News

Historians from the University of Cambridge recently unveiled a rare 13th-century document that depicts the stories of King ...
A study of 16 Medieval manuscripts in Clairvaux Abbey in France found they were bound in a surprising material: sealskin.
Medieval book covers previously thought to be made from deer or boar skin are actually made of sealskin from northern regions ...
The "romance" of Alexander the Great is a unique illuminated codex on his life and was the most widely-read romance in the ...
Biomolecular analysis shows that unusual book coverings are made of sealskin, hinting at far-flung trade networks.
Historians were surprised when analyses revealed Catholic monks used pinniped hides for the protective outer layer on some ...
The silver Kiddush cup, an object used to sanctify the Shabbat and Jewish holidays, evidences medieval Jewish communities in ...
An international team of archaeologists, bioinformatic specialists, and historians has discovered that many medieval books ...
The monks curated a vast manuscript and book collection at the Library of Clairvaux Abbey, a site in Champagne, France, founded in 1115. The group of 12th- and 13th-century works expanded to more than ...
The medieval artefact, which is inscribed with both Hebrew and Arabic, will be on display for a limited time before heading ...
Now after years of painstaking collaborative work with the university’s Cultural Heritage Imaging Laboratory (CHIL), ...
A major highlight of the museum is the Blue Qur’an. This exceptional Islamic manuscript from the 9th century features beautiful blue pages and gold script, representing a high point of Islamic art.