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Summary
How were the libraries mentioned in the preceding chapter fitted up? For instance, what manner of bookcase did Archbishop Chichele put into his library at Canterbury in 1414, or the “bons ouvriers subtilz et plains de sens” supply to the Abbat of Clairvaux in 1496? The primitive book-presses have long ago been broken up; and the medieval devices that succeeded them have had no better fate. This dearth of material need not, however, discourage us. We have, I think, the means of discovering with tolerable certainty what monastic fittings must have been, by comparing the bookcases which still exist in a more or less perfect form in the libraries of Oxford and Cambridge with such monastic catalogues as give particulars of arrangement and not merely lists of books.
The collegiate system was in no sense monastic, indeed it was to a certain extent established to counteract monastic influence; but it is absurd to suppose that the younger communities would borrow nothing from the elder–especially when we reflect that the monastic system, as inaugurated by S. Benedict, had completed at least seven centuries of successful existence before Walter de Merton was moved to found a college, and that many of the subsequent founders of colleges were more or less closely connected with monasteries.
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- The Care of BooksAn Essay on the Development of Libraries and their Fittings, from the Earliest Times to the End of the Eighteenth Century, pp. 125 - 164Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1902