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The Index of Middle English Prose: Handlist XXIV - Manuscripts in New York City Libraries (Hardcover)
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The Index of Middle English Prose: Handlist XXIV - Manuscripts in New York City Libraries (Hardcover)
Series: Index of Middle English Prose
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Handlist to the rich collection of manuscripts contained in five
major libraries across New York, giving a full account of their
provenance. This volume provides detailed descriptions of Middle
English prose materials found in the Columbia University Rare Book
and Manuscripts Library, The Pierpont Morgan Library, The New York
Public Library, The New York Academy of Medicine Library, and New
York University Bobst Library (Special Collections). The
manuscripts tend to be less well known than those in English
libraries, with overlooked texts such as the Pseudo-Hildegard
Anti-Mendicant Prophecy; The Book of Palmistry; a subject index of
legal statutes; culinary and medical recipes; and English
instructions to Latin prayers in Books of Hours. Other manuscripts
of note include Trevisa's translation of De proprietatibus rerum by
Bartholomaeus Anglicus, used as a copy-text for Wynkyn de Worde's
first edition printed ca. 1495; and deluxe illustrated manuscripts
of The Pilgrimage of the Soul and Ordinances of Chivalry. The
introduction to the volume highlights the particular interests of
the various collectors and the influences and characteristics
underpinning their acquisitions. All but one of the manuscripts
described from Columbia University were acquired by George A.
Plimpton (1855-1936), whose firm, Ginn and Co., published spelling
books. His collection records an interest in the history of
education, with MS 258, a primer probably compiled for an English
schoolchild, being a highlight. John Pierpont Morgan (1837-1913)
specialized in expensive, illustrated manuscripts, aided in his
purchases by Belle da Costa Greene, who became the first director
of the Morgan Library as a public institution under J.P. Morgan,
Jr. Curt F. Bühler became the Keeper of Printed Books at the
Morgan in 1934, bequeathing to the Library the manuscripts that he
had bought over the years. James Lenox and John Jacob Astor
established the New York Public Library, with Lenox donating two
Wycliffite Bibles and Astor a third. The New York Academy of
Medicine owns two manuscripts relating to the work of the French
surgeon Guy de Chauliac.
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