![]() We can see that even the process of procuring all the necessary materials for a manuscript involved many people doing different, specialized tasks. In fact, the making of blue dye was such a revered process that once indigo came on the scene woad producers were able to get its production banned under threat of death in Elizabethan England (Philips 2007, 10). Blue dyes were especially difficult to produce, being the result of fermenting a noxious weed called Isatis tinctoris or woad. The inks were themselves the results of long and tedious processes. Mayo-8 was decorated with beautiful lettering in blue and red and perhaps a third, now faded color, visible only by blacklight (see image 3 with the light glow boarding the I). ![]() (See image 2 and Mayo-8) This could be the result of the individual scribe’s preference, or by the specific pen he used or merely by his schooling. However, it is different in that the bottoms of letters (most notably the m’s and n’s) lack the customary diamond shape often seen in Quadrata forms of Textura (The University of Nottingham, n.d.). But our Mayo-8 script closely resembles that of Textura with its distinct separation of letters. It is difficult to assign a single script style to a manuscript, as each scribe had their own unique handwriting and scripts were often combined. There were also many scripts used in manuscript writing ranging from the simple to the ornate, often dictated by location and time period. At the very least, manuscript writing was certainly not a silent process, as reading in one’s head did not exist at the time. “In this perspective, notation truly becomes the ‘stenographic’ representation of a melody that is not simply remembered or copied from a written exemplar, but that is also transcribed while listening to a live performance” (Nardini 2012, 54). This is evident through varying notations of a single melody in the same manuscript, indicating that they are the result of musical dictation. In her essay, “God is Witness,” Luisa Nardini suggests that many manuscripts were not copied from existing music but were instead dictated and written down by ear. The next stage in manuscript making was the transcription process, and this was also not as easy as it may seem. It’s rare for musical manuscripts to be palimpsests, and therefore this gives us more insight into the lives of the scribes who made it. Otto Ege believed this palimpsest text to be horseshoe nail notation however it’s difficult to know for sure and I would argue that notation here is a bit too varied in its neume types to be horseshoe nail. This theory is supported by the small pin holes that line the tops of the pages, indicating that they were at one point either bound vertically, or, more likely, were once oriented that way as an earlier manuscript. However, the lettering cuts off abruptly at the bottom of the page leading us to believe that these manuscripts were once much larger and were cut to fit their current size. We can see here a few faint Latin words and even some early evidence of music notation. The first (and perhaps the most obvious) is the faint lettering that goes horizontally across the page. We can see on our manuscripts two indications that they were reused. After being stripped, the palimpsest could be written on again with the new information however, the process was not perfect and, luckily for us, we can still see remnants of what was previously on the pages of Mayo-8, especially with the help of a UV light (see Image 1). Palimpsests were made by taking parchment that had already been written on and then scraping off the existing text with pumice, a form of volcanic glass (British Library, n.d.). ![]() As a way to save both time and money, scribes sometimes scraped and reused parchment such recycled paged are called palimpsests. However, our manuscripts are the product of a second process. The parchment itself, vellum, was made from animal skin, usually that of a calf or sheep and involved a long process of drying, tensioning on a frame, and surface treatment (Grömer, Russ-Popa, and Saliari 2017, 73). From making the parchment, to creating the inks, to writing out the manuscript itself, manuscript making involved intense manual labor and a number of diverse tasks from a variety of people. The process of making a medieval manuscript was long and painstaking. Making Medieval Manuscripts Making Medieval Manuscripts
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