References

Bell, D.N. (ed.), The Libraries of the Cistercians, Gilbertines, and Premonstratensians (London, 1992)
Knowles, D., The Religious Orders in England, 3 vols. (Cambridge, 1948–59), vol. ii (1955), p. 332Google Scholar
Little, A.G., ‘Cistercian Students at Oxford in the Thirteenth Century’, English Historical Review, 8 (1893), 84–5Google Scholar
Drinkwater, G., ‘French Libraries in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries’, in The Medieval Library, ed. J.W. Thomson (New York and Chicago, IL, 1939; repr. 1957)Google Scholar
Cheney, C.R., ‘English Cistercian Libraries: the First Century’, in Medieval Texts and Studies (Oxford, 1973)
Kingsford, C.L., Prejudice and Promise in Fifteenth Century England (Oxford, 1925; repr. London, 1962)
McCrank, L.J., ‘Libraries’, in Dictionary of the Middle Ages, ed. J.R. Strayer, 13 vols. (New York, 1982–9), vol. vii (1986), p. 563Google Scholar
Bell, D.N., ‘Reading Revolutionary Catalogues: The Case of Les Écharlis’, in Truth as Gift: Studies in Medieval Cistercian History in Honor of John R. Sommerfeldt, ed. M. Dutton et al., CS 204 (Kalamazoo, MI, 2004)Google Scholar
Bell, D.N., ‘Abbot Jean Depaquy and the Printed Books of Pontigny, 1778–1794’, Cîteaux, 51 (2000), 117–48Google Scholar

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