
BUT I will mention that I find the swirlstem design at the side of the page illustrated here VERY SIGNificant. In the meantime I’ll let you all notice them for yourselves. The so-called “Voynich Manuscript” was also in his possession and it’s indications are it had to do with the same thing! I won’t get into the details unless somebody asks me and I am currently studying the issue deeper. HOW would anyone NOW KNOW what they contained, and WHY would anyone have ripped out 12 pages of the rules of the Benedictines? I suspect from certain indications of the Devil image and the city image that they had to do with ALCHEMY, and Holy Roman Emperor Rudolph II in whose personal possession the book last was known for his interest in the alchemical transmutation of base metals into gold as well as other occult matters.

įrom what I have read about it it originally had 320 pages, TWELVE more than the current 310.

Join her in NYC on Monday, April 23 for the third installment of her literary-themed variety show, Necromancers of the Public Domain. Wonderfully Weird & Ingenious Medieval BooksĪyun Halliday is an author, illustrator, theater maker and Chief Primatologist of the East Village Inky zine. How Illuminated Medieval Manuscripts Were Made: A Step-by-Step Look at this Beautiful, Centuries-Old Craftīehold the Beautiful Pages from a Medieval Monk’s Sketchbook: A Window Into How Illuminated Manuscripts Were Made (1494) You’ll also find a lot of interesting historical detail: relocations resulting from the Hussite Wars and the Thirty Years’ War, a close call with fire, and of course the attendant legends.īegin your explorations of the Codex Gigas here. You can have a look for yourself on the Library’s website, where the entire work is viewable in digitized form.Ĭertainly the devil is a great place to start, though his appearance may strike you as a bit comical, given all the fuss.įor viewers unsure of where to start, the library has compiled a guide to the highlights. Its uniform size would’ve required the scribe to rule each page before forming the letters, after which 100 lines a day would have been a reasonable goal. Experts at National Library of Sweden, where the Codex Gigas has come to a rest after centuries of adventures and misadventures, identify it as carolingian minuscule, a popular and highly legible style of medieval script.


The actual lettering does seem to come down to a single scribe with very neat handwriting. In addition to a complete Bible, the “Devil’s Bible” includes an encyclopedia, medical information, a calendar of saints’ days, Flavius Josephus’ histories The Jewish War and Jewish Antiquities and some practical advice on exorcising evil spirits. More likely, the work was spread out over 25 to 30 years, with various authors contributing to the different sections. Benedict’s rules for monastic life were literally cut from the manuscript at an unknown date.)Ī National Geographic documentary concluded that the sprawling manuscript would’ve required a minimum of 5 years of full-time, single-minded labor. Weighing in at 165 lbs, this 3-foot tall bound whale required the skins of 160 donkeys, at the rate of two pages per donkey.
