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1 of 253523 objects
Summa Theologiae: fragment 1300-20
35.2 x 25.0 cm (whole object) | RCIN 1145402
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Vellum manuscript leaf. Written in 2 columns, with 2-line initials in red and blue, with blue and red ornament. Marginal corrections in scribal hand, and othe rmarginal notes in a cursive 14th century hand in brown ink. A fragment of the Summa Theologiae of St Thomas Aquinas. Reused as a wrapper at Draycot House, Chippenham. Pencil note in Jackson's hand 'cover of a pamphlet at Draycote House 1865'. Annotated 'Th. Fordan' in a 16th-17th century hand. John Edward Jackson (1805-91) was a clergyman antiquary who spent his working life in the South West of England, beginning his career as curate at Fairleigh Hungerford (Somerset) in 1834, and in 1845 appointed rector of Leigh Delamere (Wiltshire), a post which he retained for the rest of his life. He had a life long interest in the antiquities and local history of the area, and was an archivist for the Marquess of Bath at Longleat. The so-called Jackson Fragments are a fairly random collection of vellum manuscript fragments, which were often cut up and used as parts of book bindings. Not surprisingly, most of them are from liturgical, legal and theological manuscripts. Jackson’s library collections were sold after his death in two sales by Hodgsons in May and November 1895; these fragments can probably be identified as lot 1106 in the November sale ‘Old parchment and other deeds. A parcel’, which was sold for £1 2s. Adapted from: 'Catalogue of the Jackson Collection of manuscript fragments in the Royal Library Windsor Castle', by Jenny Stratford (London: Academic Press, 1981)
Provenance
Presented to the Royal Library by Sir Richard Holmes, Royal Librarian 1870-1906
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Creator(s)
(collector)Acquirer(s)
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Measurements
35.2 x 25.0 cm (whole object)
26.0 x 16.5 cm (written space dimensions)
Place of Production
England