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Thomas Becket's little book

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27 December 2020, 11:25 AM
wtg
Thomas Becket's little book
quote:
More has been written about Thomas Becket, the archbishop hacked to death in Canterbury Cathedral exactly 850 years ago, than any other non-royal English person of the Middle Ages. And yet it seems it's still possible to discover new things about his remarkable life.

Before dawn on 14 October 1164, Thomas Becket found an open gate in the city walls and rode out of Northampton with a servant and two guides, the sound of their horses' hooves masked by high wind and driving rain.

The archbishop was making a run for it after a week on trial in Northampton Castle. The initial charge had been a minor one, but King Henry II had added new and increasingly serious accusations, and a verdict of treason was looking likely.

Becket headed north, making it to Lincoln in two days, then put on the rough, dark woollen tunic of a local religious order, adopted the name Brother Christian, and turned south into the wilderness of the fens. His companions were genuine lay brothers, able to lead him through the marshes and waterways to isolated hermitages and priories, where he would be able to plan his next moves. Had he been caught, the leading Becket expert Prof Anne Duggan says, the king could have chosen any punishment he liked - castration, blinding, even death.

But Becket wasn't caught.

He made it, ultimately, to Kent and was rowed from there to France in the first days of November.

In exile he would need money, so before leaving Northampton, Becket had secretly sent his closest confidant, the scholar Herbert of Bosham, to Canterbury, to gather as much as he could and to take it to the Abbey of St Bertin, near Calais. But there was also one other thing he wanted Herbert to find - a certain little book.

"The implication is that it was a book that was very important to Becket, and that Herbert would know what it was," Anne Duggan says.

"It's quite interesting that he doesn't tell us - so there is a mystery there. It wasn't a law book, it wasn't a gospel, it was a little book - a codicella."


Story here:

https://www.bbc.com/news/stories-55370722


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We are all visitors to this time, this place. We are just passing through. Our purpose here is to observe, to learn, to grow, to love… and then we return home. - Australian Aboriginal proverb

Bazootiehead-in-training



27 December 2020, 12:14 PM
jodi
Interesting story. I found myself fascinated by the pictures, examples of what the books looked like, wondering about the ink they used, the pigments, where the colors came from, the lightfastness as it’s what I’ve been doing a lot of, making inks and lake pigments from natural sources, many of the colors survive in journals or books but not when exposed to uv light. Earth and mineral colors survive, and the very expensive lapis lazuli blue does, but some of the plant colors, and the cochineal bug that makes scarlet red is not lightfast. Writing inks were problematic, oak galls have a lot of tannin, which makes a great dark brown ink, but it is not lightfast. When you add iron to the mix, you get a lightfast ink, but the iron makes a compound that eventually eats through the paper.


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Smiler Jodi

27 December 2020, 10:49 PM
CHAS
Thanks
Becket has interested me for a long time.
Started a detailed biography. Left it in Colorado.


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Several people have eaten my cooking and survived.