The Book: Monasteries, Schools, and Notaries, Part 2: Introduction to the Transitional Gothic Script - Harvard University

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    Course

  • Methodology

    Online

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    Different dates available

Get an introduction to European handwriting of the so-called “twelfth-century renaissance,” when manuscript production skyrocketed as never before.With this course you earn while you learn, you gain recognized qualifications, job specific skills and knowledge and this helps you stand out in the job market.

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Different dates availableEnrolment now open

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2017

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Subjects

  • Book
  • Gothic
  • Humanities
  • Literature
  • Manuscripts

Course programme

Thousands upon thousands of manuscripts written in Latin and other languages remain from the 12th century, when Western Europe saw an unprecedented increase in manuscript production. Of these manuscripts from the middle ages, only a small percentage have been identified, much less edited and published. To explore these fascinating texts, you need to learn the art and science of reading medieval handwriting.

This module of The Book: Histories Across Space and Time introduces students to medieval paleography, the science of reading old handwriting, with a focus on the era of the 12th century. By studying a representative hand in depth, you will learn to read 12th century Transitional Gothic script and decipher the abbreviations that set the pattern of writing for the following centuries before print. We will work with selected manuscripts from Harvard’s Houghton library and enter into the cultural world of the 12th century monasteries and schools. Assessments and quizzes will allow you to track your progress as you move through letter forms and abbreviations to read whole blocks of text.

Some knowledge of Latin will be very helpful for understanding the texts you will read, but students without the necessary language skills will still enjoy this chance to explore 12th century hands.

What you'll learn

  • Transitional Gothic, the script of 12th century monasteries and school , and the tiny variations of it used for notations and glosses.
  • The basic form of each letter
  • Standard abbreviations
  • Patterns of abbreviation that will allow you to approach the writing of later periods

Additional information

Beverly Mayne Kienzle Beverly Mayne Kienzle is the  John H. Morison Professor of the Practice in Latin and Romance Languages and Lecturer on Medieval Christianity (retired) at Harvard Divinity School. Her courses on Christian Latin, Latin paleography,  and medieval Christianity emphasize the careful examination of primary sources and the role of texts in medieval culture. Professor Kienzle’s research covers the fields of sermon studies, heresy, and hagiography with attention to the place of preaching in the history of medieval religion, to evidence for women's preaching in monastic, lay, and dissident communities, and to violence against women in hagiographical and historical narratives. Her recent publications have focused on Hildegard of Bingen and other holy women.

The Book: Monasteries, Schools, and Notaries, Part 2: Introduction to the Transitional Gothic Script - Harvard University

Free