![]() ![]() The Brown Fine Arts Library offers a strong collection of scholarly literature on illuminated manuscripts. ![]() Entries for Italian Renaissance manuscripts are alphabetical by author or artist. Regardless of the title of the commentary volume, that entry will follow the facsimile entry. Entries state both the Library of Congress uniform title of the manuscript and the title of the facsimile and are usually arranged alphabetically by the facsimile's title. The Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas holds approximately 215 manuscripts from the medieval and Renaissance periods, many of which are also online. The Getty Center is one of few places in the United States where you can see medieval and Renaissance illuminated manuscripts year-round. Less elaborate study facsimiles may be found in the Brown Fine Arts Library. The south has many primary resources available to the medieval researcher. Most of the facsimiles are housed in the Library Service Center and must be consulted in the Woodson Research Center after a request to be delivered to Fondren Library is generated through the online catalog. Because the Library's holdings of facsimiles of Italian Renaissance, Arabic, and Hebrew illuminated manuscripts are modest, these lists are not subdivided by content. Manuscripts from late antiquity are listed under the appropriate literary form while there is a separate section for Renaissance manuscripts and another for Arabic and Hebrew manuscripts. A commentary is included in each volume.īecause the tradition of illuminating manuscripts extends beyond the historical parameters of the medieval period, facsimiles of manuscripts illuminated in late antiquity to the sixteenth century are also included. These editions are high quality full color facsimiles of the manuscripts in a small format with standard library binding but do not reproduce the look or feel of parchment or vellum. Facsimiles published in the Glanzlichter der Buchkunst series are also included. Medieval and Renaissance Manuscript Illumination (from 35mm) Images with detailed descriptions from mid-20th century 35mm filmstrip negatives and positive slides. The purpose of this guide is to facilitate research on medieval illuminated manuscripts by identifying both high quality, full facsimiles of complete manuscripts as well as less elaborate facsimiles of either the entire manuscript or all the full page illuminations with select portions of the text. ![]()
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