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The manuscript's shelf mark originates from its previous owner, Henry Yates Thompson, who owned an extensive collection of illuminated medieval manuscripts which he sold or donated posthumously to the British Library. [2] The Taymouth Hours is now held by the British Library Department of Manuscripts in the Yates Thompson collection. [2]
London, British Library, Add MS 37320 (Greek Gospel Book) London, British Library, Add MS 40000 (Gospel Book) London, British Library, Arundel MS 524 (Greek Gospel Book) London, British Library, Royal MS 1 A XVIII (Gospel Book) London, British Library, Stowe MS 3 (Gospel Book) Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Clm 4453 (Gospels of Otto III)
Fragmentarium (Digital Research Laboratory for Medieval Manuscript Fragments) is an online database to collect and collate fragments of medieval manuscripts making them available to researchers, collectors and historians worldwide.
Bald's Leechbook and Leechbook III survive only in one manuscript, Royal 12 D. xvii, in the British Library, London and viewable online. [1] The manuscript was written by the scribe who entered the batch of annals for 925–955 into the Parker Chronicle. This suggests that Royal 12 D. xvii is also from the mid-10th century.
A selection of 32 digitised pages on the British Library's Online gallery of sacred texts; BBC – Dorset – "The Sherborne Missal". 12 August 2005 (Retrieved 15 July 2008) "Digitisation of the Sherborne Missal", The British Library Medieval manuscripts blog, 27 August 2020 (Retrieved 14 September 2020) BBC Radio 4, Moving Pictures, The ...
The Maastricht Hours is a book of hours that was produced in the vicinity of Liège early in the 14th century and is now among the Stowe manuscripts of the British Library. [1] It is known for its colourful and imaginative miniatures, often on animal themes. [2] It has been fully digitised and is available on the British Library website. [3]
The Royal manuscripts are one of the "closed collections" of the British Library (i.e. historic collections to which new material is no longer added), consisting of some 2,000 manuscripts collected by the sovereigns of England in the "Old Royal Library" and given to the British Museum by George II in 1757. They are still catalogued with call ...
The Pearl Manuscript (British Library MS Cotton Nero A X/2), also known as the Gawain manuscript, [1] is an illuminated manuscript produced somewhere in northern England in the late 14th century or the beginning of the 15th century.