You have no items in your shopping cart.
Close
Search
Filters

Yours, Mine, or Theirs? Historical Observations on the Use, Collection and Sharing of Manuscripts in

In the west centuries ago manuscripts were replaced by printed books, and relegated to mostly secular libraries as a result of religious and political upheavals. In the Christian Orient such changes were slower and remain less advanced. Manuscripts have not entirely vanished from regular use, and Christian communities retain ownership of significant collections of their historic manuscripts. The vital connection between manuscripts and religious culture endures, even if attenuated by persecution, diaspora, technology, and other aspects of modernity. This essay provides an historical survey of these issues in both Europe and the Christian Orient (limited here to the Middle East, the Caucasus, and Ethiopia/Eritrea).
Publisher: Gorgias Press LLC
Availability: In stock
SKU (ISBN): 978-1-60724-059-4
  • *
Publication Status: In Print
Publication Date: Sep 23,2009
Interior Color: Black
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Page Count: 29
Languages: English
ISBN: 978-1-60724-059-4
$36.00 (USD)
Ship to
*
*
Shipping Method
Name
Estimated Delivery
Price
No shipping options

Manuscripts are uniquely privileged bearers of cultural identity. Created and transmitted within particular linguistic and religious communities, they retain their fullest significance when they are used regularly and remain in the possession of their historic cultures. In the west those two pillars of manuscript-based culture were broken centuries ago as manuscripts were replaced by printed books, and relegated to mostly secular libraries as a result of religious and political upheavals. In the Christian Orient such changes were slower and remain less advanced. Manuscripts have not entirely vanished from regular use, and Christian communities retain ownership of significant collections of their historic manuscripts. The vital connection between manuscripts and religious culture endures, even if attenuated by persecution, diaspora, technology, and other aspects of modernity. Western collectors, whether imperial, institutional, or individual, have posed another threat to Oriental Christian manuscripts, taking many very important items or collections to European and American national or research libraries. This essay provides an historical survey of these issues.

Columba Stewart, O.S.B., is a Benedictine monk of Saint John’s Abbey, Collegeville, Minnesota, and Professor of Theology at the Saint John’s School of Theology Seminary. He has directed the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library’s efforts to digitize the manuscript culture of the Eastern Christian churches in the Middle East, Eastern Europe, Ethiopia, and India.

Manuscripts are uniquely privileged bearers of cultural identity. Created and transmitted within particular linguistic and religious communities, they retain their fullest significance when they are used regularly and remain in the possession of their historic cultures. In the west those two pillars of manuscript-based culture were broken centuries ago as manuscripts were replaced by printed books, and relegated to mostly secular libraries as a result of religious and political upheavals. In the Christian Orient such changes were slower and remain less advanced. Manuscripts have not entirely vanished from regular use, and Christian communities retain ownership of significant collections of their historic manuscripts. The vital connection between manuscripts and religious culture endures, even if attenuated by persecution, diaspora, technology, and other aspects of modernity. Western collectors, whether imperial, institutional, or individual, have posed another threat to Oriental Christian manuscripts, taking many very important items or collections to European and American national or research libraries. This essay provides an historical survey of these issues.

Columba Stewart, O.S.B., is a Benedictine monk of Saint John’s Abbey, Collegeville, Minnesota, and Professor of Theology at the Saint John’s School of Theology Seminary. He has directed the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library’s efforts to digitize the manuscript culture of the Eastern Christian churches in the Middle East, Eastern Europe, Ethiopia, and India.

Write your own review
  • Only registered users can write reviews
*
*
Bad
Excellent
*
*
*
*
Contributor

ColumbaStewart

  • Yours, Mine, Or Theirs? Historical Observations on the Use, Collection and Sharing of Manuscripts in Western Europe and the Christian Orient (page 5)
    • Manuscripts and Their Communities (page 6)
    • Manuscripts and Manuscript Culture in Western Europe (page 8)
    • Manuscripts and Manuscript Culture in the Christian Orient (page 15)
    • Manuscripts and Their Ecclesiastical Guardians (page 18)
    • Oriental Christian Manuscripts in the West: The Special Case of Egypt (page 24)
    • The Continuing Challenge (page 29)
  • Errata (page 33)
Customers who bought this item also bought
ImageFromGFF

Biblical Women as Images of Church in Jacob of Serug

This study seeks to address the common bridal imagery pervasive in ancient Syriac Christianity by asking how Jacob of Serug employed the presentation of biblical women in his homilies to serve as imagery for the Church.
$37.00 (USD)
Picture of Intermediaries in Jewish Theology

Intermediaries in Jewish Theology

A philological study of the usage of Memra, Shekinah, and Metatron in Tragumic and Cabbalistic literature that combats nineteenth century Christian attempts to read these as references to the Second or Third Persons of the Trinity.
$41.00 (USD)
Picture of The Life of Severus by Zachariah of Mytilene

The Life of Severus by Zachariah of Mytilene

This biography of Severus, the patriarch of Antioch from 512-518 CE, attributed to his schoolmate Zachariah of Mytilene, gives unique information about life in Mediterranean region in the second half of the 5th century. These two young men from wealthy families became involved with a Christian movement, the "philoponoi," "those devoted to work" who combined asceticism with theological study. The work, originally in Greek, survives only in Syriac, which this volume presents alongside the first English translation of it. It is an important source for studies on Ancient Biography, Late Antiquity, and Early Christianity.
$44.00 (USD)
Picture of The History of the Holy Mar Ma‘in

The History of the Holy Mar Ma‘in

The History of Holy Mar Ma‘in of Sinjar tells the story of a Sasanian general during the time of Shapur II (309-79) who suffered persecution after his conversion to Christianity. In this volume, the first in this new series from Gorgias Press, Sebastian P. Brock provides the first edition ever of the Syriac text of the History of Ma‘in as well as the first full translation of it. This volume also includes a basic guide to the whole corpus of Persian Martyr Acts as well as useful indices to these numerous texts.
$44.00 (USD)