Beneventan script

Beneventan script

Beneventan script was a medieval script, so called because it originated in the Duchy of Benevento in southern Italy. It was also called "Langobarda", "Longobarda", "Longobardisca" (signifying its origins with the Langobards), or sometimes "Gothica"; it was first called "Beneventan" by palaeographer E. A. Lowe.

It is mostly associated with Italy south of Rome, but it was also used in Beneventan-influenced centres across the Adriatic Sea in Dalmatia. The script was used from approximately the mid-8th century until the 13th century, although there are examples from as late as the 16th century. There were two major centres of Beneventan usage: the monastery on Monte Cassino, and Bari. The Bari type developed in the 10th century from the Monte Cassino type; both were based on Roman cursive as written by the Langobards. In general the script is very angular. According to Lowe the perfected form of the script was used in the 11th century, while Desiderius was abbot of Monte Cassino, declining thereafter.

Beneventan features many ligatures and "connecting strokes" - the letters of a word could be joined together by a single line, with forms almost unrecognizable to a modern eye. Ligatures involving the letter t resemble Visigothic forms; t can take many forms depending on the letter joined to it. Ligatures with the letters e and r are also common. In early forms of Beneventan, the letter a has an open top, similar to the letter u; later, it resembled "cc" or "oc", with long tails hanging to the right. In the Bari type, the letter c often has a "broken" form, resembling the Beneventan form of the letter e. E itself, however, has a very long middle arm, distinguishing it from c. The letter d can have a vertical or left-slanting ascender, the letter g resembles the uncial form, and the letter i is very tall and resembles l.

The script has some unique ways to signify abbreviations and contractions - like most other Latin scripts, missing letters can be signified by a macron over the previous letter, although Beneventan often adds a dot to the macron. There is also a symbol resembling the number 3, or a sideways m, when the letter m has been omitted. In other scripts there is often little or no punctuation, but standard punctuation forms were developed for the Beneventan script, including the basis for the modern question mark.

Beneventan shares some features with Visigothic and Merovingian script, probably due to the common late Roman matrix.

ources

* Francesco Bianchi/Antonio Magi Spinetti: BMB. Bibliografia dei manoscritti in scrittura Beneventana, Rom 1993 ff.
* Giulio Battelli: Beneventana, scritture e miniatura, in: Enciclopedia Cattolica II, Città del Vaticano 1949, p. 1617-1618.
* Virginia Brown: A second new list of beneventan manuscripts, in: Studi medievali 40 (1978), p. 239-289
* Guglielmo Cavallo: Rotoli di Exultet del Italia meridionale, Bari 1973.
* Guglielmo Cavallo: Struttura e articolazione della minuscola beneventana tra i secoli X - XII, in: Studi medievali 3. ser. 11 (1970), p. 343-368.
* Alfonso Gallo: Contributo allo studio delle scritture meridionali nell'alto medio evo, in: Bulletino dell'Istituto Storico Italiano 47 (1931), S. 333-350.
* Elias Avery Lowe: The Beneventan Script. A history of the south Italian Minuscule, Oxford 1914.
* Elias Avery Lowe: Scriptura beneventana. A history of the South Italian minuscule, 2 vol., Oxford 1929.
* Elias Avery Lowe: A new list of beneventan manuscripts. In: Collectanea Vaticana in honorem A. M. card. Albareda, Città del Vaticano1962 (Studi e testi 220) , p. 211-244 = ders., Palaographical Papers II, Oxford 1972, p. 417-479.
* Elias Avery Loew [=Lowe] : The Beneventan Script, 2 Bde., 2. Aufl., Rom 1978 - 1980.
* Francis Newton: Fifty Years of Beneventan Studies, in: AfD 50 (2004), p. 327-346.
* Viktor Novak: Scriptura Beneventana, Zagreb 1920

External links

* [http://edu.let.unicas.it/bmb/ Bibliography of beneventan manuscripts]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Beneventan script — ▪ calligraphy       in calligraphy, southern Italian hand, cultivated in the mother house of the Benedictine order at Montecassino. It has a peculiar jerky rhythm and retains individual cursive forms, which together with many abbreviations and… …   Universalium

  • Merovingian script — 8th century Merovingian script Merovingian script was a medieval script so called because it was developed in France during the Merovingian dynasty. It was used in the 7th and 8th centuries before the Carolingian dynasty and the development of… …   Wikipedia

  • Visigothic script — was a type of medieval script, so called because it originated in the Visigothic kingdom in Hispania (the Iberian Peninsula, modern Spain and Portugal). It is also called littera toletana or littera mozarabica .The script was used from… …   Wikipedia

  • Copperplate script — Not to be confused with Copperplate Gothic. Sample of a digital Copperplate typeface based on the Letraset Gravura typeface by Phill Grimshaw. Copperplate, or English round hand, is a style of calligraphic writing, using a sharp pointed nib… …   Wikipedia

  • Lombards — The Lombards (Latin Langobardi , whence the alternative names Langobards and Longobards) were a Germanic people originally from Northern Europe who settled in the valley of the Danube and from there invaded Byzantine Italy in 568 under the… …   Wikipedia

  • Carolingian minuscule — [ right|frame|Example from 10th century manuscript, Vulgate Luke 1:5 8.] Carolingian or Caroline minuscule is a script developed as a writing standard in Europe so that the Roman alphabet could be easily recognized by the small literate class… …   Wikipedia

  • Écriture bénéventaine — Page de la Regula Benedicti, écrite vers 1075–1090, provenant de la bibliothèque de Monte Cassino L’écriture bénéventaine (ou bénéventine, en latin beneventana) est une écriture livresque qui a été en usage principalement dans le Sud de l’Italie …   Wikipédia en Français

  • calligraphy — calligrapher, calligraphist, n. calligraphic /kal i graf ik/, calligraphical, adj. calligraphically, adv. /keuh lig reuh fee/, n. 1. fancy penmanship, esp. highly decorative handwriting, as with a great many flourishes: She appreciated the… …   Universalium

  • Beneventana — Seite der Regula Benedicti, datiert auf 1075–1090, aus der Bibliothek von Monte Cassino Die Beneventana ist eine langobardische Buchschrift, die vor allem in Süditalien verbreitet war. Am bekanntesten ist der Stil von Monte Cassino. Ihren Namen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Palaeography — Palaeography, (British), or paleography (American) (from the Greek gr. παλαιός palaiós , old and gr. γράφειν graphein , to write ) is the study of ancient handwriting, and the practice of deciphering and reading historical manuscripts. [… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”