Certaine Worthy Manvscripts: Medieval Books in the Fisher Library

Friday, May 22nd, 2020 - Friday, August 21st, 2020

The medieval bishop and bibliophile Richard de Bury describes books as an "infinite treasure," for they, more than any other human contrivance, are able to preserve the knowledge and the wisdom, as well as the follies and the failures, of previous generations – "in books I find the dead as if they were alive." This exhibition aims to bring the medieval world to life by drawing on the many treasures from the period to be found in the Fisher Library. It will celebrate the medieval book, and the medieval written word more generally, in all its variety in terms of both subject matter and physical form. Included will be books on topics from religion to science and history to the law and in formats from the codex to the charter to the tally stick. Though the main focus of the exhibition will be on medieval manuscripts – that is, books written by hand – it will also explore the transition from handwritten to printed books that began at the very end of the medieval period. Medieval books, and especially their aesthetic qualities, have been a recurrent source of inspiration for the makers of books in subsequent periods, and the exhibition will also examine this medievalist tradition in book production, especially in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

Mon - Wed & Fri 9am - 5pm
Thu 9am - 8pm
Sat & Sun CLOSED

Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library
120 St. George Street

Toronto, ON CANADA

43.6640736, -79.3989838

Certaine Worthy Manvscripts: Medieval Books in the Fisher Library