Abstract

Among the few major Carolingian libraries that are rather well preserved, Lyon’s Cathedral Chapter Library presents a specific challenge: its fragmentation and dispersion have long hindered studies on its constituent manuscripts, because they were scattered across distant libraries. Nowadays, digitization lifts the greater part of the material obstacles, and virtual reconstructions makes it possible to study damaged manuscripts almost as if their scattered fragments were still preserved together. While accompanying a few such reconstructions on display on Fragmentarium, this paper intends to highlight the importance of an individual XVIIth century collector, Étienne Baluze, in the salvaging of fragments from the Lyon library. Through this example is shown how the very preservation status of fragments within larger ensembles can reveal information on the librarians, collectors, collections, and libraries to whom they belonged, and their own history.

Highlights

  • Because of this situation, it went unnoticed for a long time that the library was fairly well preserved, and to this day, the library remains less famous and less investigated than its peers; in order to notice that the library was relatively intact, and to study its contents, one needs to travel back and forth between several distant libraries. — Or one needed to

  • Among the few major Carolingian libraries that are rather well preserved, Lyon’s Cathedral Chapter Library presents a specific challenge: its fragmentation and dispersion have long hindered studies on its constituent manuscripts, because they were scattered across distant libraries

  • While accompanying a few such reconstructions on display on Fragmentarium, this paper intends to highlight the importance of an individual XVIIth century collector, Étienne Baluze, in the salvaging of fragments from the Lyon library

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Summary

Introduction

It went unnoticed for a long time that the library was fairly well preserved, and to this day, the library remains less famous and less investigated than its peers; in order to notice that the library was relatively intact, and to study its contents, one needs to travel back and forth between several distant libraries. — Or one needed to.

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