Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Introduction to Christian monastery libraries in the medieval world

During the Early Middle Ages, after the fall of the Western Roman Empire and before the rise of the large Western Christian monastery libraries beginning at Monte Cassino, Libraries were found in scattered places in the Christian Middle East, encompasses southwest Asia and Egypt. Members of monastic orders (monks) are usually celibate, and they live apart from society either in a community of monks or nuns or as a religious recluses. 
In the Middle Ages, the Christian Monastery Libraries served as places of worship and learning and also played an important role for various European rulers. An early type of Buddhist monastery was called the Vihara which consisted of an open court surrounded by open cells with access through an entrance porch.

Resources

Battles, M 2003, Library: An Unquiet History, W.W. Norton & Company, New York

Medieval Christian Libraries,Wikipedia, The Free encyclopedia, viewed 18th August 2010, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library#Medieval_Christian_libraries>

Murray, S A.P 2009, Library: An Illustrated History, Skyhorse Pub, New York

Interesting facts

Most writings in this time were inscribed on wax tablets, which did not generally survive long. The wax tablet was an important writing medium in the middle ages. The panels were usually calved with a shallow reservoir into which beeswax was poured, once cooled, the beeswax made a soft surface so that letters could be inscribed with a sharp stylus. The panel which could be quickly erased with vigorous rubbing which was very convenient for the writer but far less for the historian, as no wax tablet literature survives.
The borrowers were often nobles, government officials, or individuals that were benefactors of the monastery library. This was as close to a public library as monastic libraries were ever going to become in this period.


Resources

Murray, S A.P 2009, Library: An Illustrated History, Skyhorse Pub, New York

1993, World encyclopedia of library and information services, American Library association, Chicago

Monasteries in the middle ages

The monks, known as Benedictines not only read every day but wrote and were employed as scribes copying texts or translating Greek words into Latin.
Benedictine scriptoria (A room in a monastery set aside for the copying, writing, or illuminating of manuscripts and records) became the most productive of the middle ages, as their scattered monasteries industriously turned out copies of important titles – at first mostly theological.  Over the centuries the monks copied thousands of manuscripts and books including scriptures, stories and works of the church founders, psalters (versions of the book of psalms), missals ( Book of prayers or devotions), the gospels and writings of church leaders.

Resources

Murray, S A.P 2009, Library: An Illustrated History, Skyhorse Pub, New York

1993, World encyclopedia of library and information services, American Library association, Chicago

Monastic Scribes and Libraries, Medieval Writing, viewed 17th August 2010, <http://medievalwriting.50megs.com/author/monasticscribe.htm>

Rule of monks


The guidebook – Rule of Monks was influenced from the sixth century order of Saint Benedict.  The guidebook set out the principles and duties of the monastic community, informing their members to practice all things in moderation – eating. Religious devotion, fasting and also to read every day. The Rule of Monks required each monastery to have one book for every brother and recommended Benedictines never to be idle and to set aside specified periods for manual labour along with prayerful reading.  Mealtime was a time the monks were read aloud by a brother, sometimes narratives from the lives of the saints.



Resources

Murray, S A.P 2009, Library: An Illustrated History, Skyhorse Pub, New York

1993, World encyclopedia of library and information services, American Library association, Chicago

Monastic Scribes and Libraries, Medieval Writing, viewed 17th August 2010, <http://medievalwriting.50megs.com/author/monasticscribe.htm>