Article

The Dispersal of Monastic Libraries in the Early Nineteenth Century: Buxheim and Karakallou

Details

Citation

Jackson Williams K (2024) The Dispersal of Monastic Libraries in the Early Nineteenth Century: Buxheim and Karakallou. Library and Information History, 40. https://www.euppublishing.com/loi/lih

Abstract
This article discusses the dramatic dispersal of monastic libraries in Europe and the Christian East during the early nineteenth century through two contrasting examples. These are: (1) the 1423 St Christopher woodblock print and other early examples of fifteenth-century printing, formerly the property of the Charterhouse at Buxheim in Swabia but purchased in 1803 by Alexander Horn for George John, 2nd Earl Spencer; and (2) a series of Byzantine manuscripts, formerly the property of the monastery of Karakallou on Mount Athos but purchased in 1837 by Robert Curzon, later 14th Baron Zouche. It identifies changing perceptions surrounding the value and use of books on the parts of both monks and collectors as central to this moment and explores the different – but often surprisingly similar – ways in which books left monastic ownership in western vs. eastern contexts.

Keywords
Monasticism; monastic libraries; secularisation; book collecting; Earl Spencer; Robert Curzon

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming

Journal
Library and Information History: Volume 40

StatusAccepted
Date accepted by journal22/04/2024
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35999
Publisher URLhttps://www.euppublishing.com/loi/lih
ISSN1758-3489
eISSN1758-3497

People (1)

Dr Kelsey Williams

Dr Kelsey Williams

Associate Professor, English Studies