The Archaeology of Medieval BookbindingIn the past, studies of the history of bookbinding were mainly concerned with the exterior decoration. This book focuses attention primarily on the physical aspects of the binding and its construction principles. It is an expanded version of a series of lectures delivered by the author while Visiting Professor at the University of Amsterdam in 1987, supplemented with the results of ten years of intensive research in major libraries on the Continent, the United Kingdom and the USA. It surveys the evolution of binding structures from the introduction of the codex two thousand years ago to the close of the Middle Ages. Part I reviews the scanty physical evidence from the Mediterranean heritage, the early Coptic, Islamic and Ethiopian binding structures and their interrelation with those of the Byzantine realm. Part II is devoted to a detailed analysis of Western binding techniques, distinguishing the carolingian, romanesque and gothic wooden-board bindings as the main typological entities; their structure and function is compared with those of contemporary limp bindings. The book is illustrated with over 200 drawings and photographs and contains a comprehensive bibliography. |
From inside the book
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Page 18
... sewing stations at the head and tail the thread climbs and changes over to the next quire ; the configuration of the link stitch changes accordingly [ e ] . As the sewing thread proceeds in the centrefolds of the consecutive quires in ...
... sewing stations at the head and tail the thread climbs and changes over to the next quire ; the configuration of the link stitch changes accordingly [ e ] . As the sewing thread proceeds in the centrefolds of the consecutive quires in ...
Page 46
... thread [ a ] . In the case of sewing on one pair of sewing stations , the sewing thread enters in the first set of holes at sewing station A , leaving either end the same length , and makes the anchoring loop [ b ] ; one end then enters ...
... thread [ a ] . In the case of sewing on one pair of sewing stations , the sewing thread enters in the first set of holes at sewing station A , leaving either end the same length , and makes the anchoring loop [ b ] ; one end then enters ...
Page 54
... sewing stations and the speedy method of the basic Islamic link - stitch sewing on two sewing stations ( see Figure ... thread to the boards . Holes and remnants of thread along the spine edge allow conclusions about the position of the ...
... sewing stations and the speedy method of the basic Islamic link - stitch sewing on two sewing stations ( see Figure ... thread to the boards . Holes and remnants of thread along the spine edge allow conclusions about the position of the ...
Contents
The first singlequire Coptic codices | 7 |
Notes | 13 |
Late Coptic codices | 32 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Amsterdam UB anchored animal glue bevel binder binding structures blind tooling board attachment board edge bookbinding bookblock byzantine bindings carolingian bindings cent centrefolds chains chamois leather change-over codex codices colours Coptic Coptic bindings cross-stitch dating decoration described drawknife earliest endband endband sewing endband support endleaves evidence examples Federici and Houlis fifteenth century Figure fore-edge Germany girdle book gothic bindings Group Guelf head and tail herringbone sewing hinging loops inner face Kairouan lacing path Lake Constance leather covering Library limp bindings limp parchment bindings link-stitch sewing lower cover material metal Nuremberg observed outer face overcover papyrus parchment pastedown pattern Petersen quires Regemorter romanesque bindings sewing holes sewing stations sewing supports sewing thread sewn SG Cod single slit spine edge St Gall stitches straight sewing strap Szirmai tackets textblock thongs turn-ins upper cover usually variants Vezin wooden boards Würzburg Zutphen Zutphen Librije