#55 Poggio Bracciolini Part 3
The Renaissance Times - Een podcast door Cameron Reilly & Ray Harris
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So back to January 1417. Poggio made a number of book hunting trips that winter. So he must have had a lot of funding from back home. Here’s a short clip from today’s episode: Bruni wrote to him, saying “keep going, don’t worry about the cost, I’ll cover them all, just find more books” On this trip, he had with him a companion, another apostolic secretary from Constance, Bartolomeo de Aragazzi. They were close friends and avid humanists. But they were also rivals. Great fame and glory was to be had for whomever found lost treasures. So in late January, they went their separate ways. Each hoping to find a great treasure. Poggio headed north. Bartolomeo headed to a monastery of hermits deep in the Alps, where he had heard they had a trove of ancient books. But he fell ill and had to return to Constance to recover. Poggio had with him a German scribe he was training. Now Poggio apparently didn’t like monks very much. He thought of them mostly as superstitious, ignorant, and hopelessly lazy He thought Monasteries were the dumping grounds for those deemed unfit for life in the world. Noblemen fobbed off the sons they judged to be weaklings, misfits, or good-for-nothings; merchants sent their dim-witted or paralytic children there; peasants got rid of extra mouths they could not feed. He complained that the only thing they were good at was singing. “What would they say if they rose to go to the plough, like farmers, exposed to the wind and rain, with bare feet, and with their bodies thinly clad? ” But of course he didn’t let on how he really felt when he arrived at a monastery looking for books. Like you, he never said what he really thinks. Skilled in the diplomatic arts. The founders of the early monastic orders didn’t think of copying manuscripts as some kind of esteemed activity it was shit kicker work in old Rome it had been done by slaves So the work was tedious and humiliating. Like being a podcaster. it was excellent work for humbling the spirit. But not for Poggio. For him this was the highest of callings. He was like Indiana Jones. But even in the monasteries, scribes, especially the good ones, who would write neatly and accurately, eventually came to be valued. In early German codes of law, they had the Weregild (vera-gilt) a payment you had to make as punishment if you killed someone. Weregild “were” man, geld “payment” As in Were Wolf, man wolf Killing a scribe was ranked equal to the loss of a bishop or an abbot. Which suggests how difficult and expensive it was to find someone who could copy books. And they needed books to enforce the reading rule. Compared to the ancient libraries of Rome, Alexandria, Baghdad, the libraries of these monasteries were tiny. They eventually developed a special room, the scriptoria, where monks would sit in absolute silence for long hours of painstaking work. Most books in the ancient world took the form of scrolls. But in the fourth century, Christians developed the codex, which was more like a modern book. It was easier to paginate, index and bookmark. For thousands of years, ancient texts were typically written on papyrus, made from the pith or centre tissue of the papyrus plant. But papyrus had come from Egypt. And after the fall of the Roman Empire, it was expensive to get papyrus. trade with the papyrus makers of Egypt had long vanished Paper did not come into general use until the fourteenth century. So for more than a thousand years the chief writing material used for books was made from the skins of animals—cows, sheep, goats, and occasionally deer. Parchment and vellum started being used in the first century BCE. It was initially expensive to produce,