G-VVM4M3Z5F5

Detail View: Medieval Collection: Flyleaf

Image Number: 
Brotherton_500_016
Reference Number: 
Brotherton Collection MS 500
Image Title: 
Flyleaf
Parent Work Title: 
Prick of Conscience
Creator: 
Neale, T.C.
Creator Role: 
Scribe
Creator Attribution: 
Rolle, Richard, of Hampole, 1290?-1349
Date Created: 
14th-15th century [1380-1420?]
Page: 
v v
Image Sequence Number: 
001p
Description: 
Front flyleafs contain extensive 19th century notes by T.C. Neale and F.A. Harrison relating to the manuscript. 19th century pagination appears in the corner of each folio, probably by T.C. Neale. All folio references use modern pencil foliation at the bottom of the recto pages.
Language Code: 
eng-GB
Category of Material: 
Manuscripts
Sub-Category: 
Codex
Technique Used: 
Handwriting
Medium: 
Ink
Support: 
Paper
Time Period Covered: 
19th Century CE
Item Height: 
205 mm
Item Width: 
125 mm
Current Repository: 
Leeds University Library, The University of Leeds, U.K.
Provenance: 
Neale, T.C., Governor of Essex County Jail, Chelmsford, former owner
Provenance: 
Harrison, Frederick A. (by 1898, grandson of T.C. Neale)
Provenance: 
Sotheby's sale 30th January 1920, lot 116.
Provenance: 
Maggs Brothers (Purchased from Maggs Brothers for the Brotherton Collection in 1950)
Provenance: 
Sotheby's sale 15th October 1945, lot 2086
Provenance: 
Harmswoth, Leicester, Sir
Rights Holder - Image: 
University of Leeds
Rights holder - Work: 
University of Leeds
References: 
Lewis, R. E., and A. McIntosh, 'A Descriptive Guide to the Manuscripts of the Prick of Conscience' (Oxford: Society for the Study of Mediaeval Languages and Literature, 1982), pp. 55-56.
References: 
Humphreys, K. W., and J. Lightbown, 'Two Manuscripts of the Pricke of Conscience in the Brotherton Collection, University of Leeds', Leeds Studies in English, 7-8 (1952), pp. 29-30.
Bibliographic Citation: 
Ker, N. R., 'Medieval Manuscripts in British Libraries', vol. 3 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1983), p. 67.
Notes: 
The authorship is very often ascribed to Richard Rolle of Hampole, a prolific 14th-century hermit and mystic, but modern scholarship has cast doubt over this assertion and has instead ascribed the work to a different and anonymous writer.
Date Captured (yyyy-mm-dd): 
2010-02-11
Multi Page Number: 
80
Image Creation Technique: 
Digital capture by The University of Manchester Library
Date Image Added (yyyy-mm): 
2010-02
Metadata Language: 
eng-GB
Collection Code: 
Medieval