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I cannot read languages written in non-Latin alphabets, such as Hebrew, Greek, Syriac, and Armenian, so I will only attempt to catalogue them if I have help from a specialist. I do, however, enounter them periodically. Ethiopian codices are fairly popular with private collectors, for example, because a complete codex (usually 19th-century, but still medieval in character) can be bought for the price of a single medieval Western illuminated leaf, and because the wood boards of the bindings are often not covered, leaving the spine and sewing structure clearly visible: they therefore make very good teaching tools.
I encounter with some frequency (in person or online) leaves from an Armenian Lectionary dispersed by Otto Ege (as shown above). Leaves of it were not included in his famous portfolio of Fifty Original Leaves, but they were in three of his earlier portfolios: Original Leaves from Famous Bibles: Nine centuries, 1121 A.D. - 1935 A.D., 'Series A' issued in 1936, in an edition of 200, and 'Series B' issued in 1938, in an edition of 100; and Fifteen Original Oriental Leaves of Six Centuries issued in [1952] in an edition of 40 copies [1]. If you meet with a leaf of an Armenian manuscript on paper, written in two columns of 33 lines, there is a good chance that it comes from this manuscipt.
Ege's printed description reads:
"Leaf from anArmenian Manuscript Bible1121 A. D.Fifth century translation by Mesrop written in the Haikian alphabet of thirty-eight characters (Iron writing) on early paper of the Near East. The Mono-physitic doctrine and many other ‘heresies’ in the Armenian translation were a source of continual controversy with the Greek and Roman churches."
"The MS. to which these leaves belonged was described in detail by H. Ačaṙean in 1919 in Tehran, Iran, when it was in the possession of a Persian dealer. At that time, the book consisted of 508 folios decorated with many simple marginal ornaments. At least 213 folios from the original MS. were missing; hence the book originally consisted of at least 721 folios. Although the principal colophon has been lost, the book contained a long colophon in verse and several brief notices that provided the basic data concerning its production. According to these, the codex was written by two scribes, Astuacapov (or Asapov) and the deacon Tēron. It was executed in A.E. 1120 (=A.D. 1671) at Šoš (or Isfahan), for Yohan, son of Yovhannēs, and Ełisabet."
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Sylvie Merian, of the Morgan Library, has been in touch and tells me that she has been working on this MS for many years. She would be glad if readers would bring to her attention any leaves that they encounter, at: smerian@themorgan.orgShe also provides a correction and some amplifications to what I wrote above. The correction is that although Sanjian implied that Ačaṙean published his description in 1919, the former only states that the latter described the manuscript in 1919; the description was in fact not published until 1936. She tells me that the 1936 catalogue records that the volume was already in bad shape by 1919, and had no binding. It contained several colophons, including one dated 1120 and another dated 1121 -- so this is where Ege got the 1121 date from.Looking at images of sister-leaves more closely, I have realised that they do not all have 33 lines per page. Oberlin College Library has two leaves, for example: one leaf has 32 lines per page, while the other leaf has 33 lines on one side and 35 on the other (images and descriptions are on Digital Scriptorium).It was not only Ege who sold leaves; Philip Duschnes had a significant cache as well, and was selling them by 1941:
Duschnes, Catalogue 34
Duschnes, Catalogue 48 |
Note that he quotes the "colophon which read 'Finished Easter Eve 1121 A.D.'" (but we can be confident that it did not say "A.D."!)As mentioned above, the MS is reported to have had 508 leaves in 1919; such a large number makes it statistically all the more probable that any single leaf now in the USA comes from this MS. If in doubt, send images to Sylvie!
Prompted by Scott Gwara's comment below, I thought it would be worth adding here the 1936 summary description in German, and the 1976 Sanjian description of two sister-leaves (I owe these images to the kindness of Sergio La Porta):
Edit, 4 Nov. 2021: Scott points out to me that the broadside sheet that accompanied the Oriental Leaves portfolio refers to Ege as "the late Dean of the Cleveland Institute of Art", and thus it must date from after his death in 1951.
[2] I am very grateful to Sergio La Porta for very kindly providing me with a scan of the relevant pages and much other help with Armnian manuscripts.
Hello Peter, Delighted to see that you bring attention to Ege MS 56 in Old Armenian. For a while I have been looking at some of its leaves. A first brief account appears in Figure 5 and its caption in our 2020 Spring Symposium Booklet, which you could find here:
ReplyDeletehttps://manuscriptevidence.org/wpme/2020-spring-symposium-save-the-date/ . I'll write more to you. Keep up the good work!
Peter, can you say more about the Harry Kurdian collection (Wichita, KS) which in 1976 seemed to have had a large number of leaves from HL 56? Could you please share the 1936 description? Ege included this manuscript in the October 1936 issue of Famous Bibles I, and I'd love to know whether he made a last-minute substitution when he bought it. He wanted a "12th-century" fragment, and the decoration was precisely the sort of thing his buyers sought. Incidentally, Ege was very careful to provide reliable dating, and he would have been mortified to know how wrong he was on this one. The Oriental Leaves portfolio was prepared by the "late Dean," so the 1930 date should just be dropped. It is clear as well that this Oriental Leaves compilation was intended as a companion to the Fifty Original Leaves set.
ReplyDeleteScott Gwara