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<article dtd-version="1.1" article-type="book-review">
  <front>
    <journal-meta>
      <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
      <journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
      <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
      <publisher>
        <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
      </publisher>
    </journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">11.02.10</article-id>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>11.02.10, Kotzabassi, Sevcenco and Skemer, Greek Manuscripts at Princeton (Glenn Peers)</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <name>
            <surname>Peers</surname>
            <given-names/>
          </name>
          <aff>University of Texas at Austin</aff>
          <address>
            <email>gpeers@mail.utexas.edu</email>
          </address>
        </contrib>
      </contrib-group>
      <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2011">
        <year>2011</year>
      </pub-date>
      <product product-type="book">
        <person-group>
          <name>
            <surname>Sofia Kotzabassi, Nancy Patterson Sevcenko, and Don C. Skemer</surname>
            <given-names/>
          </name>
        </person-group>
        <source>Greek Manuscripts at Princeton, Sixth to Nineteenth Century: A Descriptive Catalogue, </source>
        <year iso-8601-date="2010">2010</year>
        <publisher-loc>Princeton, NJ</publisher-loc>
        <publisher-name>Princeton University Press</publisher-name>
        <page-range>Pp. 544</page-range>
        <price>$195</price>
        <isbn>978-0-691-14387-3</isbn>
      </product>
      <permissions>
        <copyright-statement>Copyright 2011 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
      </permissions>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <p>

This extraordinarily handsome volume presents in detail 63 Greek
manuscripts and fragments to be found at Princeton University
(including the University Library, the Scheide collection and the
University Art Museum) and one volume at the Theological Seminary. It
is a substantial volume, for its appealing presentation, its heft and
its rigorous presentation. By current standards, this is a luxury
production, and it shows just cause for Princeton's longstanding
reputation in Hellenic studies and its strengths in publishing its
endeavors in this field. The many color illustrations are excellent
quality, as are the scholarly exposition and copyediting.</p>
    <p>

Indeed, the pleasures of reading such a catalogue are surprisingly
frequent. Many of the manuscripts are known from earlier presentations
in exhibition or other publications, but many are not. They all have
compelling features that are related by the scholars here with real
clarity and striking command of their fields. If the stories these
manuscripts and fragments tell are somewhat bloodless, that is the
nature of this format. Only one manuscript entry is prefaced by
"general remarks," and so one is led in other cases directly through
the individual, standard elements comprising these entries (each
described on pp. xxi-xxii). However, some summary presentation for the
entries would have aided browsers. And the scholarly rigor of the
entries will also block entry for many. One would like such a volume
to be accessible to undergraduates and others without Greek, but many
aspects of the stories these objects can tell will be closed because
so much Greek remains untranslated. For example, Garret MS. 7 (late
twelfth/thirteenth centuries with inserted thirteenth-century
miniatures) has been studied, and readers can track down facets of its
historical significance through the bibliographic notices at the end
of the entry. But the fourteenth-century note on 240r is untranslated,
and only hints of its meaning, through mention of previous
misunderstanding, are given. Likewise, on the same page (46), mention
is made of apotropaic acronyms, but these are not explained. Of
course, this volume is a generous testimony to scholarship amongst the
Hellenists in this project and at Princeton, but some concessions
might have been made to Greekless undergraduates, for example, who
might otherwise be rebuffed. The inscriptions and other notations are
witnesses to the human, personal lives of these books and fragments,
and all facets of those lives should be made accessible to anyone who
can read the language in which this book is written.</p>
    <p>

This withholding is striking because the descriptions of the contents,
illustrations and visual elements in the manuscripts are so ample.
Many of the illustrations are included in the fine plates at the back
of the volume, but not all; even this publishing project had its
limits. All images are liberally verbalized, in any case.  This
decision has meaning. The descriptions clearly attempt to give the
illustrations a voice, which the illustrations are themselves
incapable of doing. They emphasize content, identity of figure and
action, including passages on clothing and furniture. They privilege
primary (to our minds) aspects of content, so an illustration of St.
Mark on 65v in Garret 7, for example, is described in a clear,
meticulous manner but the "crude sketches of a hunting dog" on the
recto (65r) receive a sentence only and no figure. The exercise of a
descriptive catalogue cannot involve exhausting every possible aspect
of every manuscript or fragment. But it is not natural or neutral in
what it chooses to emphasize or pass over. So, what is visual is
generously articulated, and what is opaque to many--Greek--now is
left as such.</p>
    <p>

For a catalogue, this book evokes many fascinating pasts, and it does
so in measured, careful ways that still does not hide the still-vivid
people who intersected with these objects and who directed them to
this small college town in New Jersey. Robert Garrett is a quiet hero
here in the catalogue, the main collector from whom Princeton
University's Hellenic ambitions benefitted. A shadowy figure behind
his collecting appears here to be Thomas Whittemore, whose role as
facilitator for Garrett is tied to eight of the manuscripts from his
collection. The Russian skete of St. Andrew on Mount Athos was the
source Whittemore drew on for his trade in manuscripts; the trade may
have been perfectly benign (Whittemore was active with Russian refugee
causes), but its nature is not addressed here.  The forgery of a
parchment folio of the Battle of Lepanto (235-6) brings to the
stage Demetrios Pelekasis, who might have passed off his work as that
of the sixteenth-century painter George Klontzas; R.M. Dawkins, Arthur
Evans and Joseph Demotte also appear in this entry. The purpose of the
forgery, if that is what it really is, is still a mystery, and the
entry is like a skeleton of a novel. The evocativeness of the
geographical range of these manuscripts is also striking; these books
and fragments apparently visited many parts of Greece, the Balkans and
the Middle East in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries before
arriving in Princeton.</p>
    <p>

The medieval and post-medieval identities of these objects are, of
course, going to interest readers of <italic>The Medieval Review</italic>. Some
of these objects have been scarcely studied and published. Even those
that had been published will find new life; Garrett 16, a heavily
illustrated version of the <italic>Heavenly Ladder</italic>, will find new
attraction to scholars and students in the entry and its beautiful
plates.  Further into the catalogue are newer additions, like
Princeton Greek 12, a post-medieval Proskynetarion of the Holy Land,
which is unpublished and deserves study (the spelling mistakes noted
are an intriguing aspect, for example); and Princeton Greek 13, two
drawings from model books (perhaps) from the late seventeenth/early
eighteenth centuries, only purchased in 2002.  These are two examples,
but more avenues into these objects' past lives open from these
catalogue entries. Getting both feet on the avenue means proficiency
in Greek, but many readers will be drawn more deeply into the
challenges and pleasures of Hellenism by these beautifully laid
approaches to them.
</p>
    <p/>
  </body>
</article>
