| Index of Scripts | |
| These
examples of scripts
are being progressively added to. The categorisation of scripts is a little
tricky and I have used a very pragmatic approach rather than an attempt
to be heavily scientific. Script styles grade into one another rather
than being separated by immutable stylistic barriers. Scholars of book
hand seem to use more formal systems of classification than those
of document hand,
so that a book script may get the full Latinate treatment of scriptura
gothica textura semiquadrata formata, or suchlike, while historians
of documents may simply refer to a chancery
hand or a legal hand or a typical charter
hand of the period. This may reflect a greater degree of variability
and flexibility among the scribes of documents, but more likely reflects
different preoccupations of scholars.
Even the designation of book hands and document hands reflects usual convention rather than absolutes of classification, as scribes sometimes used scripts normally used for books in documents and vice versa. The hybridisation of book and document hands in the later middle ages led to a proliferation of script styles for a range of purposes. Anyway, the main point of this section is not to classify things, but to have a go at reading them. These pages use extensive graphics, so please be patient as they load. |
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Old Roman scripts More details on the first two sections
New Roman scripts
National Hands or Pre-Carolingian Scripts More details on this section
Caroline minuscule More details on this section
Gothic scripts
and anything else we think of along the way. |
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