Chapter From research on the scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogiła until the beginning of the 16th century

The scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogila should be considered as the best developed, especially in reference to the 13th century. It has three coverages in a book form and numerous articles. The period up to the end of the 13th century is relatively best developed. It was established th...

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Huvudupphov: Domżał, Zbigniew, Wałkówski, Andrzej
Materialtyp: Online
Språk:polska
Utgiven: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego 2025
Länkar:ONIX_20250307_9788381427289_512
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author Domżał, Zbigniew
Wałkówski, Andrzej
author_browse Domżał, Zbigniew
Wałkówski, Andrzej
author_facet Domżał, Zbigniew
Wałkówski, Andrzej
author_sort Domżał, Zbigniew
collection Directory of Open Access Books
description The scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogila should be considered as the best developed, especially in reference to the 13th century. It has three coverages in a book form and numerous articles. The period up to the end of the 13th century is relatively best developed. It was established that at the time 29 documents were created in the scriptorium: The Polish-Silesian Chronicle and The Nocturnale Cantuale codex, which did not survive and we know about it from the later made (16th century) monasterial chronicles of Nicholas from Cracow. Three monastic writers known by the name were indicated: abbot Herman, brother Ludwik and abbot Engelbert. In addition, 21 anonymous monastic writers who wrote down monastery documents were disclosed. There are clear similarities in the writing habits of the Cistercian monastery in Mogila to the scriptorium of its matrix in Lubianka, especially in the twenties and thirties of the 13th century and their subsequent disappearance was the result of the emergence of a new generation of monastic writers. The continuation of the research covered the period from the 14th to the beginning of the 16th century. From that time, 186 documents concerning the Cistercian monastery in Mogila and 29 codices were preserved. During the research it was established that the following Cistercians could have worked in the scriptorium: Jan Wartenberg (1375/78–1389), Arnold (1412), Nicholas Brygier (1426–1438), doctor Jacob from Paradyz (1420–1441), brother N (1441), later abbot Peter Hirszberg (1447), brothers George from Sambor and Nicholas (1461–1475), brother Nicholas from Cracow, for example author of the monastery chronicle (1452–1505/6).
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spelling doab-20.500.12854ir-1550872025-03-07T13:53:44Z Chapter From research on the scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogiła until the beginning of the 16th century Domżał, Zbigniew Wałkówski, Andrzej The scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogila should be considered as the best developed, especially in reference to the 13th century. It has three coverages in a book form and numerous articles. The period up to the end of the 13th century is relatively best developed. It was established that at the time 29 documents were created in the scriptorium: The Polish-Silesian Chronicle and The Nocturnale Cantuale codex, which did not survive and we know about it from the later made (16th century) monasterial chronicles of Nicholas from Cracow. Three monastic writers known by the name were indicated: abbot Herman, brother Ludwik and abbot Engelbert. In addition, 21 anonymous monastic writers who wrote down monastery documents were disclosed. There are clear similarities in the writing habits of the Cistercian monastery in Mogila to the scriptorium of its matrix in Lubianka, especially in the twenties and thirties of the 13th century and their subsequent disappearance was the result of the emergence of a new generation of monastic writers. The continuation of the research covered the period from the 14th to the beginning of the 16th century. From that time, 186 documents concerning the Cistercian monastery in Mogila and 29 codices were preserved. During the research it was established that the following Cistercians could have worked in the scriptorium: Jan Wartenberg (1375/78–1389), Arnold (1412), Nicholas Brygier (1426–1438), doctor Jacob from Paradyz (1420–1441), brother N (1441), later abbot Peter Hirszberg (1447), brothers George from Sambor and Nicholas (1461–1475), brother Nicholas from Cracow, for example author of the monastery chronicle (1452–1505/6). 2025-03-07T13:53:43Z 2025-03-07T13:53:43Z 2020 chapter ONIX_20250307_9788381427289_512 9788381427289 9788381427272 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/155087 pol image/jpeg Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International https://www.press.uni.lodz.pl/index.php/wul/catalog/book/1052 Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego 10.18778/8142-727-2.09 The scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogila should be considered as the best developed, especially in reference to the 13th century. It has three coverages in a book form and numerous articles. The period up to the end of the 13th century is relatively best developed. It was established that at the time 29 documents were created in the scriptorium: The Polish-Silesian Chronicle and The Nocturnale Cantuale codex, which did not survive and we know about it from the later made (16th century) monasterial chronicles of Nicholas from Cracow. Three monastic writers known by the name were indicated: abbot Herman, brother Ludwik and abbot Engelbert. In addition, 21 anonymous monastic writers who wrote down monastery documents were disclosed. There are clear similarities in the writing habits of the Cistercian monastery in Mogila to the scriptorium of its matrix in Lubianka, especially in the twenties and thirties of the 13th century and their subsequent disappearance was the result of the emergence of a new generation of monastic writers. The continuation of the research covered the period from the 14th to the beginning of the 16th century. From that time, 186 documents concerning the Cistercian monastery in Mogila and 29 codices were preserved. During the research it was established that the following Cistercians could have worked in the scriptorium: Jan Wartenberg (1375/78–1389), Arnold (1412), Nicholas Brygier (1426–1438), doctor Jacob from Paradyz (1420–1441), brother N (1441), later abbot Peter Hirszberg (1447), brothers George from Sambor and Nicholas (1461–1475), brother Nicholas from Cracow, for example author of the monastery chronicle (1452–1505/6). 10.18778/8142-727-2.09 83bfe9c9-323d-4283-b087-d859fd9af314 9788381427289 9788381427272 197-229 open access
spellingShingle Domżał, Zbigniew
Wałkówski, Andrzej
Chapter From research on the scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogiła until the beginning of the 16th century
title Chapter From research on the scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogiła until the beginning of the 16th century
title_full Chapter From research on the scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogiła until the beginning of the 16th century
title_fullStr Chapter From research on the scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogiła until the beginning of the 16th century
title_full_unstemmed Chapter From research on the scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogiła until the beginning of the 16th century
title_short Chapter From research on the scriptorium of the Cistercian monastery in Mogiła until the beginning of the 16th century
title_sort chapter from research on the scriptorium of the cistercian monastery in mogila until the beginning of the 16th century
url ONIX_20250307_9788381427289_512
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