Bibliomania in the Middle Ages - F. Somner Merryweather

Bibliomania in the Middle Ages

Louis Weiss & Co.
Printers....
118 Fulton Street
... New York



n every century for more than two thousand years, many men have owed their chief enjoyment of life to books. The bibliomaniac of today had his prototype in ancient Rome, where book collecting was fashionable as early as the first century of the Christian era. Four centuries earlier there was an active trade in books at Athens, then the center of the book production of the world. This center of literary activity shifted to Alexandria during the third century b. c. through the patronage of Ptolemy Soter, the founder of the Alexandrian Museum, and of his son, Ptolemy Philadelphus; and later to Rome, where it remained for many centuries, and where bibliophiles and bibliomaniacs were gradually evolved, and from whence in time other countries were invaded.
For the purposes of the present work the middle ages cover the period beginning with the seventh century and ending with the time of the invention of printing, or about seven hundred years, though they are more accurately bounded by the years 500 and 1500 a. d. It matters little, however, since there is no attempt at chronological arrangement.
About the middle of the present century there began to be a disposition to grant to mediæval times their proper place in the history of the preservation and dissemination of books, and Merryweather's Bibliomania in the Middle Ages was one of the earliest works in English devoted to the subject. Previous to that time, those ten centuries lying between the fall of the Roman Empire and the revival of learning were generally referred to as the Dark Ages, and historians and other writers were wont to treat them as having been without learning or scholarship of any kind.

F. Somner Merryweather
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2007-05-28

Темы

Bibliomania -- History; Scriptoria -- England -- History; Book collectors -- England -- Biography; Libraries -- Great Britain -- History -- 400-1400; Monastic libraries -- Great Britain -- History; Manuscripts, Medieval -- Collectors and collecting -- England -- History; England -- Intellectual life -- 1066-1485

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