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Private Collection, Ege's FBNC Portfolio, Dante Leaf, Verso, Detail. Reproduced by Permission.
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A Leaf with Patchwork from the Saint Albans Bible

December 29, 2025 in Fragments, Manuscript Studies

A Leaf with Patchwork
from the Saint Albans Bible
in the Collection of William Voelkle

Double columns of 46 lines in Gothic Script
with 2-line Decorated Initials, Bar-Extensions,
Foliate Ornament,
and Marginal Inhabitants (Monkey, Dragon, Bird)

Northern France, circa 1330

Psalms 107:14 ([facerimus uir-]/tutem et ipse)
– 108:31 (a persequentibus [animam meam] )
and 109:2 ([tuorum te-]cum principium . . . )
– 110:6 (. . . operum suorum / [adnuntiabit populo suo])

Plus Cut-Out with Patch apparently from the Same Bible
Cut out (in 14 lines of one column):
Psalms 109:1–2 (Dixit Dominus domino meo . . . tuorum te-/]cum principium)
Replacement Patch (in 14 lines pasted to opposite side):
Epistle of James 1:11–15 (peccatum uero cum / [consummatum fuerit]

[Posted on 27 December 2025]

Collection of William Voelkle, Framed Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible: Recto under glass. Photograph by William Voelkle.

Our series of RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”, continues to uncover more leaves from the fragmentary manuscripts which the workshops consider, by request. Now we report another leaf from the Saint Albans Bible, with which our workshops began.

We set the stage by reviewing two leaves which generated our interest in this manuscript and its fragments. They belong to the Farrell and Weber Collections respectively, with portions from the Old Testament and the New Testament respectively.

The ‘new’ leaf belongs to the Collection of William Voelkle. Its pieced-together pieces represent parts of one Book from the Old Testament and another from the New Testament.

The patchwork, replacing a cut-out portion with a cutting from elsewhere in the volume, resembles a phenomenon which we explored previously in another fragmentary Vulgate Bible, the larger Lectern Bible dispersed by Otto F. Ege as his Number 14.

  • Patch Work in Otto Ege MS 14
Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Otto Ege Collection, MS 14, Genesis Opening Leaf: Recto, Detail of Patch.

Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Otto Ege Collection, MS 14, Genesis Opening Leaf: Recto, Detail of Patch.

Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Otto Ege Collection, MS 14, Genesis Opening Leaf: Verso, Detail of Patch.

Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Otto Ege Collection, MS 14, Genesis Opening Leaf: Verso, Detail of Patch.

1. The Farrell Leaf
(from the Book of Numbers)

Our workshops first examined a leaf on loan to the RGME with part of the text of the Book of Numbers in a Latin Vulgate Bible in double columns of 46 lines in Gothic script, with decorative elements. Reports of our discoveries about that leaf have been reported in our blog on Manuscript Studies.

  • A Latin Vulgate Leaf from the Book of Numbers (Part 1)
  • Latin Vulgate Bible Leaf in the Collection of Jennah Farrell, Part 2: Provenance
  • The Latin Vulgate Bible Leaf in the Farrell Collection Part 3: The Full Leaf

Collection of Jennah Farrell, Manuscript Leaf in Mat: top left. Photograph by Jennah Farrrell.

Recto

Collection of Jennah Farrell, Single Leaf from the Book of Numbers in a Medieval Latin Vulgate Bible manuscript. Full extent of the leaf, unframed: Recto. Photography by Mildred Budny.

Verso

Collection of Jennah Farrell, Latin Vulgate Bible Leaf: Verso with Ruler. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

2. The Weber Leaf
(from the Acts of the Apostles)

As the workshops progressed, our Associate Richard Weber revealed another leaf from this manuscript in his collection, to join our blogposts about various items in his collection. Unlike the first leaf considered in our workshops, from the Old Testament Book of Numbers, this leaf belongs to the New Testament portion of the bible, from within the text of the Acts of the Apostles. See

  • The Weber Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible

Collection of Richard Weber, Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible, Verso: Top Left. Photograph by Richard Weber.

Recto

Collection of Richard Weber, Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible, Recto. Photograph by Richard Weber.

Verso

Collection of Richard Weber, Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible, Recto. Photograph by Richard Weber.

Collection of William Voelkle, Framed Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible: Recto under glass. Photograph by William Voelkle.

3. The Voelkle Leaf
(from the Psalms
and the Epistle of James)
—A Patchwork Leaf

Next, our Associate William Voelkle sent a photograph of his leaf from the Saint Albans Bible.

About the leaf, William Voelkle reported that

I purchased the leaf from Philip Duschnes (NY dealer) August 10, 1983, as ‘repaired.’ The historiated miniature had been cut out and replaced with another section of the text.
— email of 29 December 2025

About Duschnes and his business, see, for example Philip C. Duschnes.

Contained within a glass-fronted frame, the leaf shows one side, but turns the other side to the back of the frame, where it remains hidden.

We examine the visible side, with glimpses also of the opposite side as revealed by show-through and other evidence.

Recto (the Visible Side)

Collection of William Voelkle, Framed Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible: Recto. Photograph by William Voelkle.

The page has no running title, unlike some other parts of the Saint Albans Bible (see above).

Mainly the text on the page presents part of the Book of Psalms, plus a replacement patch for fourteen lines cut out from one column, which removed the first lines of Psalm 109.

A modern pencil note at the left opposite line 3 of the left-hand column identifies the number of the Vulgate Psalm (“108”) which opens there (Deus laudem meam me tacueris). It seems likely that the note postdates the dismemberment of the manuscript, so that an identification of the contents of the leaf might be appropriate, starting with the first of the Psalms on the page.

Rubrication in red pigment announces the start of Psalms 108 and 110 — perhaps it did so also for the opening of Psalm 109, but that title would have been lost in the cut-out.

Show-through from the opposite side reveals (in mirrored view) the presence of polychrome bar ornament in verticals along the inner and outer margins as well as the intercolumn — that is, at the left-hand side of both columns of text on that page and, to a less marked extent, at the right-hand side of the outer column — and in branching formations at both upper and lower margins.

The Texts:
Parts of Two Different Books of the Bible

The visible side of the leaf carries text principally from the Book of Psalms. It begins midword within Psalms 107:14 ([facerimus uir-]/tutem et ipse) and ends within Psalms 110:31 (operum suorum / [adnuntiabit populo suo]). The text carries the full text of Psalm 108, but only the last part of Psalm 109, because its first lines have been cut out and removed, taking the opening initial and the adjacent section of its intercolumnar bar ornament at the left. Untouched was the bar ornament at the right-hand side, along with the full-length bird perched in profile upon its foliage.

The Psalms text in column a and the upper and lower parts of column b:

Psalms 107:14 ([facerimus uir-]/tutem et ipse) – 108:31 (a persequentibus /[animam meam])
and (after the gap produced by the cut-out)
Psalms 109:2 (tuorum te-/]cum principium) – 110:1–6 (operum suorum / [adnuntiabit populo suo])

Missing text cut out from column b:

Psalms 109:1–2 ([Dixit dominus Domino meo . . . tuorum te-]cum principium)

Replacement patch of fourteen lines in a single column:

Epistle of James 1:11–15 (Exortus est enim . . . peccatum uero cum / [consummatum fuerit]

Untouched in the cutting process was the bar ornament at the right-hand side, along with the full-length bird perched upon its foliage. Seen in profile facing left, the bird raises its offside leg and its head to look up to the left. Might the bird perhaps depict a thrush or strike?

Collection of William Voelkle, Framed Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible: Recto under glass, Midsection with patch. Photograph by William Voelkle.

A patch in the second column supplies a passage of fourteen lines of text where the original text had been cut out — presumably as a specimen of text and/or decoration. The supplied portion presents similar layout, script, structure, and intercolumnar border decoration as characteristic of the Saint Albans Bible, so perhaps or presumably another leaf from the same book supplied the gap. Certainty about the source of the replacement might become clearer if, say, the portion of the Epistle of James in the volume can be identified either intact or defective.

Collection of William Voelkle, Framed Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible: Recto under glass, Detail with patch. Photograph by William Voelkle.

The bar ornament at the left on the replacement patch is broader than the bar ornament which it supplants or interrupts in the intercolumn of the Psalms leaf, although its undulating ornamental pattern and coloring resembles that bar. The extensions to the left from the replacement bar imply that this patch came from a left-hand column on its former page, reaching into the inner margin.

The Decoration and Figural Ornament

Ornamented initials stand at the openings of the individual Psalms, as inset 2-line polychrome capitals within frames. From their left-hand side, extensions might rise or descend along the side of the column of text to curve into the upper or lower margins in elaborate branching foliate motifs. The individual verses of the Psalms open within the continuous lines of text as inset 1-line capitals, rendered alternately in blue pigment or gold, within beds of penline decoration.

Top

Collection of William Voelkle, Framed Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible: Recto under glass, Top. Photograph by William Voelkle.

Bottom

Collection of William Voelkle, Framed Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible: Recto under glass, Lower portion. Photograph by William Voelkle.

Seen in profile, the animated elements in the lower margin comprise

1) a charming undulating dragonesque creature with raised wings at the outer right, an elongated neck, and an open-mouthed head facing right with a dog-like head having pointed ears and a bearded lower jaw; and

2) an upright monkey striding toward the left. In its outstretched hands this creature holds an implement which might depict a spindle and whorl.

Below the monkey’s feet, two foliate terminals of the border ornament have descending streaks of ink and pigment which damaged the page at an unknown stage.

Collection of William Voelkle, Framed Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible: Recto under glass, detail: monkey. Photograph by William Voelkle.

Questions or Suggestions?

Do you know of other leaves from this Bible? Do you know of other works by the same scribe(s) or artist(s)? We welcome your feedback.

*************

Tags: Collection of Richard Wagner, Collection of William Voelkle, Fragmentology, Jennah Farrell Collection, manuscript fragments, Manuscript Illumination, Otto Ege MS 14, Patchwork in Manuscripts, RGME Workshops on the Evidence of MSS Etc., Saint Albans Bible, Vulgate Bible Manuscripts
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2026 Annual Appeal

November 7, 2025 in Manuscript Studies, RGME Annual Appeal

2026 Annual Appeal
for Donations
to Support
our Mission and Activities

[Posted on 7 November 2025]

We invite you to join our 2026 Annual Appeal, as the Research Group rounds out the extraordinarily successful year of accomplishments for 2025 (see below), and prepares for the future. That we were able to accomplish so much in 2025, in the face of many significant setbacks for funding and swift shifts in plans to host our activities, attests to the strength and vigor of the volunteers and donors (individual and institutional).

They all, in collegial collaboration, have made it possible to maintain course for our activities, to produce so many events both hybrid and online, to gather to learn about discoveries for research and the progress on work-in-progress, and to celebrate the delights of learning more about the marvels of books and their stories transmitted across the centuries. This momentum carries our plans forward to 2026, with activities already planned and more to come.

We turn to you to help us to maintain momentum and share the quest. Please donate what you can. For our small, deducated, nonprofit organization powered principally by volunteers, every donation can make a difference.

Ways to Donate Online and Other Ways

Ways to contribute?

There are many ways to help: Funds, Goods, Expertise, Time. All can help our work and mission.

For suggestions, see:

  • Contributions & Donations
  • Donations

1) Via Mightycause:

  • Donate to RGME
  • RGME 2026 Annual Appeal via Mightycause

2) Via Paypal, Venmo, ApplePay, Pay Later, or Debit or Credit Card:


Suggestions or Feedback?

Please leave your Comments or questions below, Contact Us, or visit

  • our FaceBook Page
  • our Facebook Group
  • our Twitter Feed (@rgme_mss)
  • our Bluesky nest @rgmesocial.bluesky.social)
  • our LinkedIn Group
  • our Instagram presence(@rgme94)
  • our Blog on Manuscript Studies and its Contents List

A Community of Scholars,
Teachers, Students, Friends,
and Admirers of Books

We thank you for your support.

Please  join our community and join our cause.

******

Summary of Activities So Far

Building on the momentum and enthusiasm for this year’s accomplishments, we prepare more for 2026.

Activities in Progress and Accomplished in 2025

In 2025 we had:

Two Symposia dedicated to “Agents and Agencies” in the realms of books

  • 2025 Spring and Autumn Symposia

More Episodes for our online series “The Research Group Speaks”

  • “The Research Group Speaks”: The Series

More RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”

  • RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”

More Meetings of the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

  • Meetings of the Friends of the RGME

Logo (2024) of the Friends of the Research Group on Manuscript Evidence

Steps toward the preparation of a Cookbook of Favorite Recipes of the Friends of the RGME

  • For example, entries for Favorite Recipes for Lemonade, Etc.

Poster 2. 2025 Autumn Colloquium. Poster set in RGME Bembino.

Multiple conference sessions, sponsored and co-sponsored, at

1) the International Congress on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo
RGME Activities at the 2025 International Congress on Medieval Studies

2) the International Medieval Congress at Leeds
RGME Activities at the 2025 International Medieval Congress at Leeds

By request, a special Autumn Colloquium on Fragments, in hybrid form, which had to move abruptly from the first host institution to a welcome instead at Princeton

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium on Fragments

Onward to 2026

Our website reports activities and projects as they unfold for the Year 2026, when our Theme centers upon “Transformation and Renewal”. Join us to see how they may unfold.

Please donate what you can to keep our organization on course, in the face of widespread challenges for funding. We are grateful for your support.

1) Via Mightycause:

  • Donate to RGME
  • RGME 2026 Annual Appeal via Mightycause

2) Via Paypal, Venmo, ApplePay, Pay Later, or Debit or Credit Card:


Information and Suggestions
for Donations in Funds and Contributions in Kind

  • Contributions & Donations
  • Donations

Many thanks!

J. S. Wagner Collection. Leaf from from Prime in a Latin manuscript Breviary. Folio 4 Verso, with part of Psalm 117 (118) in the Vulgate Version, set out in verses with decorated initials.

J. S. Wagner Collection, Leaf from from Prime in a Latin manuscript Breviary. Folio 4 Verso, with part of Psalm 117 (118) in the Vulgate Version, set out in verses with decorated initials.

*****

 

Tags: Friends of the Reaearch Group on Manuscript Evidence, Manuscript studies, RGME Annual Appeal, RGME Symposia, RGME Workshops on the Evidence of MSS Etc., The Research Group Speaks
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Workshop 6. “What’s In a Name?”

April 16, 2025 in Announcements, Manuscript Studies, Research Group Workshops

RGME Workshops
on
“The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”

Workshop 6
“What’s In a Name?
Guides to Nomenclature
for Manuscript Studies”
Sunday 27 April 2025

Jan Van Eyck, The Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele, 1434–36, Bruges, Groeningemuseum (detail), image from the Closer to Van Eyck project (https://closertovaneyck.kikirpa.be/)

[Posted on 16 April 2025]

Continuing our series of RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”, we move from the first series, Workshops 1–5 devoted principally to identifying selected Medieval Latin Vulgate Bible Manuscript Fragments.

The Name ‘Game’

By request, for Workshop 6 we will consider ‘best practices’ with regard to the use of Nomenclature for Manuscript Studies.

We explore the range of terms in use (in English and other languages) for different parts of books, from the outside in. In this way, we consider the merits — or otherwise — of terms in use for different parts of manuscripts, books, bindings, and other features of the material evidence of written sources. How helpful and comprehensible are the systems of terminology?

Examples of reference works online and in print will be examined, with observations on their usefulness for various purposes, types of books, problems, and approaches.

Do you have specific questions? We can help.

Add-On

Since Workshop 5, a new discovery of a medieval Latin Bible leaf has come to light, so that we might briefly introduce it to our ongoing project on those materials.

The owner contacted us because of our blog on Manuscript Studies, which featured some leaves from the same Bible manuscript despoiled and distributed by Otto F. Ege, biblioclast. His work, its widespread legacy, and multiple projects dedicated to identifying and reconstructing (at least virtually) the fragments of manuscripts inspired us to prepare our 2025 Autumn Colloquium on “Break-Up Books and Make-Up Books”.

  • 2025 RGME Autumn Colloquium at the University of Waterloo

Can you guess which manuscript this fragment came from?

We show one side, as it stands in the glass frame which at present contains it. Visible within the window of the mat is the leaf with part of the running title (MA-) and the text laid out in two columns of thirty-two lines. In the intercolumn, a segmented frieze-like vertical series of J– or reverse L-shaped bar motifs in alternating red and blue pigment extends above and below the 2-line inset initial A (for Anno) for Chapter VII.

Private Collection. Leaf from a Medieval Latin Vulgate Bible, Manuscript, ‘Verso’.

Registration

  • Workshop 6. “What’s In a Name?” Tickets

After registration, we will send the Zoom Link shortly before the event.  The Link will come from the RGME, not Eventbrite or Zoom.

With registration, we invite you to make a Voluntary Donation in support of our nonprofit educational organization powered principally by volunteers. Your donation for our Section 509(c)(3) nonprofit organization might be tax-deductible to the fullest extent permitted by law.

We thank you for your support for our organization and interest in our activities.

We hope to see you there.

*****

Jan Van Eyck, The Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele, 1434–36, Bruges, Groeningemuseum (detail), image from the Closer to Van Eyck project (https://closertovaneyck.kikirpa.be/)

Tags: Manuscript studies, Nomenclature for Manuscript Studies, RGME Workshops on the Evidence of MSS Etc.
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Workshop 4. “Manuscript Fragments Compared”

February 16, 2025 in Announcements, Manuscript Studies, Research Group Workshops

RGME Workshops
on
“The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”
(Formerly: “Examining Original Sources”)

Workshop 4
“Manuscript Fragments Compared”

Sunday 23 February 2025
1:00- 2:30 p.m. EST (GMT-4) by Zoom

We cordially invite you to join us for our next RGME Workshop on the “Evidence of Manuscripts Etc.” The series gives the opportunity collectively to examine original sources, in manuscript and other written forms. Beginners and experts are welcome; we can learn together.

The Series

Originally this series was planned as a two-part series of workshops to consider the medieval “Farell Leaf” on loan to the RGME Library and Archives from the Collection of Jennah Farrell. After rich discussions concerning the fragment and evidence for its production and provenance, most probably as part of the Saint Albans Bible (dismembered in 1964), our workshops have turned into a series for teaching manuscripts and related studies.

Collection of Jennah Farrell, Single Leaf from the Book of Numbers in a Medieval Latin Vulgate Bible manuscript: Recto, top. Photography by Mildred Budny.

Workshop 4

Workshop 4 introduces a comparative study. The plentiful genre of medieval Latin Vulgate Bibles is a rich field in Manuscript Studies. Work on cases of deliberately disbursed manuscripts has yielded in the last two decades a selection of stand-out works. Among them is the Saint Albans Bible, known through numerous studies in print and online. Examples include

  • “Breaking Bad: The Incomplete History of the Saint Albans Bible” (1 Nov 2019)
  • The Book, The Leaf, The Knife, and Some Bother
  • The St Albans Bible (20 June 2021)

Since Workshop 3, another leaf from the medium-format Saint Albans Bible has come to our attention. It stands in the collection of our Associate, Richard Weber – from whose collection our blog on Manuscript Studies has reported other discoveries. Its portion from the Acts of the Apostles offers comparison with the Farrell Leaf from the Book of Numbers, with a view toward the presentation of both Old and New Testaments within its former single volume.

Now see:

  • The Weber Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible

Collection of Richard Weber, Leaf from the Saint Albans Bible, Recto: Top Right. Photograph by Richard Weber.

In our workshop, the case of that manuscript is joined by another fragmented Bible, dismembered instead by the biblioclast Otto F. Ege: namely his large-format Ege MS 14, represented by a leaf now on loan to the RGME for teaching purposes. Over the years, our blog has contributed discoveries to knowledge of that manuscript (see Manuscript Studies). For our workshop, Richard Weber reports his leaf from that manuscript as well.

Private Collection, Leaf from ‘Ege MS 14’. Part of the Book of Jeremiah, Recto, Detail. Photograph by Mildred Budny.

Resources for the Quest

The different agents of destruction for these two books provide instructive case studies for the different but overlapping resources available in print and online for the detective work of fragmentology, in the quest to trace the steps of re-distribution of leaves from these Bibles, with a view toward identifying the locations of survivors and virtually reconstructing their original books, insofar as possible.

We welcome participants to join the quest and come forward with questions, updates on any work they have been doing on the Farrell Leaf, or suggestions for potential avenues of study in future workshops.

Registration

Registration is required and free. We are grateful for Voluntary Donations accompanying your Registration to help support our nonprofit educational organization powered principally by volunteers.

  • Workshop 4. “Manuscript Fragments Compared”: Tickets

Note that our Workshop series now appears on our Eventbrite Registration Portal:

  • RGME Workshops on “Examining Original Sources”: Tickets: Tickets

If you have issues with the Zoom Link or connecting, please contact

  • director@manuscriptevidence.org or rgmesocial@gmail.com .

Information about the series

  • RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”

  • The Bridge of Signs

  • Handlist of Recources for Manuscript Studies and Fragmentology

Workshop 5 is planned for Sunday March 2025 at 1:30-2:30 pm EST (GMT-5) by Zoom.

Please join us if your timetable allows. We look forward to welcoming you.

*****

Questions? Suggestions?

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We look forward to seeing you at our events!

*****

Tags: Collection of Richard Weber, Fragmentology, Jennah Farrell Collection, Latin Vulgate Bibles, Manuscript studies, Medieval manuscripts, Otto Ege MS 14, Otto F. Ege, RGME Workshops on the Evidence of MSS Etc., Saint Albans Bible
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Two Example Pages, Described and Analyzed

January 18, 2025 in Uncategorized

Two Example Pages
Described and Analyzed

As companion to the RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.” (Also Known as “Looking at Original Sources”), launched in 2024, we present a case setting out the stages of looking at the pages of two medieval manuscripts.

As part of the “RGME Lending Library,” these two pages have been introduced in a blogpost soon after we first encountered them, as they stand in their archival modern frames which turn the backs of the leaves to the covered back of the frame. Our examination proceeds by the pages which are revealed to us. For the story so far, see:

  • Two Pages

We now prepare a RGME Research Booklet to demonstrate the steps and present the results of the investigation which they enable. This Booklet and demonstration build upon the foundation principles of the RGME Workshops, described here:

  • The Bridge of Signs

Watch This Space.

We invite you to attend the Workshops:

  • RGME Workshops on “The Evidence of Manuscripts, Etc.”

All are welcome, including experts and beginners alike. Given the range of materials and original sources to explore, and the fields of expertise or experience which they call for, it is perhaps unlikely that anyone might be expert in everything under examination.

There might be something to learn, and the range of materials can pertain to a very wide range of interests, medieval and more.

*****

 

Tags: RGME Workshops on Looking at Manuscripts, RGME Workshops on the Evidence of MSS Etc., The Bridge of Signs
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