Scribe C: Rewriting the Beowulf Manuscript - a Seminar with Cheryl Jacobsen

October 14th 2021 10am-11.30am (PT); 6pm-7.30pm (GMT)

Sponsored by Stanford Libraries and Stanford Text Technologies, this seminar will be held on Zoom.

Please Register Here

The Nowell Codex has vast significance for literary history as the unique copy of Beowulf but few have looked at it with the experience of a working scribe. What would be learned about the writing of the manuscript if one was to make a new copy using images from the British Library respoitory? Modern Scribe Cheryl Jacobsen has explored this question when she fulfilled a commission to copy the text of Beowulf in the original language and script with facing translation into a parchment book. Cheryl collaborated with early medieval scholar Jonathan Wilcox on questions about the Old English. The book resulting from the commission holds both the English Vernacular Minuscule reproduced page-by-page and a facing translation in modern English, both written by hand on goatskin. Through hours of writing, Cheryl came to understand the sequence of strokes in the letter formation of Scribes A and B in intimate detail along with something of their aesthetic and practical decisions. The many aspects of planning, organizing, and writing a manuscript of over 280 pages all presented opportunities to understand how the scribes may have thought as they did their work.