Libraries in The Medieval and Renaissance PeriodsThe Rede Lecture Delivered June 13, 1894 by Clark, J. W. (John Willis), 1833-1910
Libraries in The Medieval and Renaissance PeriodsThe Rede Lecture Delivered June 13, 1894 by Clark, J. W. (John Willis), 1833-1910
IN THE
BY
CAMBRIDGE:
MACMILLAN AND BOWES.
1894
The lecture was illustrated by lantern-slides. A brief notice of each of these is printed in the text in Italics at
the place in the lecture where the slide was exhibited.
[Pg 5]
LIBRARIES.
A library may be considered from two very different points of view: as a workshop, or as a Museum.
FEELINGS ABOUT
The former commends itself to the practical turn of mind characteristic of the present day; common sense
urges that mechanical ingenuity, which has done so much in other directions, should be employed in making
the acquisition of knowledge less cumbrous and less tedious; that as we travel by steam, so we should also
read by steam, and be helped in our studies by the varied resources of modern invention. There lies on my
table at this present moment a Handbook of Library Appliances, in which[Pg 6] fifty-three closely printed
pages are devoted to this interesting subject, with illustrations of various contrivances by which the working
of a large library is to be facilitated and brought up to date. In fact, from this point of view a library may be
described as a gigantic mincing-machine, into which the labours of the past are flung, to be turned out again in
a slightly altered form as the literature of the present.
LIBRARIES.
If, on the other hand, a library be regarded as a Museum—and I use the word in its original sense as a temple
or haunt of the Muses—very different ideas are evoked. Such a place is as useful as the other—every facility
for study is given—but what I may call the personal element as affecting the treasures there assembled is
brought prominently forward. The development of printing, as the result of individual effort; the art of
bookbinding, as practised by different persons in different countries; the history of the books themselves, the
libraries in which they have found a home, the hands[Pg 7] that have turned their pages, are there taken note
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of. Modern literature is fully represented, but the men of past days are not thrust out of sight; their footsteps
seem to linger in the rooms where once they walked—their shades seem to protect the books they once
handled. What Browning felt about frescoes may be applied—mutatis mutandis—to books in such an asylum
as I am trying to portray:
LIBRARIES.
I must begin with a few words about Roman libraries, because their methods influenced the Middle Ages, and
are, in fact, the precursors of those in fashion in our own times. The Romans preserved their books in two
ways: either in a small room or closet, for reading elsewhere; or in a large apartment, fitted up with greater or
less splendour, according to the taste or the means of the possessor, in which the books were doubtless studied
as in a modern library. An instructive example of the former class was one of the first discoveries at
Herculaneum in 1754. It was a very small room, so small in fact that a man who stood with his arms extended
in the centre of it could almost touch the walls on either side, yet 1700 rolls were found in it. These were kept
in wooden presses (armaria) which stood against the walls like a modern bookcase. Besides these a
rectangular case occupied the central space, with only a narrow passage to the right and left between it and the
wall-cases. These cases[Pg 10] were about a man's height, and had been numbered. It may be concluded from
this that a catalogue of the books had once existed. In larger libraries the books were kept in similar presses,
but they were ornamented with the busts or pictures of illustrious men, under each of which was a suitable
inscription, usually in verse.
ROMAN
No ancient figure of one of these book-presses has been preserved, so far as I have been able to ascertain; but,
as furniture is apt to retain its original forms with but little variation for a very long period, a representation of
a press containing the four Gospels, which occurs among the mosaics in the Mausoleum of the Empress Galla
Placidia at Ravenna, though it could not have been executed before the middle of the fifth century, may be
taken as a fairly accurate picture of the book-presses of an earlier age. It is unnecessary to describe it, for it is
exactly like a still later example which I am about to shew you. This picture occurs at[Pg 11] the beginning of
the MS. of the Vulgate called the Codex Amiatinus, which is now proved to have been written in England, at
Wearmouth or Jarrow, but probably by an Italian scribe, shortly before 716. The seated figure represents Ezra
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BOOK-PRESSES.
Bookcase in the Codex Amiatinus: from Garrucci, "Storia dell' arte Cristiana," iii. pl. 126.
To get an idea of one of the larger Roman libraries in ancient times we cannot do better than turn to that of the
Vatican at the present day. It was fitted up as we see it now—with presses, busts, and antique vases, by Pope
Sixtus V., in 1588. It is therefore, at best, only a modern antique; but arranged so skilfully that an ancient
Roman, if he could come to life again, might imagine himself in his own library.
[Pg 12]
RULE OF S. BENEDICT.
The library-era, as we may call it, of the Christian world, began with the publication of the Rule of S.
Benedict, early in the sixth century. But, just as that Rule emphasized and arranged on the lines of an ordered
system observances which had long been practised by isolated congregations or individuals living in
solitude—so the part of it which deals with study was evidently no new thing. S. Benedict did not invent
literature or libraries; he only lent the sanction of his name to the study of the one and the formation of the
other. That libraries existed before his period is proved by allusions to them in the Fathers and other early
writers; but, as those allusions are general, and say nothing from which either their size or their arrangement
can be inferred, I shall dismiss them in very few sentences. The earliest is said to have been the collection got
together at Jerusalem, by Bishop Alexander, at the beginning of the third century. Another was founded about
fifty years later at Cæsarea by Origen.[Pg 13] This is described as not only extensive, but remarkable for the
importance of the manuscripts it contained. Others are recorded at Hippo, at Cirta, at Constantinople, and at
Rome, where both S. Peter's and the Lateran had their special collections of books. I suspect that all these
libraries were in connexion with churches, possibly actually within their walls. At Cirta, for example, it is
recorded that during the persecution of 303-304 the officers "went to the church where the Christians used to
assemble, and spoiled it of chalices, lamps, etc., but when they came into the library (bibliothecam), the
presses (armaria) there were found empty." This language seems to imply that the sacred vessels and the
books were in different parts of the same building. The instructions, again, of the dying Augustine, who
bequeathed his library to the church at Hippo, lead to the same conclusion. The library of S. Peter's at Rome,
though added to the basilica erected by Constantine, long after its primitive foundation, was[Pg 14] on the
ground-floor in the angle between the nave and the north limb of the transept, a position which may perhaps
have been selected in accordance with early usage.
LIBRARIES IN CHURCHES.
I now pass to the treatment of books in the libraries of the monastic orders. These either adopted the Rule of
S. Benedict, or based their own Rule upon its provisions. It will therefore be desirable to examine what he said
on the subject of study, and I will translate a few lines from the 48th chapter of his Rule, Of daily manual
labour.
RULE OF S. BENEDICT.
Idleness is the enemy of the soul; hence brethren ought, at certain seasons, to occupy themselves with manual
labour, and again, at certain hours, with holy reading....
Between Easter and the calends of October let them apply themselves to reading from the fourth hour till near
the sixth hour. After the sixth hour, when they rise from table, let them rest on their beds in complete silence;
or, if any one should wish to read to himself, let him do so in such a way as not to disturb any one else....
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HIS INFLUENCE.
From the calends of October to the beginning of Lent let them apply themselves to reading until the second
hour.... During Lent, let them apply themselves to reading from morning until the end of the third hour ... and,
in[Pg 15] these days of Lent, let them receive a book apiece from the library, and read it straight through.
These books are to be given out at the beginning of Lent. It is important that one or two seniors should be
appointed to go round the monastery at the hours when brethren are engaged in reading, in case some
ill-conditioned brother should be giving himself up to sloth or idle talk, instead of reading steadily; so that not
only is he useless to himself, but incites others to do wrong.
"Behold! how great a matter a little fire kindleth!" These simple words, uttered by one who in power of
far-reaching influence has had no equal, gave an impulse to study in the ages it once was the fashion to call
dark which grew with the growth of the Order—till wherever a Benedictine house arose—or a monastery of
any one of the Orders which were but off-shoots from the Benedictine tree—books were multiplied, and a
library came into being, small indeed at first, but increasing year by year, till the wealthier houses had
gathered together a collection of books that would do credit to a modern University.
MONASTIC CUSTOMS.
It is very interesting to notice, as Order after[Pg 16] Order was founded, a steady development of feeling with
regard to books, and an ever increasing care for their safe-keeping. S. Benedict had contented himself with
general directions for study; the Cluniacs prescribe the selection of a special officer to take charge of the
books, with an annual audit of them, and the assignment of a single volume to each brother; the Carthusians
and the Cistercians provide for the loan of books to extraneous persons under certain conditions—a provision
which the Benedictines in their turn adopted. Further, by the time that the Cluniac Customs were drawn up in
the form in which they have come down to us, it is evident that the number of books exceeded the number of
brethren; for both in them, and in the statutes which Lanfranc promulgated for the use of the English
Benedictines in 1070, the keeper of the books is directed to bring all the books of the House into Chapter,
after which the brethren, one by one, are to bring in the books they had borrowed[Pg 17] on the same day in
the previous year. Some of the former class of books were probably service-books, but, after this deduction
has been made, we may fairly conclude that by the end of the eleventh century Benedictine Houses possessed
two sets of books: (1) those which were distributed among the brethren; (2) those which were kept in some
safe place, probably the church, as part of the valuables of the House: or, to adopt modern phrases, they had a
lending library and a library of reference. The Augustinians go a step farther than the Benedictines and the
Orders derived from them, for they prescribe the kind of press in which the books are to be kept. Both they
and the Premonstratensians permit their books to be lent on the receipt of a pledge of sufficient value. Lastly,
the Friars, though they were established on the principle of holding no possessions of any kind, soon found
that books were indispensable; that, in the words of a Norman Bishop, Claustrum sine armario, castrum sine
armamentario. So,[Pg 18] by a strange irony, it came to pass that their libraries excelled those of most other
Orders, as Richard de Bury testifies in the Philobiblon.
DISTRIBUTION OF BOOKS.
THE MENDICANT ORDERS.
Whenever we turned aside to the cities and places where the Mendicants had their convents ... we found
heaped up amidst the utmost poverty the utmost riches of wisdom....
These men are as ants ever preparing their meat in the summer, and ingenious bees continually fabricating
cells of honey.... And to pay due regard to truth, although they lately at the eleventh hour have entered the
Lord's vineyard ..., they have added more in this brief hour to the stock of the sacred books than all the other
vine-dressers; following in the footsteps of Paul, the last to be called but the first in preaching, who spread the
gospel of Christ more widely than all others.
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It might have been expected, from the use of the word library in the Rule of S. Benedict, that a special room
assigned to books would have been one of the primitive component parts of every Benedictine House. This,
however, is not the case. Such a room does usually occur in these Houses, but it will be found, on
examination, that it was added to some previously existing structure in the fourteenth or fifteenth[Pg 19]
century. Its absence from the primitive plan brings out two points very clearly: (1) how few books even a
wealthy community could afford to possess for several centuries after the foundation of the Order; (2) how
strictly the Order adhered to prescribed arrangements in laying out its Houses, for even those built, or rebuilt,
after books had become plentiful, do not admit a Library as an indispensable item in their ground-plan.
BOOK-PRESSES.
How then did they bestow their books after they had become too numerous to be kept in the church? The
answer to this question is a very curious one, when we consider what our climate is, and indeed what the
climate of the whole of Europe is, during the winter months. The centre of the monastic life was the cloister.
Brethren were not allowed to congregate in any other part of the conventual buildings, except when they went
into the frater, or dining-hall, for their meals, or at certain hours in certain seasons into the warming-house
(calefactorium). In the cloister[Pg 20] accordingly they kept their books; and there they sat and studied, or
conducted the schooling of the novices and choir-boys in winter and in summer alike.
Such a locality as this could not have been very favourable to the preservation of the books themselves. They,
however, had a certain amount of protection which was denied to their readers, for they were shut up in
presses. The word used for these, armarium, is the same as that which was applied by the Romans to their
bookcases; and probably the idea of such a piece of furniture was due to a far-off echo of ancient usage. The
official who had charge of the books did not derive his name from them, as in modern times, but from the
presses which contained them—for he was uniformly styled armarius.
In the north syde of the Cloister, from the corner over against the Church dour to the corner over againste the
Dorter dour, was all fynely glased from the hight to the sole within a litle of the grownd into the Cloister
garth. And in every wyndowe iij Pewes or Carrells, where every one of the old Monks had his carrell, severall
by himselfe, that, when they had dyned, they dyd resort to that place of Cloister, and there studyed upon there
books, every one in his carrell, all the after nonne, unto evensong tyme. This was there exercise every daie.
BOOK-PRESSES IN WALLS
All there pewes or carrells was all fynely wainscotted and verie close, all but the forepart, which had carved
wourke that gave light in at ther carrell doures of wainscott. And in every carrell was a deske to lye there[Pg
22] bookes on. And the carrells was no greater then from one stanchell of the wyndowe to another.
And over against the carrells against the church wall did stande certaine great almeries [or cupbords] of
waynscott all full of bookes [with great store of ancient manuscripts to help them in their study], wherein did
lye as well the old auncyent written Doctors of the Church as other prophane authors with dyverse other holie
mens wourks, so that every one dyd studye what Doctor pleased them best, havinge the Librarie at all tymes
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No example of an English monastic book-press has survived, so far as I have been able to discover; but it
would be rash to say that none exists. Meanwhile I will shew you a French example of a press, from the
sacristy of the Cathedral at Bayeux, but I cannot be sure that it was originally intended to hold books. M.
Viollet-Le-Duc, from whom I borrow it, decides that it was probably made early in the thirteenth century.
OF CLOISTER AT WORCESTER.
The Durham Rites speak only of book-presses standing in the cloister against the walls;[Pg 23] but it was not
unusual to have recesses in the wall itself, fitted with shelves, and probably closed by a door. Two such are to
be seen at Worcester, immediately to the north of the chapter-house door. Each is about ten feet wide by two
feet deep.
A similar receptacle for books seems to have been contemplated in Augustinian Houses, for in the Customs of
the Augustinian Priory of Barnwell, written towards the end of the thirteenth century, the following passage
occurs:
The press in which the books are kept ought to be lined inside with wood, that the damp of the walls may not
moisten or stain the books. This press should be divided vertically as well as horizontally by sundry partitions,
on which the books may be ranged so as to be separated from one another; for fear they be packed so close as
to injure each other, or delay those who want them.
CISTERCIAN PRACTICE.
Recesses such as these were developed in Cistercian houses into a small square room[Pg 24] without a
window, and but little larger than an ordinary cupboard. In the plans of Clairvaux and Kirkstall this room is
placed between the chapter-house and the transept of the church; and similar rooms, in similar situations, have
been found at Fountains, Beaulieu, Tintern, Netley, etc. The catalogue, made 1396, of the Cistercian Abbey at
Meaux in Holderness, now totally destroyed, gives us a glimpse of the internal arrangement of one of these
rooms. The books were placed on shelves against the walls, and even over the door. Again, the catalogue of
the House of White Canons at Titchfield in Hampshire, dated 1400, shews that the books were kept in a small
room, on shelves there called columpnæ, set against the walls. It is obvious that no study could have gone
forward in such places as these; they must have been intended for security only, and to replace the wooden
presses used elsewhere.
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S. GERMAIN DES PRÉS.
Most of us, I take it, have more or less imperfect ideas of the appearance of a great monastery in the days of
its completeness; and information on this point is unfortunately much more defective for our own country
than it is for France. In illustration, therefore, of what I have been saying about the position of monastic
libraries, I will next shew you two bird's-eye views of the Benedictine House of S. Germain des Prés, Paris.
The first, dated 1687, shews the library over the south walk of the cloister, where it was placed in 1513. It
must not, however, be supposed that no library existed before this. On the contrary, the House seems to have
had one from the first foundation, and so early as the thirteenth century it could be consulted by strangers, and
books borrowed from it. The second view, dated 1723, shews a still further extension of the library. It has now
invaded the west side of the cloister, which has received[Pg 27] an upper storey, and even the external
appearance of the venerable refectory, which was respected when nearly all the rest of the buildings were
rebuilt in a classical style, has been sacrificed to a similar gallery. The united lengths of these three rooms
must have been little short of 324 feet. This library was at the disposal of all scholars who desired to use it.
When the Revolution came it contained more than 49,000 printed books, and 7000 manuscripts. The fittings
belonged to the period of its latest extension: they appear to have been sumptuous, but for my present object,
uninteresting.
At Canterbury the library, built as I have said, over the Prior's Chapel, was 60 feet long, by 22 feet broad; and
we know, from some[Pg 28] memoranda written in 1508, when a number of books were sent to be bound or
repaired, that it contained sixteen bookcases, each of which had four shelves. I have calculated that this library
could have contained about 2000 volumes.
CITEAUX.
I have shewn you a Benedictine House, and will next shew you a bird's-eye view of Citeaux, the parent house
of the Cistercian Order, founded at the close of the eleventh century. The original was taken, so far as I can
make out, about 1500, at any rate before the primitive buildings had been seriously altered. The library here
occupied two positions—under the roof between the dormitory and the refectory (which must have been
extremely inconvenient); and subsequently it was rebuilt in an isolated situation on the north side of the
second cloister, over the writing-room (scriptorium). This was also the position of the new library at
Clairvaux—the other great Cistercian House in France—the fame of which was equal to, if not greater than,
that of Citeaux. Of this latter library we[Pg 29] have two descriptions; the first written in 1517, the second in
1723.
CLAIRVAUX.
View of Citeaux: from Viollet-Le-Duc, "Dictionnaire de l'Architecture," i. 271.
The former account, by the secretary of the Queen of Sicily, who visited Clairvaux 13 July 1517, is as
follows:
On the same side of the cloister are fourteen studies, where the monks write and study, and over the said
studies is the new library, to which one mounts by a broad and lofty spiral staircase from the aforesaid
cloister. This library is 189 feet long, by 17 feet wide. In it are 48 seats (bancs), and in each seat 4 shelves
(poulpitres) furnished with books on all subjects, but chiefly theology; the greater number of the said books
are of vellum, and written by hand, richly storied and illuminated. The building that contains the said library is
magnificent, built of stone, and excellently lighted on both sides with fine large windows, well glazed,
looking out on the said cloister and the burial-ground of the brethren.... The said library is paved throughout
with small tiles adorned with various designs.
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The description written in 1723, by the learned Benedictines to whom we owe the Voyage Littéraire, is
equally interesting:[Pg 30]
CLAIRVAUX.
From the great cloister you proceed into the cloister of conversation, so called because the brethren are
allowed to converse there. In this cloister there are 12 or 15 little cells, all of a row, where the brethren
formerly used to write books; for this reason they are still called at the present day the writing-rooms. Over
these cells is the Library, the building for which is large, vaulted, well lighted, and stocked with a large
number of manuscripts, fastened by chains to desks; but there are not many printed books.
In the great cloister, on the side next the Chapter House, the same observer noted "books chained on wooden
desks, which brethren can come and read when they please." The library was for serious study, the cloister for
daily reading, probably in the main devotional.
CHRIST'S HOSPITAL.
If my time were unlimited I could describe to you several other fifteenth century monastic libraries, but I feel
that I must content myself with only one more—that of the Franciscan House in London, commonly called
Christ's Hospital. The first stone of this library was laid by Sir Richard Whittington, 21 October, 1421, and by
Christmas Day in the following[Pg 31] year the roof was finished. Stow tells us that it was 129 feet long by 31
feet broad; and the Letters Patent of Henry the Eighth add that it had 28 desks, and 28 double settles of
wainscot. The whole building—so well worth preservation—has been totally destroyed, but I am able to shew
you a view of it.
This view is an excellent illustration of the point on which I have insisted, namely, that in the course of the
fifteenth century the great religious Houses—no matter to what Order they belonged—found that their books
had become too numerous for the localities primitively intended for them, and began to build special
libraries—usually over some existing structure; or—in other words—established a library of reference, which
was not unfrequently thrown open to scholars in general, who were allowed to borrow books from it, on
execution of an[Pg 32] indenture, or deposit of a sufficient pledge. "It is safer to fall back on a pledge, than to
proceed against an individual," said the Customs of the Priory at Abingdon.
ANALOGY BETWEEN
In what way were these monastic libraries fitted up? No trace of any monastic fittings has survived, so far as I
am aware, either in England, or in France, or in Italy; and even M. Viollet-Le-Duc dismisses "The Library" in
a few brief sentences, of which the keynote is despair. My own view is that a close analogy may be traced
between the fittings of monastic libraries and those of collegiate libraries; and that when we understand the
one we shall understand the other.
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this clause, from the statutes of Oriel College, Oxford, dated 1329:
COLLEGE STATUTES.
The common books (communes libri) of the House are to be brought out and inspected once a year, on the
feast of the Commemoration of Souls [2 November], in[Pg 34] presence of the Provost or his deputy, and of
the Scholars [Fellows].
Every one of them in turn, in order of seniority, may select a single book which either treats of the science to
which he is devoting himself, or which he requires for his use. This he may keep until the same festival in the
succeeding year, when a similar selection of books is to take place, and so on, from year to year. If there
should happen to be more books than persons, those that remain are to be selected in the same manner.
Bishop Bateman—who had been educated in the priory at Norwich, and whose brother was an
abbot—gave statutes to Trinity Hall, Cambridge, in 1350, with similar provisions, and the addition that
certain books "are to remain continuously in the library-chamber, fastened with iron chains, for the common
use of the Fellows." These were copied by Wykeham at New College, Oxford, but with extended provisions
for lending books to students, and a direction that all the books "which remain unassigned after the Fellows
have made their selection are to be fastened with iron chains, and remain for ever in the common Library."
This statute was[Pg 35] repeated at King's College, Cambridge, and at several colleges in Oxford.
On the Monday after the first Sunday in Lent, before brethren come into the Chapter House, the librarian
(custos librorum) shall have had a carpet laid down, and all the books got together upon it, except those which
a year previously had been assigned for reading. These brethren are to bring with them, when they come into
the Chapter House, each his book in his hand....
Then the librarian shall read a statement as to the manner in which brethren have had books during the past
year. As each brother hears his name pronounced he is to give back the book which had been entrusted to him
for reading; and he whose conscience accuses him of not having read the book through which he had received,
is to fall on his face, confess his fault, and entreat forgiveness.
The librarian shall then make a fresh distribution of books, namely, a different volume to each brother for his
reading.
EARLIEST BOOK-DESK.
You will agree with me, I feel sure, that this statute, or similar provisions extracted from[Pg 36] other
regulations, is the source of the collegiate provisions for an annual audit and distribution of books; while the
reservation of the undistributed volumes, and their chaining for common use in a library, was in accordance
with the unwritten practice of the monasteries. This being the case I think that we are justified in assuming
that the internal fittings of the libraries would be identical also; and it must be further remembered that both
collegiate and monastic libraries were being fitted up during the same period, the fifteenth century.
EARLIEST BOOK-DESK.
When books were first placed in a separate room, fastened with iron chains, for the use of the Fellows of a
college or the monks of a convent, the piece of furniture used was, I take it, an elongated lectern or desk, of a
convenient height for a seated reader to use. The books lay on their sides on the desk, and were attached by
chains to a horizontal bar above it. There were at least two libraries in this University fitted with such desks, at
the colleges of[Pg 37] Pembroke and Queens'; and that it was a common form abroad is proved by its
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appearance in a French translation of the first book of the[Pg 38] Consolations of Philosophy of Boethius,
which I lately found in the British Museum[1], executed towards the end of the fifteenth century (fig. 1).
BOOK-DESKS AT ZUTPHEN.
Such cases as these must have been in use at the Sorbonne, where a library was first established in 1289 for
books chained for the common convenience of the Fellows (in communem sociorum utilitatem). A description
of this library, based probably on records now lost, [Pg 39]has been given by Claude Héméré (Librarian
1638-1643) in his MS. history. This I proceed to translate:
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CHAINING OF BOOKS.
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Merton College, Oxford: (1) general view of the interior of the Library; (2) a single bookcase as at present.
The system of chaining, as adopted in this country, would allow of the books being readily taken down from
the shelves, and laid on the desk for reading. One end of the chain was attached to the middle of the upper
edge of the right-hand board; the other to a ring which played on a bar set in front of the shelf on which the
book stood. The fore-edge of the books, not the back, was turned forwards. A swivel, usually in the middle of
the chain, prevented tangling. The chains varied in length according to the distance of the shelf from the desk.
The bar was kept in place by a rather elaborate system of iron-work attached to the end of the bookcase, and
secured by a lock which often required two keys—that is, the presence of two officials—to open
it. To illustrate this I will shew you a sketch of[Pg 43] one of the bookcases in Hereford Cathedral (fig. 4).
CHAINING OF BOOKS.
Another device for combining desk with shelf is to be seen at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and, as these cases
were set up after 1626, we have here a curious instance of a deliberate return to ancient forms. There is
evidence that there once existed below the shelf a second desk, which could be drawn in and out as required,
so that a reader could stand or sit as he pleased, as you will see from the next illustration.
The University of Leiden in Holland adopted a modification of this design, for there the shelf[Pg 45] is above
the desk, and readers could only stand to use the books (fig. 5).
LIBRARIES. 12
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UNIVERSITY OF LEIDEN.
LIBRARY AT CESENA.
On the continent, where elaborate bindings came early into fashion, sometimes protected by equally elaborate
bosses at their corners, it would have been impossible to arrange the volumes as we did side by side on the
shelves. It therefore became the fashion to place a shelf below the desk, and to lay the books upon it on their
sides. The earliest library fitted in this manner that I have been able to discover is at Cesena in North Italy. It
was built in 1452, by Domenico Malatesta Novello, for the convent of S. Francesco. It is possible, therefore,
that the parent house of S. Francesco at Assisi, which had a large library, divided, so early as 1381, into a
Libreria publica and a Libreria secreta, had similar bookcases. I am going to shew[Pg 47] you a general view
of the room, which has a thoroughly medieval character, next the cases (fig. 6), and thirdly a single book with
its chain (fig. 7). You will observe that the seats for the reader are no longer independent, but are combined
with the bookcase.
LIBRARY AT CESENA.
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LIBRARY AT CESENA.
S. JOHN'S COLLEGE.
Bookcase in the Medicean Library at Florence.
In English libraries at least bookcases arranged on what I may term the Oxford type were in general use
throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The invention of printing had largely increased the
number of volumes, and at the same time diminished their value, so that chaining was no longer necessary.
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The Project Gutenberg eBook of Libraries In The Medieval And Renaissance Periods by J.W. Clark.
When it had been abandoned neither a desk, nor a seat in close proximity to the books, was required. In
consequence, though libraries continued to be built on the ancient type with numerous windows close to the
floor, it was possible to alter the old cases, or to make new ones, with a far larger number of shelves than
heretofore; and when further space for books was needed, low cases were interposed between each pair of tall
ones. A splendid specimen of this treatment is to be seen at S. John's College, Cambridge, where the
bookcases were put up soon after the completion of the library in 1628.[Pg 50] Though the plinth and central
pilaster have been taken away, and the levels of the shelves changed, their original appearance can be
recovered at a glance. On the top of all the low cases there was a desk, in memory of that of ancient times. At
the end of the taller cases is a panel to contain the catalogue, here closed by a small door.
Sometimes, as we see at Peterhouse, ancient usage asserted itself so far that a seat was contrived by making
the plinth of the tall case project to a sufficient distance. These bookcases were set up between 1641 and 1648.
PETERHOUSE.
Bookcase in Peterhouse Library.
When the necessity for still further space for books became imperative, the seat was given up, or was dropped
to the height of a step, as in the bookcases in the south room of the University[Pg 51] Library, Cambridge, put
up soon after 1649. The carved wing, however, which had masked the ends of it, was retained as an ornament,
both there and in the old library at Pembroke College, Cambridge, furnished soon after 1690.
THE ESCURIAL.
Meanwhile a new system of arranging bookcases had come into use on the continent. So far as I have been
able to discover, the first library arranged in the way with which we are familiar, namely, with the bookcases
set against the walls instead of at right angles to them, is that of the Escurial. These cases were made by
Herrera, the architect of the building, in 1584. There is no indication of chaining, but, in conformity with
ancient usage, the fore edge of the books, instead of their backs, is turned outwards, and the desk is
represented by a shelf, carried all round the room at a convenient height. No doubt so important a structure as
this, erected by so mighty a potentate as the King of Spain, would be much talked about, and provoke
imitators. Among these, I feel sure, was Cardinal[Pg 52] Mazarin, whose library was fitted up in Paris in or
about 1647, as a library to be used daily by the public. After his death his books and bookcases were moved to
the building in which they may still be seen. I will now shew you views of the two libraries, and you shall
decide whether it is not obvious that the one was suggested by the other.
BIBLIOTHÈQUE MAZARINE.
Interior of the Library of the Escurial and of the Bibliothèque Mazarine, Paris.
The new system was not accepted hastily. I believe that Sir Christopher Wren, when he built Trinity College
Library in 1695, was the first English architect who ventured to build a library with windows which, as he
says himself, "rise high, and give place for the deskes against the walls." I suspect that he borrowed this latter
idea from France, which he visited in 1665, and most likely from the Bibliothèque Mazarine, for he has
himself recorded his admiration for "the masculine furniture of the Palais Mazarin," though[Pg 53] he does
not specially mention the library. But he did not discard the ancient arrangement altogether. On the contrary
he utilised it so far as to subdivide the room, and provide recesses for the convenience of students. He says:
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places at the endes, and 4 lesser celles not to study in, but to be shut up with some neat lattice dores for
archives.
I need hardly say that neither this library, nor any of those built by Wren's pupils or imitators, shew traces of
chaining. The old fashion, however, lingered. In 1651 Humphrey Cheetham directed the books he gave to
certain specified parish-churches near Manchester to be chained; in 1694 James Leaver gave books to the
grammar-school at Bolton in Lancashire[Pg 54] which were chained in a cupboard very like the armarium of
a monastic cloister;
PRIVATE LIBRARIES.
Book-cupboard and desk at Bolton, Lancashire. The former is lettered: "The gift of Mr James Leaver, citison
of London 1694."
and at All Saints Church, Hereford, a collection of books bequeathed in 1715 was chained to ordinary shelves
set against the walls, as may still be seen. This very obvious way of disposing of books evidently shocked
old-fashioned people, for Cole the antiquary, writing in 1703, could still speak of the arrangement of shelves
against the walls as à la moderne.
The libraries I have been describing were more or less public, and I should like, before I conclude, to shew
you how books were bestowed in the studies of individual scholars—whether royal, monastic, or
secular.
So late as the end of the twelfth century I find a Bishop who bequeathed his library to a church describing it as
"the contents of my press (plenarium armarium meum)."
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the books that shall be placed there."
Another, and apparently very usual way of bestowing books, especially when they were not numerous, was to
place them in a sort of cupboard under the sloping desk on which the owner read or wrote. An excellent
specimen of this device—which Richard de Bury specially commends, as being modelled on the Ark,
in the side of which the book of the Law was put—is to be found in the Ship of Fools (1498). Another,
of a curiously modern type, occurs in an Hours in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, executed about 1445
for Isabel, Duchess of Brittany.
CONCLUSION.
Sometimes this book-cupboard supported a revolving desk, which could be raised or depressed by the help of
a central screw—like those I shewed you just now; sometimes [Pg 60]the desk alone appears, with
books laid on it. The forms given to these pieces of furniture by the ingenuity of those who made them are
infinite; and they often include beautiful designs for armchairs, fitted with desks for writing. I will shew you
just one—not because it is specially beautiful, but because it gives a quaint picture of a scholar's room
at the beginning of the fifteenth century[5].
CONCLUSION.
Here Time—as represented by yonder clock—holds up his finger and bids me stop. I would fain
have shewn you more pictures—but I hope that you have seen a sufficient number to give you some
idea of the surroundings in which our forefathers read and wrote. I am sure that only in this way can we
realise that they were real living people—not mere names. Their modes of thought were far different
from ours; they may have wasted their time in verbal subtleties, and uncritical tales; but the more we study
what they did, the more we shall [Pg 61]realise how laborious, how artistic, how conscientious they were; and
amid all the developments of the nineteenth century, we shall gratefully confess that the Middle Ages rocked
the cradle of our knowledge, and that we "See but their hope become reality."
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ILLUSTRATIONS.
1. Interior of a library, from Boethius.
2. General view of part of the library attached to the Church of S. Wallberg at Zutphen.
CAMBRIDGE: PRINTED BY C.J. CLAY, M.A. & SONS, AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.
3. THE BOOK OF OBSERVANCES OF AN ENGLISH HOUSE OF AUSTIN CANONS, written about A.D.
1296. Edited, with an English translation, introduction, plan of an Augustinian House, and notes. 8vo. [In the
Press.
4. CAMBRIDGE DESCRIBED AND ILLUSTRATED. By J.W. Clark, M.A. and T.D. Atkinson. With 30
plates by Le Keux and Storer and upwards of 100 Illustrations in the text—Plans, Views, Arms, &c.
Medium 8vo. [In preparation.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] MSS. Harl. 4335.
ILLUSTRATIONS. 18
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