A Sister Leaf from a Miniature Latin Vulgate Bible
December 17, 2025 in Fragments, Manuscript Studies, Research Group Workshops, Workshops on "The Evidence of Manuscripts"
A Sister Leaf
from a Miniature Latin Vulgate Bible:
Fragments at Princeton
2 columns in 47 lines
Measurements
Leaf maximum circa 121 mm high × 82 mm wide
<Written area circa 90 × 57 mm>
[Posted on 16 December 2025]

Poster 3 for 2025 Autumn Colloquium. Workshops on “Fragments at Princeton”
For the recent 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments, our Associate Eric M. White presented a pair of Workshops on “Fragments at Princeton”, with a focus on “Books in Fragments / Fragments in Books”. The workshops took place in Special Collections of the Princeton University Library, in two sittings.
With a few variations in each workshop, the selected specimens considered a range of manuscript and printed materials. They included, for example, single manuscript leaves (or fragments thereof) on their own or manuscript fragments (single leaves or conjoint bifolia) reused as part of bindings, pastedowns, or endleaves for other texts.
For many of these specimens, Eric demonstrated their characteristics with a riveting commentary about the processes of discovery which brought them to Princeton or which enriched understanding about them once the curator or scholar came across them in the stacks or within their secondary homes in the form of composite codices mixing layers from different dates and places of production and different genres of books.
He presented some specimens of individual leaves as curiosities about which little is known — in case they might be recognized. About one of them I said that I thought I knew of another similar leaf. The Princeton University Leaf came from a set of three boxes of manuscript fragments, which had little or no information about their sources.
Now we introduce another leaf which I believe came from the same manuscript. Do you agree?
