
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- The Early History of the Scriveners’ Company Common Paper and its So-Called ‘Oaths’
- Oxford, Corpus Christi College MS 201 and its Copy of Piers Plowman
- Did John Gower Rededicate his Confessio Amantis before Henry IV’s Usurpation?
- Le Songe Vert, BL Add. MS 34114 (the Spalding Manuscript), Bibliothèque de la ville de Clermont, MS 249 and John Gower
- Bodleian Library, MS Ashmole 33: Thoughts on Reading a Work in Progress
- The Rawlinson Lyrics: Context, Memory and Performance
- Linguistic Boundaries in Multilingual Miscellanies: The Case of Middle English Romance
- What Six Unalike Lyrics in British Library MS Harley 2253 Have Alike in Manuscript Layout
- Evidence for the Licensing of Books from Arundel to Cromwell
- Bishops, Patrons, Mystics and Manuscripts: Walter Hilton, Nicholas Love and the Arundel and Holland Connections
- The Choice and Arrangement of Texts in Cambridge, Magdalene College, MS Pepys 2125: A Tentative Narrative about its Material History
- ‘Thys moche more ys oure lady mary longe’: Takamiya MS 56 and the English Birth Girdle Tradition
- Bookish Types: Some Post-Medieval Owners, Borrowers and Lenders of the Manuscripts of The Wise Book of Philosophy and Astronomy
- Laurentius Guglielmus Traversagnus and the Genesis of Vaticana Codex Lat. 11441, with Remarks on Bodleian MS Laud Lat. 61
- The Travels of a Quire from the Twelfth Century to the Twenty-First: The Case of Rawlinson B 484, fols. 1–6
- William Elstob’s Planned Edition of the Anglo-Saxon Laws: A Remnant in the Takamiya Collection
- Gutenberg Meets Digitization: The Path of a Digital Ambassador
- A Bibliography of Toshiyuki Takamiya
- Index of Manuscripts
- General Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
- York Medieval Press: Publications
Evidence for the Licensing of Books from Arundel to Cromwell
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- The Early History of the Scriveners’ Company Common Paper and its So-Called ‘Oaths’
- Oxford, Corpus Christi College MS 201 and its Copy of Piers Plowman
- Did John Gower Rededicate his Confessio Amantis before Henry IV’s Usurpation?
- Le Songe Vert, BL Add. MS 34114 (the Spalding Manuscript), Bibliothèque de la ville de Clermont, MS 249 and John Gower
- Bodleian Library, MS Ashmole 33: Thoughts on Reading a Work in Progress
- The Rawlinson Lyrics: Context, Memory and Performance
- Linguistic Boundaries in Multilingual Miscellanies: The Case of Middle English Romance
- What Six Unalike Lyrics in British Library MS Harley 2253 Have Alike in Manuscript Layout
- Evidence for the Licensing of Books from Arundel to Cromwell
- Bishops, Patrons, Mystics and Manuscripts: Walter Hilton, Nicholas Love and the Arundel and Holland Connections
- The Choice and Arrangement of Texts in Cambridge, Magdalene College, MS Pepys 2125: A Tentative Narrative about its Material History
- ‘Thys moche more ys oure lady mary longe’: Takamiya MS 56 and the English Birth Girdle Tradition
- Bookish Types: Some Post-Medieval Owners, Borrowers and Lenders of the Manuscripts of The Wise Book of Philosophy and Astronomy
- Laurentius Guglielmus Traversagnus and the Genesis of Vaticana Codex Lat. 11441, with Remarks on Bodleian MS Laud Lat. 61
- The Travels of a Quire from the Twelfth Century to the Twenty-First: The Case of Rawlinson B 484, fols. 1–6
- William Elstob’s Planned Edition of the Anglo-Saxon Laws: A Remnant in the Takamiya Collection
- Gutenberg Meets Digitization: The Path of a Digital Ambassador
- A Bibliography of Toshiyuki Takamiya
- Index of Manuscripts
- General Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
- York Medieval Press: Publications
Summary
This paper, originally delivered at the Early Book Society conference in honour of Professor Toshiyuki Takamiya in York in 2011, arose out of the 2009 Oxford conference ‘After Arundel: Religious Writing in Fifteenth-Century England’. In preparing my own contribution, I spent some time looking at Arundel’s Constitutions in relation to the restrictions on the circulation of books and looking for evidence that these restrictions were enforced in the 120 years of their existence. There is ample evidence for their being enforced in relation to reading, and owning translations of, scripture, but very little evidence that they were enforced in terms of the actual approval, or licensing, of texts. It is the evidence for the licensing of books throughout the fifteenth and into the mid-sixteenth century which will be the focus of this essay.
The Context
The Constitutions of Thomas Arundel, Archbishop of Canterbury (1397, 1399–1414), were issued in the convocation of November 1407 and repeated in that of January 1409. They came to prominence more recently in 1995, when Nicholas Watson wrote his much discussed and disputed Speculum article on ‘Censorship and Cultural Change in Late-Medieval England’. The sixth and seventh constitutions relate specifically to books: the sixth deals with the textbooks used in the Universities and the seventh with translations of scripture. The sixth (‘Quia insuper nova via’) describes how universities must deal with books of Wycliffe or since Wycliffe – they are to be examined and passed to the stationers to copy, check for consistency, and sell or pass on, with a master copy in the University chest.
In this essay I deal with the seventh constitution, the only new addition to what Jeremy Catto has seen as no more than ‘republishing the prohibition of unlicensed preachers and the measures to control unorthodox opinion in Oxford which had been enacted in [the Blackfriars Council of] 1382’.
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- Middle English Texts in TransitionA Festschrift Dedicated to Toshiyuki Takamiya on his 70th birthday, pp. 134 - 158Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2014
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