ABSTRACT

This book presents the collectors’ roles as prominently as the collections of books and texts which they assembled. Contributors explore the activities and networks shaping a range of continental and transcontinental European public and private collections during the Renaissance, Enlightenment and modern eras. They study the impact of class, geographical location and specific cultural contexts on the gathering and use of printed and handwritten texts and other printed artefacts. The volume explores the social dimension of book collecting, and considers how practices of collecting developed during these periods of profound cultural, social and political change.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part I|75 pages

Renaissance Collectors

chapter 1|17 pages

Building a Library Without Walls

The Early Years of the Bodleian Library

chapter 2|20 pages

Universal Knowledge and Self-Fashioning

Cardinal Bernardino Spada’s Collection of Books 1

chapter 3|16 pages

‘A Paradise & Cabinet of Rarities’

Thomas Browne, His Library, and Communities of Collecting in Seventeenth-Century Norfolk

chapter 4|20 pages

Samuel Pepys and John Evelyn

A ‘Collecting Friendship’ as Told Through a Re-evaluation of Manuscript PL 2237 and Print Album PL 2062 in the Pepys Library, Magdalene College Cambridge

part II|52 pages

Gentlemen and Their Libraries From the Seventeenth to the Nineteenth Century

chapter 5|17 pages

‘Ye Best Tast of Books & Learning of Any Other Country Gentn’

The Library of Thomas Mostyn of Gloddaith, c.1676–1692

chapter 6|15 pages

Fashioning a Gentleman’s Library

Displaying the Cottonian Collection, 1791–1816

chapter 7|18 pages

“He Was Always Fond of Books”

John Couch Adams’s Genesis as an Academic Collector

part III|57 pages

Beyond Mere Records of Collecting

chapter 8|16 pages

From Francis Bacon’s Historia Literarum to Samuel Johnson’s Literary History

The Catalogus Bibliothecae Harleianae (1743–1745)

chapter 10|22 pages

Reading in the Provinces

Plymouth Public Library’s Nineteenth-Century Catalogues

part IV|51 pages

Bibliomania