Radley College Crest
In Latin with notes in Flemish, manuscript on vellum, South Netherlands, c.1500

236 leaves written in black ink in a large Gothic script, with nine large historiated initials and large decorative initials in blue ink, with elaborate penwork decoration in red ink. Contemporary blind-stamped pig skin binding with metal bosses, rebacked in the nineteenth century.

This music manuscript is designed for use by a choir singing a service. It contains nine settings for the major church festivals, each introduced by a historiated initial letter: 1. God speaks to Zechariah - Advent; 2. the nativity; 3. the circumcision of Jesus; 4. the baptism of Jesus; 5. the women at the tomb - Easter; 6. Ascension; 7. Pentecost; 8. the Trinity; 9. The Eucharist ‘ecce panis.’

The border to accompany the women at the tomb contains two heraldic shields, one with an abbot’s or bishop’s crozier, indicating the original owner. In addition, there are many shorter liturgical pieces each introduced by a decorated initial. The text is Latin throughout, with notes in Flemish at the beginning of some sections. The music has a four-line stave with minimal notation except to indicate some longer notes. The score shows evidence of having been used for services: some lines have been changed or corrected and there are occasional annotations.

The manuscript retains its original binding with heavy bosses and incised decoration. It was rebacked and repaired at the Bodleian Library sometime in the later nineteenth century.

Its provenance is unrecorded. There is no indication how it came to belong to Radley. There have been suggestions that this was the manuscript which ‘sorely tempted’ William Sewell on a visit to London which had ‘belonged to Bishop Heber who gave £200 for it.’ However, that is described as a fifteenth-century manuscript (although the close identification of manuscript material should not be taken as evidence from this period), and ‘sorely tempted’ implies that he did not, in fact, buy the book. A later entry in Singleton’s diary confirms both that this was not the manuscript in question and that Singleton and Sewell agreed not to buy it:

June 3rd 1847. Falcke also sent the ‘Graduale’ mentioned earlier in the hope of our purchasing it, but we agreed that we could not afford to give £40 for it, and, even if we could, that we had better lay out the money on portraits. It is undoubtedly a very fine manuscript of AD 1494, but we must do without it. The sheets of vellum are 21 inches by 15.

Moreover, the catalogue of the library in the inventory of goods pre-1862 lists ‘An old illuminated manuscript, and ditto in vellum’ indicating that there were at least two unidentified ‘medieval’ manuscripts in the library. The inventory also lists chapel music, and it is much more likely that this manuscript would have been intended to be a part of the musical tradition had it been part of the school’s holdings in Singleton’s and Sewell’s day. The only indication of an early date for this manuscript’s arrival in Radley is the design of the bookplate, of which there are no other examples and which incorporates an early drawing of St. Peter.

The entire manuscript was digitised in 2009. Click on a thumbnail image below to view the page.


Head of Library &
Archivist:



Electronic resources:


Library Manager:


Journals & Circulation:



Enquiries:



See also:
The Richard Morgan Library
Library resources
Recommended Reads
Special Collections
Antiphonal
Books and articles about Radley
Archives
From the archives
Singleton's Diary

Lusimus Online:
A catalogue in your attic?

Old Radleian Book Reviews:
Alfred Russel Wallace: a life
Brits: the war against the IRA
Conflicts in the Middle East since 1945
McQueen: the biography
Queen Victoria: a personal history
Voice mail

See also:
The Online Bookshop

PDF FilesPDF Files:
The List -Adolescent Angst
The List - Murder and Mayhem

A Guide for New Users

Useful Links:
ACHUKA Children's Books UK
Bodleian Library
Book Aid International
British Library
CILIP
National Archive
School Library Association (SLA)

Nativity

Music for Christmas and Epiphany 1

Music for Christmas and Epiphany 2

Music for Christmas
and Epiphany 3

Music for Christmas
and Epiphany 4

Music for Christmas
and Epiphany 5

Music for Christmas
and Epiphany 6

Circumcision of Jesus

Baptism of Jesus

Easter - the women at the tomb, with the heraldic devices of the original owners of the manuscript in the border

Ascension

Pentecost

The Trinity

Communion 'ecce panis'

The final page, with a paper blessing pasted to the vellum

The first folio