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The Historical Manuscripts at Lambeth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

When Peter the Great was wearied with London and Londoners, and even receiving visits of ‘the thin gentleman’ in ‘a modest looking coach’ to his lodgings in Norfolk Street, Strand, and returning them through the back door of Kensington House had ceased to amuse, he was induced to make an expedition from Deptford to Lambeth where, we are told, ‘nothing in England astonished him so much as the Archiepiscopal library … he declared that he had never imagined that there were so many printed volumes in the world.’ One would like to know if they displayed to him among the MSS. that Elizabethan atlas (463) with its wonderful map of the New World and its mariner's compass in the wooden cover—an atlas made, as it shows, in days when Africa was better known than Scotland and Canada included what we now know as the United States; or Sir Henry Maynwaring's treatise on nautical terms (91, cf. 268), parent of many similar works. They form at any rate part of the original collection which the Archbishops hold in trust ‘to ye service of God and his Church, of the Kings and Commonwealth of this Realme, and particularly of the Archbishops of Canterbury,’ in the terms of Archbishop Abbott's will, ‘as they will answere unto me, and my predecessor [Richard Bancroft] in that fearefull day of God.’ Those treasures thus preserved have been added to, under sanctions less tremendous, not only by the munificence of Archbishops such as Sheldon and Tenison, Secker and Manners-Sutton, but also by the gifts of readers: or if Lambeth Library is the only one in London, public or private, of which it can be said that access has been given to students for over three hundred years, it may be allowed to the enthusiasm of one of the youngest as well as the latest of its Keepers to venture the opinion that it has gained thereby not less than it has given. It was a reader, John Selden, who saved it in the days of the Commonwealth: it was yet other readers, William Dugdale, and in the following century Richard Trevor, Bishop of Durham, who recovered for it valuable MSS. which, owing to the change of the times, could no longer be regained, as had been done in earlier days, by the weapons of the major excommunication and that godly discipline as to which some of my brother librarians probably agree with the Prayer Book that its restoration is much to be wished. And while there are many other readers down to the present time to whom the Library is indebted not only for books but even for MSS., there have been few I believe, who share with King James I the ignominy of having abused their privilege.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1917

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References

page 185 note 1 Macaulay, , Hist. Eng., ed. Firth, vi. 2790, 2792.Google Scholar

page 192 note 1 For the benefit of historical students it may be worth while to point out that these volumes do not present a calendar of all the MSS. that once belonged to Carew. In investigating the history of the Burghley MSS., a fascinating but provoking study, I was led to consider how far the conventional description of Lambeth MSS. 596–638 as Codices Carewani was exhaustive. That there are some in Bodley that belonged to Carew is well known, but then also I have seen others in the British Museum which were probably his, unless he annotated other people's MSS. The curious who will compare the two lists following: B 104, 131, 248, 250, 257, 266, 270, 278, 282, 291, 293, 294, 299, 300, 301, 302, 305, 307, 310, 312–21, 490, 747, 774, 776; C 248, 250, 254, 255, 257, 263, 264, 270, 274, 278, 280, 282, 285–9, 292–4, 298–9, 302, 307, 310, 312–21, 490, 494, 506–8, 510, 512, 515–16, 520–21, 636, 637. 638. may hesitate (as I do) to expand the first into ‘Burghley’ and the second into ‘Carew,’ at any rate without some eliminations, but will observe several startling coincidences for which the relations of Robert Cecil and Carew may or may not account. Some MSS. of Burghley's were once in the possession of Richard Chiswell, and may have come to Lambeth through Bancroft or Tenison, but the collection sold in 1687 was, as it seems to me, probably a remnant, though of respectable size. The point of this note, however, is to call the attention of students to the importance of a possibly unnamed seventeenth-century MS. catalogue of MSS. in which the contents may be numbered AAAA, BBBB, etc., for if it exists it will probably supply the completion of the list of MSS. which Carew owned.

page 194 note 1 Browne, Cave, Lambeth Palace, pp. 791–80.Google Scholar

page 196 note 1 Green, J. R., Stray Studies, p. 158.Google Scholar