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The first book-length study of the famous pre-1600 library at Corpus Christi College, one of the few college libraries to survive in its original form and with many of its original books in contemporary bindings.The library of Corpus Christi College is one of the most famous of all of those in Oxford and Cambridge. It is one of the few pre-1600 libraries to survive in something like its original form, and the only one still in use as a library. Its main space is still the original room built in 1517, and its furniture, if not original, is still early, most of it dating from 1604. A high proportion of its earliest book-stock, whether print or manuscript, still survives, and there is a wealth of documentation that makes it possible to chart the process of acquisition, especially the major donations of the Founder, Bishop Fox, and first President, John Claymond. And yet there is no modern, book-length study of the College Library. The present volume is intended to provide a scholarly but attractive and readable account of the Library from its conception in the mind of Richard Fox, to the appearance of its earliest surviving catalogue in 1589. It is extensively illustrated, highlighting the rarely-seen original bindings of the early books.
RODNEY M. THOMSON is Emeritus Professor of Medieval History at the University of Tasmania.
Lecture 1: Richard Fox: The Concept and Foundation of the CollegeLecture 2: John Claymond: Executor of Fox's Erasmian ProgrammeLecture 3: The Library in the Age of ElizabethAppendix A: Surviving Books from the College Library to 1589Appendix B: A Letter of John Claymond to an unidentified old friendAppendix C: A Letter of Thomas Linacre to John ClaymondAppendix D: Extracts from the College Accounts relevant to the Library
Handsomely produced and illustrated [it] comprises an expert account of the library of Corpus from its conception to the earliest surviving catalogue of 1589.