The Divine Library
Group of Six Manuscript Fragments - ca. 10th-11th Century Liturgical Missal Leaf
Group of Six Manuscript Fragments - ca. 10th-11th Century Liturgical Missal Leaf
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A group of genuine medieval manuscript fragments on vellum, written in a fine Carolingian minuscule hand, dating from the 10th to very early 11th century A.D.
These narrow strips of parchment once formed part of a large liturgical manuscript (likely a Missal or Sacramentary) produced in a Swiss or German scriptorium, quite possibly St. Gallen Abbey, one of the greatest centers of Carolingian learning and book production. These fragments were later recycled as binding material in a ca. 1485 Basel incunable, where it remained hidden for centuries before being recovered.
• Script: Clear and rounded Carolingian minuscule, the ancestor of modern handwriting.
• Decoration: Contains a red rubricated initial and additional red highlighting of sacred text.
• Text: From the Latin liturgy; fragments of prayers and chants.
• Size: Approx. see photos
• Condition: As expected for recycled binding waste; vellum trimmed narrow, with some staining and creasing. Scripts remain sharp and legible.
Carolingian manuscript fragments are exceedingly rare on the market, far scarcer than later Gothic leaves. The survival of these fragments offer collectors and institutions a chance to own authentic pieces of early medieval book history, over 1,000 years old.
Comparable examples: The style and script closely resemble manuscripts preserved at St. Gallen Abbey Library (Cod. Sang. 339, ca. 1000).
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Provenance
• Written in a monastic scriptorium in Switzerland or southern Germany, ca. 900–1050 A.D.
• Recovered from a Basel incunable binding (c. 1485).
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