Hand: Fifteen Glosses (4r, 11r, 15rv, 16v, 18v, 19v, 22r, 26rv), BL Harley 526, fols. 1–27
- Name
- Fifteen Glosses (4r, 11r, 15rv, 16v, 18v, 19v, 22r, 26rv)
- Manuscript
- BL Harley 526, fols. 1–27
- Script
- Unspecified
- Scribe
- Unspecified
- Date
- Saec. x/xi
- Place
- Unknown
Stokes, English Vernacular Script, ca 990–ca 1035, Vol. 2 (PhD Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2006)
Most of these glosses are small, fairly regular in script, and were written with a thin pen, although the size, regularity, and pen-width all vary. Ascenders are usually long, thin, and have small wedges. Descenders are also long and are straight. The form of a ranges from teardrop-shaped through semi-Caroline to fully Caroline with little apparent distinction. The a-component of æ is a little more regular: it consistently has a single compartment, and the lower curve of the a-component tends to meet the back well above the base-line. The hooks of both æ and e are round and never high, and the tongue is straight and usually rising but is sometimes horizontal. Round c was used throughout, as was Caroline d. The hook of f is well above cue-height, and the down-stroke extends well below the base-line, but the tongue is usually at mid-height. The form of h is somewhere between Insular and Caroline; the letter was written with almost no pen-lift and the down-stroke is more or less vertical but usually lacks a foot; once it has a foot and so is fully Insular (hu, 26r4), and once it curves back under the vertical stroke and so is fully Caroline (he, lower margin of 11r). Caroline r was used throughout. Caroline s was used most often, the letter standing on the base-line and with a heavy shoulder, but round s is also found (steþ, lower margin of 11r); the Caroline s+t ligature was also used (weste, 16v11). The scribe used þ exclusively in preference to ð. Round, undotted y is found, the tip of the tail having an essentially vertical but concave-left finial. The Latin glosses were almost certainly written by the same scribe and were distinguished by script.