Medieval manuscripts were bound in sealskin

The Cistercian monastery of Clairvaux Abbey has a collection of manuscripts that has been prodigious since the Middle Ages. It already had 1,000 volumes in the library by the early 1500s, most of them copied in Clairvaux’s own scriptorium, and today there are 1,450 medieval books in the collection. About 50% of them are in their original bindings, which is extremely rare for medieval manuscripts as they were often rebound. Of the 168 surviving original bindings from the 12th to the 14th century, 28 are still intact, and because the majority of them were produced in-house at Clairvaux Abbey, they are a uniquely rich source of information about how workshops manufactured books in the Middle Ages.
The Romanesque manuscripts copied and bound in the Clairvaux scriptorium have a distinguishing characteristic: a secondary cover known as a chemise made of leather that retains animal hairs. Historical catalogues describe these skins of being made from deer or boar, but their hair follicle distribution on the skins does not match either deer or boar.


Contrary to the prevailing assumption that books were crafted from locally sourced materials, it appears that the Cistercians were deeply embedded in a global trading network, acquiring skins through extensive trade exchanges. This observation extends beyond just the bindings to include most of the materials used for both the covers and the parchment of the text blocks. While librarians, palaeographers and codicologists have struggled to identify the origins and provenance of these skins solely through conventional literary sources, the disciplines of biology and biocodicology offer invaluable insight. The integrated approach used in this study not only enriches our knowledge of Cistercian manuscript production but also highlights the broader economic and cultural exchanges of the medieval period.
The study has been published in the journal Royal Society Open Science and can be read here.
* This article was originally published here
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