Emily Bulik-Sullivan `16 and Daniel Hartnett, 2014
Transcription
Emily Bulik-Sullivan `16 and Daniel Hartnett, 2014
Applying Modern Technology to Codicological Research: A Catalogue of Fifteenth-Century Iberian Boccaccio Manuscripts Emily Bulik-Sullivan ‘16 and Daniel Hartnett, 2014 Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375) • From Certaldo, outside of Florence, Italy1 • One of the “Three Crowns of Florence” (with Dante and Petrarch) 6 Giovanni Boccaccio • Author of numerous works • In the twenty-‐first century, Boccaccio’s most famous work is The Decameron • In late medieval Gmes, it seems his other works – including De mulieribus claris (Of Noble Women) and De casibus virorum illustrium (translated as The Fall of Princes) – were more popular. • 82 manuscripts idenGfied • The locaGon of 49 of these can be verified • The other 33 have either been lost or are inaccessible in private collecGons • Manuscripts vary in quality • Some are in varying degrees of compleGon • Others are richly illuminated with mulGple colors of ink and gold leaf • A handful are clearly decoraGve or intended for display; others are scholarly in nature, with interlineal glossing and annotaGon Library Over the past century, research on the works of the Italian writer Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375) has been plagued by two issues: a lack of knowledge about how accessible Boccaccio’s works were to medieval readers, and a tendency to adhere to assumptions and opinions as if they were facts because available search tools were not up to the task of providing sufficient information to answer scholars’ questions. In fifteenth- and sixteenthcentury Iberia, the writings of the “Three Crowns of Florence” (Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio) held a significant amount of political and social sway over the noble class. Through their works, these three writers influenced the self-fashioning of powerful political figures and the courtly education of young princes.2 Authors with this degree of sociopolitical clout deserve accurate portrayals in contemporary criticism. To contribute to the present state of codicological research, this study offers the most comprehensive and accurate catalogue to date of manuscripts of Boccaccio’s works that were present either in Iberia or in Iberian-controlled regions during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Recent developments in tools and techniques, particularly on the Internet, have enabled the creation of a much more accurate and detailed catalogue of manuscripts of Boccaccio’s works than what has been previously available, and this study establishes a pathway for locating manuscripts. Not only can this catalogue serve as a powerful tool for research about Boccaccio’s social and literary prestige in late medieval Iberia, but the development of modern techniques for generating this sort of manuscript catalogue could easily be applied to the works of other authors. The Catalogue Houghton Library (Harvard) 1 La librería del cabildo toledano 1 Biblioteca Capitular de Toledo 1 Archivo Capitular de Barcelona 1 Arxiu de la Corona d'Aragò 1 Biblioteca Capitular de Zaragoza 1 Biblioteca de Catalunya 1 Real Biblioteca del Palacio Real de Madrid 2 Biblioteca Capitular y Colombina de Sevilla 2 Universitat de València 2 Bibliothèque nationale de France 8 Real Biblioteca del Monasterio de El Escorial 7 Biblioteca Nacional de España 21 0 5 10 15 20 25 Number of Manuscripts Figure 2: A representation of the current locations of fifteenth-century Iberian Boccaccio manuscripts. The highest concentration of those manuscripts whose location is verifiable is in the National Library of Spain (Madrid). The National Library of France (Paris) also houses a large collection of Boccaccian manuscripts. Many of the manuscripts currently in Paris come from the Neapolitan library of the Aragonese King Alfonso the Magnanimous, who controlled Naples between 1442-1458. Prevalence of Specific Works by Boccaccio in the Fifteenth Century Ameto/Comedia delle Ninfe Fiorentine 3 De casibus virorum illustrium Figure 1: Examples of some of the manuscripts included in this catalogue. Clockwise, starting from top left: the first page of a copy of Elegia di madonna Fiammeta currently housed in the National Library of Spain3 (note gold leaf, humanistic script, and elaborate illumination); first page of a copy of Il Filostrato also housed in the National Library of Spain4 (note historiated initial with a figure writing the first word of the manuscript, “Molte”); the first letter, in gold leaf, of a copy of Il Filostrato housed in the Lilly Library at the University of Indiana-Bloomington; the first page, unfinished, of a copy of De mulieribus claris housed at the University of Valencia5 (note glossing and annotation, and space left blank for the initial). Research Methods • Inclusion criteria: • Manuscript (not incunable or printed book) • By or about Boccaccio • Present in Iberia or Iberian-‐controlled regions (e.g. Naples) between ~1375-‐1525 • Every effort was made to verify each manuscript’s conGnued existence and locaGon • Manuscripts were idenGfied by various methods: • By directly consulGng libraries’ catalogues • By crosschecking references in late medieval library inventories • Via personal communicaGon with librarians in Europe Work by Boccaccio Abstract Distribution of Extant 15th Century Iberian Boccaccio Manuscripts 14 De montibus, silvis, etc. 3 De mulieribus claris 10 Elegia di madonna Fiammeta 9 Genealogia deorum gentilium 9 Il Corbaccio 6 Il Decamerone 5 Il Filocolo 2 Il Filostrato 5 Other 7 Teseida delle Nozze d'Emilia 6 Trattatello in laude di Dante 3 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Number of Manuscripts Figure 3: Of the 82 manuscripts located in this study, considerably fewer than expected were copies of Boccaccio’s Decameron. Notable is the high number of both De casibus virorum illustrium (translated into Spanish as The Fall of Princes) and De mulieribus claris (Of Noble Women), possibly revealing Boccaccio’s political influence in fifteenth-century Iberia. It is known that the “Reyes Católicos,” Isabella and Ferdinand, used The Fall of Princes to educate their son, himself a prince.2 Acknowledgements We are indebted to the Lilly Library at the University of Indiana – Bloomington for allowing us to handle their fiPeenth-‐century Milanese manuscript of Il Filostrato. Funding for this project was provided by the Kenyon Summer HumaniGes Scholar program. References 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Branca, Vigore. Boccaccio: The Man and His Works. Trans. Richard Monges. New York: New York University Press, 1976. Print. Ruiz García, Elisa. El imaginario de una reina: páginas selectas del patrimonio escrito de Isabel la Católica. Madrid: AyN Ediciones, 2007. Print. Unknown. Fiammega [Manuscrito]. Inc.: Svole ai miseri di dolersi uagheza (h. 1). 15th Century. Biblioteca Nacional de España. Biblioteca Digital Hispánica. Web. 4 Oct. 2014. Unknown. Filostrato [Manuscrito]. Inc.: Io di Parnaso le muse pregare (h. 6). 15th Century. Biblioteca Nacional de España. Biblioteca Digital Hispánica. Web. 4 Oct. 2014. Unknown. Iohannis Boccacii de Certaldo De mulierib[us] claris f. 3 r. 1393. Universitat de València Biblioteca Històrica. Universitat de València Somni. Web. 4 Oct. 2014. Unknown. Portrait of Giovanni Boccaccio. N.d. Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies. Web. 4 Oct. 2014.