Richard Hill's Commonplace Book, or Oxford, Balliol College MS 354, [1] is a manuscript collection of late-medieval English poems and other miscellaneous items compiled between 1503 and 1536 by the London merchant Richard Hill. It is an important source of 15th-century and early 16th-century lyrics, preserving such well-known works as "The Boar's Head Carol", "The Corpus Christi Carol" and "The Nut-Brown Maid". It also presents some interesting sidelights on commercial life in early Tudor England. [2]
Richard Hill's Commonplace Book is a paper manuscript of 514 numbered pages measuring 31.3 centimetres (12.3 in) vertically and 11.3 centimetres (4.4 in) horizontally, [1] a format typical of a tradesman's account book, and it has an old wrapper of limp vellum. [3] It is quired irregularly in 10s and 12s, some quires having missing leaves and some additional ones. [1] It is described as being "well written in small current hands", much the most common hand being that of Hill himself. The first and last few leaves have suffered damage from damp. [4]
Richard Hill, originally a Hitchin man, became first a servant of a certain London alderman called Wynger, then eventually a London merchant trading with the Low Countries. [2] [5] Internal evidence shows that he compiled his commonplace book between the years 1503 and 1536. [6] Ownership inscriptions in different parts of the manuscript indicate that after Hill's death it became the property first of his eldest son, John Hill, and later in the 16th century of one John Stokes. A series of jottings dated 1731 shows it to be in the possession of some person of agricultural interests. It is not known when the commonplace book passed to the library of Balliol College, Oxford, but in 1855 it was recorded that it had recently been found there, "where it had been accidentally concealed, behind a book-case, during a great number of years". The historian J. A. Froude drew attention to it in an essay published in Fraser's Magazine in 1858. An edition was planned by the Camden Society at this time, but never reached publication; the standard editions, by Ewald Flügel and Roman Dyboski, did not appear until 1903 and 1908 respectively. [7] In 1993 Balliol College commissioned Peter Maxwell Davies to compose a choral setting of parts of the Commonplace Book to commemorate the centenary of the death of Benjamin Jowett. Corpus Christi, with Cat and Mouse was first performed by the Balliol College Chapel Choir under the direction of Mark Dawes in November 1993. [8]
Richard Hill's Commonplace Book describes itself as "A Boke of dyueris tales and balettes and dyueris Reconynges etc". Its contents are extraordinarily varied, including treatises on polite behaviour and arithmetic, notes on events in Hill's family, collected proverbs, [4] literature, riddles, [6] chronicles, a French conversation manual, and instructions on breaking horses, conjuring with cards, and making rat poison. [2] Its texts of late medieval carols and other lyrics are especially notable. It is a source for such poems as "The Corpus Christi Carol", "The Boar's Head Carol", "Gentill butler, bell ami", "Make we mery bothe more and lasse", "Alas, my hart will brek in three", "Holy bereth beris", "Draw me nere", "What cher? Gud cher, gud cher, gud cher", and "O marcyfull God, maker of all mankynd". [9] [10] It also includes John Lydgate's "The Virtues of the Mass" and "The Churl and the Bird", Thomas More's "Fortune Verses", the anonymous "Nut-Brown Maid" and The Seven Sages of Rome , "The Treatise of London" (sometimes attributed to William Dunbar), and extracts from John Gower's Confessio Amantis . [4]
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The Corpus Christi Carol or Falcon Carol is a Middle or Early Modern English hymn, first written down by an apprentice grocer named Richard Hill between 1504 and 1536. The original writer of the carol remains anonymous. The earliest surviving record of the piece preserves only the lyrics and is untitled. It has survived in altered form in the folk tradition as the Christmas carol "Down In Yon Forest". The structure of the carol is six stanzas, each with rhyming couplets. The tense changes in the fourth stanza from past to present continuous.
The White's Chair of Moral Philosophy was endowed in 1621 by Thomas White, Canon of Christ Church as the oldest professorial post in philosophy at the University of Oxford.
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John of Worcester was an English monk and chronicler who worked at Worcester Priory. He is now usually held to be the author of the Chronicon ex Chronicis.
The Mulliner Book is a historically important musical commonplace book compiled probably between about 1545 and 1570, by Thomas Mulliner, about whom practically nothing is known, except that he figures in 1563 as modulator organorum (organist) of Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He is believed to have previously resided in London, where John Heywood inscribed the title page of the manuscript Sum liber thomas mullineri / iohanne heywoode teste.. A later annotation on the same page states that: T. Mulliner was Master of St Pauls school, but this has so far proved unsupportable. The provenance of the MS is unknown before it appears in the library of John Stafford Smith in 1776. After passing through the hands of Edward Francis Rimbault the MS was given to the British Museum in 1877 by William Hayman Cummings.
Sir Keith Vivian Thomas is a Welsh historian of the early modern world based at Oxford University. He is best known as the author of Religion and the Decline of Magic and Man and the Natural World. From 1986 to 2000, he was president of Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
William Grey was a medieval English churchman, academic, and Lord High Treasurer. He served as Chancellor of Oxford University and as Bishop of Ely.
The Coventry Mystery Plays, or Coventry Corpus Christi Pageants, are a cycle of medieval mystery plays from Coventry, West Midlands, England, and are perhaps best known as the source of the "Coventry Carol". Two plays from the original cycle are extant having been copied from the now lost original manuscript in the early 19th century. Another, separate manuscript was initially titled the Ludus Coventriae by a 17th-century librarian who erroneously assumed it was copy of the Coventry mystery plays. The collection within this manuscript are now more commonly known as the N-Town Plays and are thought to have originated in East Anglia.
Sir Roger Aubrey Baskerville Mynors was an English classicist and medievalist who held the senior chairs of Latin at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge. A textual critic, he was an expert in the study of manuscripts and their role in the reconstruction of classical texts.
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Handbook for a Confessor is a compilation of Old English and Latin penitential texts associated with – and possibly authored or adapted by – Wulfstan (II), Archbishop of York. The handbook was intended for the use of parish priests in hearing confession and determining penances. Its transmission in the manuscripts seems to bear witness to Wulfstan's profound concern with these sacraments and their regulation, an impression which is similarly borne out by his Canons of Edgar, a guide of ecclesiastical law also targeted at priests. The handbook is a derivative work, based largely on earlier vernacular representatives of the penitential genre such as the Scrifboc and the Old English Penitential. Nevertheless, a unique quality seems to lie in the more or less systematic way it seeks to integrate various points of concern, including the proper formulae for confession and instructions on the administration of confession, the prescription of penances and their commutation.
The Trinity Gower D Scribe, often referred to simply as Scribe D, was a professional scribe and copyist of literary manuscripts active during the late fourteenth and early fifteenth century in London, England. Although his real name long remained unknown, Scribe D has been described as "so well known to students of late Middle English manuscripts that he hardly needs any introduction".
Robert of Cricklade was a medieval English writer and prior of St Frideswide's Priory in Oxford. He was a native of Cricklade and taught before becoming a cleric. He wrote several theological works as well as a lost biography of Thomas Becket, the murdered Archbishop of Canterbury.
Christopher Francis Rivers de Hamel is a British academic librarian and expert on mediaeval manuscripts. He is a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and former Fellow Librarian of the Parker Library. His book Meetings with Remarkable Manuscripts is the winner of the Duff Cooper Prize for 2016 and the Wolfson History Prize for 2017.
Thorlac Francis Samuel Turville-Petre is an English philologist who is Professor Emeritus and former head of the School of English at the University of Nottingham. He specializes in the study of Middle English literature.
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