TheHarleian Library,Harley Collection,Harleian Collectionand other variants (Latin:Bibliotheca Harleiana) is one of the main "closed" collections (namely, historic collections to which new material is no longer added) of theBritish Libraryin London, formerly the library of theBritish Museum.

Harley Golden Gospels,IncipittoLuke,800–825

The collection comprises 7,660 manuscripts, including 2,200illuminated manuscripts,[1]more than 14,000 original legal documents; and more than 500rolls.It was assembled byRobert Harley(1661–1724) and his sonEdward(1689–1741). In 1753, it was purchased for£10,000 by the British government. Together with the collections ofSir Robert Cotton(theCotton library) andHans Sloane(theSloane library) it formed the basis of the British Museum's collection of manuscripts, which were transferred to the new British Library in 1973.[2]

The collection contains illuminated manuscripts spanning the earlyMiddle Agesto theRenaissance.There are important early British manuscripts, many from Western Europe, and several Byzantine manuscripts in Greek and other languages.

Manuscripts

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Beatus initial,f.4 of theRamsey Psalter
Harley 1810is aGreekminusculemanuscriptof theNew Testament
A gospel book (Harley 7026); the last page shows the donor Lord Lovel presenting the book to Salisbury Cathedral

Among the most significant manuscripts are:

References

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  1. ^Laura Nuvoloni.The Harleian Medical Manuscripts(PDF).published by The British Library. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2015-09-23.Retrieved2015-07-26.
  2. ^British Library. "History of the Harley LibraryArchived2018-08-30 at theWayback Machine".

Further reading

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  • British Library Journalvol. 15 (1989) is devoted to Robert Harley and his collections.
  • C. E. and C. R. Wright, eds.The Diary of Humfrey Wanley 1715–1726,2 vols (London, 1966).

Catalogue

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51°31′48″N0°07′41″W/ 51.530°N 0.128°W/51.530; -0.128