Under the sponsorship of CMRS, “The Paleography of
Latin Manuscripts: 800–1500” will be offered at UCLA
during the Spring Quarter 2008. It is cross-listed under History, English, Classics, and French. Students can enroll in the class using URSA in the usual fashion. This graduate seminar
will be taught by internationally renowned paleographer
and manuscript scholar Professor Emeritus Richard Rouse
(History, UCLA).
This will be the third year that a course on
paleography has been offered at UCLA. In Spring quarter
2006 and 2007, “The Paleography of Latin and Vernacular
Manuscripts: 800-1500,” was team-taught by Professor
Rouse and Professor Christopher Baswell (English). Professor Baswell is well known for his research in medieval manuscripts of English vernacular literature and classical Latin literature. That
course offered students the opportunity to choose one of
two possible areas of study: one section of the class, taught
by Professor Rouse, focused on Latin hands and historical
documents; the other, taught by Professor Baswell, focused
on literary manuscripts in vernacular languages. The course
drew students from a variety of disciplines.
In Spring 2008, only the Latin hands will be taught. In a first meeting each week, the entire class will study basic developments in handwriting and manuscript format, century by century. For a second weekly meeting, the class will divide into two sections, each a practicum in reading, dating, and transcribing early manuscripts.