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The Tracts of Clement Maydeston, with the Remains of Caxton's Ordinale (Latin, Paperback)
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The Tracts of Clement Maydeston, with the Remains of Caxton's Ordinale (Latin, Paperback)
Series: Henry Bradshaw Society
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This volume presents a kind of anticipated companion volume to the
HBS edition of the Directorium Sacerdotum, a variety of ordinal or
directory, which was privately compiled by Clement Maydeston, who
though a priest held formally the post of 'deacon' at the
Brigittine Abbey of Syon, Middlesex (c. 1390-1456). Despite these
origins, the compilation acquired a de facto official status. The
Directorium Sacerdotum itself was published as volumes 20 and 22.
The Directorium aimed in part at providing calendrical and rubrical
solutions for those observing the Sarum Use. It did this by making
a distinction between the practice of the Salisbury cathedral
chapter and the practice that could reasonably be required from the
many others in England who followed in general the Sarum Use.
Maydeston's position was that outside the Salisbury chapter it was
reasonable to make modifications to meet local conditions and
calendars. This was deemed unacceptable by some, who maintained
that the practice observed at Salisbury itself should be followed
everywhere. This line of argument ignored the fact that in any case
there were contradictions between the existing manuscript drafts of
the Sarum ordinal and the rubrics of the liturgical books. The
edition focuses in particular on two printed texts which offer
Maydeston's defence. The first is the Defensorium Directorii
Sacerdotum printed in successive editions of the Directorium
Sacerdotum by Wynkyn de Worde in 1495 . The second is the text
Crede Michi, a longer and more considered rubrical tract compiled
by Maydeston but incorporating rubrical adjudications made by the
Salisbury canons c. 1440-1450, and partly based on an earlier work
by one John Raynton. The text given is that printed by Wynkyn de
Worde in the quarto of 1495.
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