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Medieval Europe + Byzantine
Course: Medieval Europe + Byzantine > Unit 3
Lesson 1: Making the medieval book- Listening to the Medieval book
- Parchment (the good, the bad and the ugly)
- Skins and scraps
- An introduction to Medieval scripts
- The work of the scribe
- Words, words, words: medieval handwriting
- A Medieval textbook
- Making books for profit in medieval times
- Decorating the book
- Medieval supermodels
- Binding the book
- Clasps: hugging a medieval book
- Medieval books in leather (and other materials)
- Making manuscripts
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Making manuscripts
Parchment, a durable material made from animal skins, was used for book pages in the Middle Ages. The process involved soaking, scraping, and stretching the skin. Once prepared, it was written on with quills and ink. The pages were then decorated by illuminators and bound together to form a book. Created by Getty Museum.
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- At, a rounded knife is shown. Is there a name for this tool, and what is used for its blade? 0:44(21 votes)
- It's just called a round knife. The blade is made from a type of metal but I don't know what kind.(2 votes)
- The parchment is so pale and white that I wonder if the original animal had fur that colour. Can a skin from an animal without white fur be used and will it make a difference to the final shade of the parchment?(10 votes)
- Most animal skins, regardless of the color of their fur, will have skin the same whitish-tan color. You can get an idea of this at, where the darker hair of the animal is being stripped to reveal the skin underneath. 0:28(18 votes)
- At, would the gold leaf flakes have been gathered or thrown away? In other words, how precious was gold leaf and how much would people have cared for tiny quantities? 4:00(11 votes)
- Gold is gold, and has always been precious, so they probably gathered it in a little pile until they were done, then melted it down again, and flattened it to make more gold leaf.(8 votes)
- how many animals would be usually killed to get the manuscripts? was there a decrease in the livestock because of this?(7 votes)
- The number of required skins depended on the number of pages and dimensions of the manuscript (smaller dimensions meant more pages could be taken from a single skin). Scholars believe that for the famous Lindisfarne Gospels (c. 700) - a fairly big book of several hundreds of pages - around 120 skins were used. Animals were not killed for their skin but for their meat, meaning that the production of books did not directly lead to a decrease in livestock.(9 votes)
- From- 2:02the video describes the making of quills. I would actually like to 2:37
make one; I have bird feathers, and I think it would an interesting experience!
Where can I find a precise set of instructions to do so?(5 votes)- Have a look at this web-page: http://www.education.com/activity/article/Make_Quill_Pens/
Good luck! Perhaps it would be fun to send a nice card to Khan Academy with your quill!(7 votes)
- Why didn't they use papyrus?(3 votes)
- Papyrus was more suitable for scrolls to be rolled rather than pages to be cut. It could become very fragile if cut as it was produced by a sort of "weaving" of fibres, making it fragile..(4 votes)
- I really want to learn how to do all this. Where do people learn these medieval crafts?(4 votes)
- My guess is, if you look up a skill somewhere on youtube, you'll see either a documentary or a how-to. You'll learn about someone who can still do the skill you're interested in. The next step would be to contact that person, who quite likely lives in a different country and speaks another language. If that's impractical, another option would be to look through the continuing ed classes at your nearest college. Things like jewelry making and stained glass haven't changed methods much since those times.(1 vote)
- why does making a manuscript look so hard?(2 votes)
- Because it actually was! Imagine copying a book for days in a cramped scriptorium - ruining your eyesight because you are forever looking back and forth between your pages and your exemplum.(3 votes)
- With all the emphasis on medieval books here, I'm wondering, were the middle ages more literate than antiquity, or is it just that we focus more on medieval books because we have more of them because they were written on durable parchment instead of more fragile ancient materials?(2 votes)
- 1) we have more medieval books in existence
2) we have them because they were written on better materials
3) Literacy was more widespread(2 votes)
- Two questions: What approximate year does the process in the video reflect? And: It's well-known that William Blake is an illuminator--how would illumination have changed from the one seen in the video?(2 votes)
- Technologies commonly changed more slowly in the past so you could be looking at processes that date from roughly 800 up to the 1400s. Blake's world, the late 18th and early 19th centuries, was a very different one from the medieval scribe's. For example Blake had access to paper, Enlightenment philosophy, and the advances of the early industrial revolution.(2 votes)
Video transcript
(gentle guitar music) - [Voiceover] In the middle ages, parchment was used to
make the pages of books. Parchment was made from
the skins of animals. The transition from a
fresh skin to a surface suitable for writing was a
slow and laborious process. The parchment maker selected skins of sheep, goats, or calves. Skins were soaked in limewater
for three to ten days, to loosen the animals' hair. The parchment maker than
scraped away the hair, and any remaining flesh. After this, the skin was
soaked in fresh water, to remove the lime, and then stretched tightly on a frame. A special, rounded knife was used to scrape the hide to the desired thickness. The process of scraping continued over the course of several days. During this time, the
parchment maker continually tightened the tension
on the stretching frame, while the skin dried. The result was parchment, a smooth and durable material, that could last over a thousand years. Before parchment could be written on, it had to be specially prepared. First, the parchment was rubbed with pumice powder to roughen the surface, and then dusted with a sticky powder. These steps made the surface receptive to inks and colors. The whole, finished skin was then cut down to the size of the pages
needed for a particular book. A big manuscript was assembled from sheets almost as large as a single skin. For smaller books, the skin was cut into two or more pieces. The parchment sheets
were folded and nested, to make gatherings, usually
of sixteen or twenty pages. The vibrant illuminations
in a medieval manuscript often overshadow the words on the page. Yet the writing of the
script was as important as the painting of the images. The tools of a scribe, the person who copied
the text onto the page, were simple. Pens, called quills, were made from the feathers of a bird, which were soaked in water, dried, and hardened with heated sand. The scribe carved the
quill to a rough point, cut a slit to draw ink down, then trimmed the point
to the proper width. The shape of the quill point varied with the style of the
lettering being copied. Scribes made ink from
a variety of materials. Gallnuts, growths found on oak trees, were often used to
create a dark, black ink. Black ink was also made by dissolving a common carbon substance. The resulting ink was called lamp black. Before the scribe began writing, he ruled the parchment
using a straightedge. Medieval scribes and their patrons prized a regular and elegant script. If a scribe made an error, he would scratch it out with a pen knife. Because the page was made from parchment, which was very resilient, it could stand many erasures of this type. An illuminator decorated
the pages of a manuscript using paint and precious metals. He began only after a scribe had finished copying the text. The illuminator first sketched his design, then added details such as
the features of a figure, or the interlacing of a decorated initial. Thin sheets of precious metals, like gold leaf, were always applied first. The illuminator put down a base coat, consisting of either a plaster-like
substance called gesso, or a gum, as shown here. Once the gum base dried, the moisture in the
illuminator's breath was enough to make the
small piece of gold leaf stick to the page. Then, the illuminator
brushed away the excess, and polished the gold leaf. After applying the gold leaf, the illuminator painted his design. Each color was made from a vegetable dye, or a mineral substance, ground
up and dissolved in liquid. The illuminator applied
the paler shades first, then the darker tones. Once the illuminator
applied black outlines, and delicate white highlights
to the figures and vines, the illumination was finished. After the scribes and
illuminators had finished writing and decorating
the parchment pages, the manuscript was bound. Groups of folded sheets of parchment, called gatherings, were sewn together with
strong linen thread onto flexible supports such as
these narrow, leather thongs. Next, the binder attached end bands, which secured the top and
bottom ends of the pages in the spine of the book. The binder then laced the leather thongs along the spine through
channels and tunnels, which had been carved into wood boards. These boards were the
covers of the manuscript. The thongs could be held in place by wood pegs or iron nails. The volume was then covered,
usually with leather. Without pressure from the
covers to keep the leaves flat, parchment expanded and contracted with changes in temperature and humidity. Pressure was applied by the
addition of clasps or straps, which held the book closed. The binding of a manuscript
could be decorated with any one of a variety of materials. A manuscript might be
covered with leather, stamped or tooled with gold, or covered with silks or velvets. The most elaborate
bindings received sculpted decoration made from precious metals. The materials of the binding depended on the wealth of the patron,
the type of manuscript, and its intended use. (gentle guitar music)