Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of abbreviations
- Preface
- Introduction
- A CODICOLOGY
- 1 Writing materials and writing tools
- II The external characteristics of the written heritage
- III Writing and copying
- Appendix: Forgeries
- B THE HISTORY OF LATIN SCRIPT
- C THE MANUSCRIPT IN CULTURAL HISTORY
- Bibliography
- Index of manuscripts cited
- Index of names and subjects
- Index of authors cited
- Plate Section
Appendix: Forgeries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of abbreviations
- Preface
- Introduction
- A CODICOLOGY
- 1 Writing materials and writing tools
- II The external characteristics of the written heritage
- III Writing and copying
- Appendix: Forgeries
- B THE HISTORY OF LATIN SCRIPT
- C THE MANUSCRIPT IN CULTURAL HISTORY
- Bibliography
- Index of manuscripts cited
- Index of names and subjects
- Index of authors cited
- Plate Section
Summary
A peripheral problem in palaeography is recognising forgeries and texts that have been falsified. The forging of manuscripts of allegedly antique or medieval origin is relatively rare in comparison with the forging of charters, but comes under various guises. There are two motives predominant behind their production: to offer forged texts and promote their authenticity, or to put something on the commercial market. Some forgeries betray themselves by the poor quality of their script, others through blunders; often old parchment is used.
In the eighteenth century Chrysostom Hanthaler, a Cistercian of Lilienfeld, fabricated and penned annals of the monastery allegedly from the thirteenth century. Romantic chauvinism was the motivation around 1820 for Wenzel Hanka in forging the Königinhof and Grünberg manuscripts from which he published his Old Czech songs. The ambition to discover something called forth the forgeries by the many-sided Georg Zappert, his Old High German ‘lullaby’ (with Hebrew vocalisation) and the ‘Conversation-book’ of Maximilian, amongst others.
The alleged specimen of handwriting from a ‘lost’ work of Cornelius Nepos in an uncial palimpsest manuscript was exposed by Ludwig Traube by reference to the inexpertly used facsimile. Uncial fragments of Plautus and Catullus were also produced, the former on purple parchment allegedly of the fourth century, the latter a palimpsest under a Middle High German animal fable.
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- Latin PalaeographyAntiquity and the Middle Ages, pp. 46 - 48Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1990