A handbook of Greek and Latin palaeography

by E M Thompson

Book, 1975

Status

Available

Call number

481.7

Publication

Ares Publishers, Inc.

Description

Principal librarian of the British Museum and eminent palaeographer, Sir Edward Maunde Thompson (1840-1929) had originally produced a handbook on the history and development of Greek and Latin handwriting in 1893. He extensively revised and expanded it for this 1912 edition, incorporating numerous facsimile plates. Thompson begins his treatment with an introduction to the Greek and Latin alphabets, then surveys ancient writing materials and implements, and describes the use and development of scrolls and codices. Later chapters, accompanied by valuable illustrations, examine the different forms of first Greek then Latin handwritten texts, from the earliest surviving examples (fourth century BCE) to the end of the fifteenth century. Punctuation, accents and abbreviations are considered, and the various scripts - cursive, uncial, majuscule and miniscule - are all illustrated and examined. Tables of Greek and Latin literary and cursive alphabets are also provided.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member waltzmn
"So -- what was your date like?"

No, that's not two teenage boys talking about the girls they just went out with. It's two paleographers comparing notes on a manuscript.

Paleography (paleo-graphy, [the study of] of writing) is the examination of manuscripts, usually old manuscripts, to try to
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determine where and when they were written, and by whom, and for what purpose. Odds are that you know at least a little about the subject yourself -- if you see a book with the "long s" that looks like an f, for instance, you know that it's old, and if it interchanges u/v and i/j, it's even older.

Paleography teaches much more than that. Early writings, in both Greek and Roman alphabets, were in "uncial" or upper-case letters; later they converted to lower-case (minuscule, cursive) styles, and then started to mix them. So just by looking at whether the letters are upper or lower case gives some idea of a manuscript's date. Some letters changed shape over the years. Others tended to add or lose serifs. Different locations developed different writing styles. Indeed, different types of books were written in different writing styles. All these clues could be used by a paleographer to date a book.

And E. Maunde Thompson was perhaps the greatest paleographer in British history. He is, for instance, the man responsible for the demonstration that parts of the manuscript play "Sir Thomas More" were written by Shakespeare. This book -- which covers Greek, Latin, and English hands -- is his master work. Indeed, it is still considered the standard reference in English.

This volume was, in its time, an amazing technical accomplishment -- it required a tremendous number of photos for the period. Sadly, because it is so old, it is starting to become dated. For instance, many of the most important recently-discovered manuscripts are papyri -- and papyrus (because it has a grain) requires a slightly different writing style than manuscripts written on vellum (animal skin). Thompson has few papyri, because relatively few were known in his time.

Also, the book makes its points almost entirely through manuscript photographs rather than charts and tables. Sometimes it would be easier to just have a nice chart showing, "Here is what an English 'a' would look like in the tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth century." You won't see much of that here. This is not a book for casual use. You're going to have to work. But if you're willing to do that work, this is a tremendously valuable volume.
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