Fragments and Palimpsests - Recycling and Recontextualisation of Latin Manuscripts Connected to Medieval Iceland

The first books in Iceland were Latin manuscripts which were used for the performance of the Catholic liturgy, for personal devotion, as well as for teaching Latin. These Latin manuscripts were first imported from abroad, later also produced locally in Icelandic scriptoria and made up an important p...

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Published in:Gripla
Main Author: Lorenz, Tom
Other Authors: Berg, Ivar, Wærdahl, Randi Bjørshol, Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður Már
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: NTNU 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3172799
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author Lorenz, Tom
author2 Berg, Ivar
Wærdahl, Randi Bjørshol
Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður Már
author_facet Lorenz, Tom
author_sort Lorenz, Tom
collection NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
container_title Gripla
container_volume 35
description The first books in Iceland were Latin manuscripts which were used for the performance of the Catholic liturgy, for personal devotion, as well as for teaching Latin. These Latin manuscripts were first imported from abroad, later also produced locally in Icelandic scriptoria and made up an important part of the books that existed in medieval Iceland (ca. 1000–1550). The introduction of the Protestant Reformation caused these old Catholic manuscripts to be gradually replaced by new Lutheran religious manuscripts and printed books. As a consequence, the obsolete Catholic manuscripts were no longer actively preserved and many were dismantled to recycle their material components or modified to adapt them to new Lutheran contexts. In this doctoral thesis, I investigate the destiny of the Catholic Latin manuscripts that were not simply lost. In the three research articles, I discuss three codicological practices for parchment recycling and manuscript recontextualisation: bookbindings, glossing and palimpsestation. Using leaves from dismantled books as material for the bookbinding of another book was the most common form of parchment recycling in early modern Iceland. However, most of these fragments were detached from the bookbindings of their host volumes in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In Article 1, I provide an overview of the Latin fragments which remain in situ (‘in place’) in Icelandic manuscripts. Glossing means the scribal practice of adding marginal or interlinear glosses to the main text of a manuscript. Several Latin psalters preserved as fragments contain Icelandic glosses written in the sixteenth century. In Article 2, I provide transcriptions of these vernacular glosses and demonstrate that they constitute two different forms of manuscript recontextualisation. Palimpsestation means the reuse of writing material by erasing the original texts of a manuscript and replacing it with new texts. Although palimpsestation is traditionally considered a form of recycling, in Article 3, I argue that ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
id ftntnutrondheimi:oai:ntnuopen.ntnu.no:11250/3172799
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftntnutrondheimi
op_doi https://doi.org/10.33112/gripla.35.1
op_relation Doctoral theses at NTNU;2025:14
Paper 1: Lorenz, Tom. ‘Latin in situ Fragments Connected to Iceland’, accepted for publication in Scripta Islandica 75 (2024). This paper is not yet published and is therefore not included.
Paper 2: Lorenz, Tom ‘Glossing the Psalms in Sixteenth-Century Iceland’, accepted for publication in ANF – Arkif för nordisk filologi 140 (2025). This paper is not yet published and is therefore not included.
Paper 3: Lorenz, Tom (2024). ‘Recycling and Recontextualisation in Early Modern Palimpsests’, Gripla 35 (2024), pp. 7–42. Published by Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies. Open Access. Available at: https://doi.org/10.33112/gripla.35.1
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3172799
publishDate 2025
publisher NTNU
record_format openpolar
spelling ftntnutrondheimi:oai:ntnuopen.ntnu.no:11250/3172799 2025-05-18T14:03:26+00:00 Fragments and Palimpsests - Recycling and Recontextualisation of Latin Manuscripts Connected to Medieval Iceland Lorenz, Tom Berg, Ivar Wærdahl, Randi Bjørshol Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður Már 2025 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3172799 eng eng NTNU Doctoral theses at NTNU;2025:14 Paper 1: Lorenz, Tom. ‘Latin in situ Fragments Connected to Iceland’, accepted for publication in Scripta Islandica 75 (2024). This paper is not yet published and is therefore not included. Paper 2: Lorenz, Tom ‘Glossing the Psalms in Sixteenth-Century Iceland’, accepted for publication in ANF – Arkif för nordisk filologi 140 (2025). This paper is not yet published and is therefore not included. Paper 3: Lorenz, Tom (2024). ‘Recycling and Recontextualisation in Early Modern Palimpsests’, Gripla 35 (2024), pp. 7–42. Published by Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies. Open Access. Available at: https://doi.org/10.33112/gripla.35.1 https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3172799 VDP::Humaniora: 000::Språkvitenskapelige fag: 010 Doctoral thesis 2025 ftntnutrondheimi https://doi.org/10.33112/gripla.35.1 2025-04-23T04:50:47Z The first books in Iceland were Latin manuscripts which were used for the performance of the Catholic liturgy, for personal devotion, as well as for teaching Latin. These Latin manuscripts were first imported from abroad, later also produced locally in Icelandic scriptoria and made up an important part of the books that existed in medieval Iceland (ca. 1000–1550). The introduction of the Protestant Reformation caused these old Catholic manuscripts to be gradually replaced by new Lutheran religious manuscripts and printed books. As a consequence, the obsolete Catholic manuscripts were no longer actively preserved and many were dismantled to recycle their material components or modified to adapt them to new Lutheran contexts. In this doctoral thesis, I investigate the destiny of the Catholic Latin manuscripts that were not simply lost. In the three research articles, I discuss three codicological practices for parchment recycling and manuscript recontextualisation: bookbindings, glossing and palimpsestation. Using leaves from dismantled books as material for the bookbinding of another book was the most common form of parchment recycling in early modern Iceland. However, most of these fragments were detached from the bookbindings of their host volumes in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In Article 1, I provide an overview of the Latin fragments which remain in situ (‘in place’) in Icelandic manuscripts. Glossing means the scribal practice of adding marginal or interlinear glosses to the main text of a manuscript. Several Latin psalters preserved as fragments contain Icelandic glosses written in the sixteenth century. In Article 2, I provide transcriptions of these vernacular glosses and demonstrate that they constitute two different forms of manuscript recontextualisation. Palimpsestation means the reuse of writing material by erasing the original texts of a manuscript and replacing it with new texts. Although palimpsestation is traditionally considered a form of recycling, in Article 3, I argue that ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Iceland NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Gripla 35
spellingShingle VDP::Humaniora: 000::Språkvitenskapelige fag: 010
Lorenz, Tom
Fragments and Palimpsests - Recycling and Recontextualisation of Latin Manuscripts Connected to Medieval Iceland
title Fragments and Palimpsests - Recycling and Recontextualisation of Latin Manuscripts Connected to Medieval Iceland
title_full Fragments and Palimpsests - Recycling and Recontextualisation of Latin Manuscripts Connected to Medieval Iceland
title_fullStr Fragments and Palimpsests - Recycling and Recontextualisation of Latin Manuscripts Connected to Medieval Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Fragments and Palimpsests - Recycling and Recontextualisation of Latin Manuscripts Connected to Medieval Iceland
title_short Fragments and Palimpsests - Recycling and Recontextualisation of Latin Manuscripts Connected to Medieval Iceland
title_sort fragments and palimpsests - recycling and recontextualisation of latin manuscripts connected to medieval iceland
topic VDP::Humaniora: 000::Språkvitenskapelige fag: 010
topic_facet VDP::Humaniora: 000::Språkvitenskapelige fag: 010
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3172799