Book Series Illuminated Manuscripts and Incunabula in Cambridge, vol. 5.1

A Catalogue of Western Book Illumination in the Fitzwilliam Museum and the Cambridge Colleges. Part Five: Volume One: Books Printed in Italy before 1501

Azzurra Elena Andriolo, Suzanne Reynolds

  • Pages: 288 p.
  • Size:230 x 330 mm
  • Illustrations:330 col.
  • Language(s):English
  • Publication Year:2017

  • € 195,00 EXCL. VAT RETAIL PRICE
  • ISBN: 978-1-909400-85-6
  • Hardback
  • Available


This is the first part of a two-volume catalogue of incunabula (books printed up to 1500) with illumination added by hand, in the Fitzwilliam Museum and the College Libraries of Cambridge.

Review(s)

« (…) contribution majeure à l’histoire du livre à la charnière de deux mondes. »  (Christian Heck, dans Bulletin Monumental, 2, 2018, p. 186)

“Overall, this superlative catalogue is just as good as its predecessors in the series. It sets a new standard for describing decoration in early printed books and provides fertile ground for further research.” (Hilary Maddocks, in Parergon, 35/2, 2018, p. 190)

“The book under review admirably embraces and reinforces growing interest in the materiality of printed books and in the evidence individual copies can provide for the histories of reading, trade, collecting and art (…) Thanks to the high quality of the catalogue entries and illustrations the book serves as a good survey of early printing with illumination in Italy and of the early ownership and subsequent collecting of these books.” (Helena Szépe, in The Burlinglton Magazine, 161, March 2019)

Summary

Incunabula research is flourishing in the twenty-first century. Since the turn of the millennium, printed catalogues of globally important collections have been published and online cataloguing projects have transformed knowledge and access. Nevertheless, the c. 2,000 incunabula in Cambridge outside the University Library remain comparatively unknown. A part of the Cambridge Illuminations Research Project, this catalogue examines books at the Fitzwilliam Museum, and the Cambridge Colleges books that were printed in Italy up to 1500 and have illumination and decoration added by hand. Over the two catalogue volumes, the College material constitutes approximately 75% of the coverage of over 400 individual incunabula in total. These collections are extraordinarily rich, and have been built up over the last 500 years through the patronage of late medieval benefactors and scholars, such as Roger Bower (d. 1507) and Thomas Rotherham (1423–1500), as well as that of classical scholars, and through the bequests of eminent British book collectors and bibliophiles from Archbishops Matthew Parker (1504–1575) and William Sancroft (1617–93), to Samuel Pepys (1633–1703), and John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946).

The catalogue focuses on books with decoration intended to ornament rather than to rubricate the text, that include one or more of the following elements: miniatures, woodcuts with contemporary colour added by hand, historiated initials and borders, other types of ornamental initials with or without borders, pen-flourished initials, and a variety of drawings or sketches. In bringing to bear on early printed books the same level of attention to the individual features of particular copies, the editors hope to further erode the artificial barriers between those working on illumination in manuscripts and in printed books, and to offer striking evidence of the inter-meshed worlds of manuscript and print in the second half of the fifteenth century.