Periodic Reporting for period 1 - BretPal (Breton Palaeography)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2023-10-01 do 2025-09-30
The Breton Palaeography project (BretPal) will provide the first palaeographic study of the early medieval manuscripts attributed to Brittany (c. 780‒1100). With its cross-cultural, interdisciplinary approach, BretPal is a unique project designed to address the questions of what is BCM, who wrote it, and where? The answers to these questions will determine future identification of Breton manuscripts and resituate early medieval Brittany within the wider scribal and intellectual traditions of early medieval western Europe, upon which Brittany drew and to which it greatly contributed.
The overall research objective of BretPal is to establish an evidence-based set of scientific criteria for the identification and analysis of the hybrid script (BCM) that was used in Brittany or by Breton scribes c. 780‒ 1100. This project will provide the first-ever focused study to reach conclusions about surviving written evidence from early medieval Brittany. Core innovation objectives will guide this ultimate aim:
• O1: To establish, for the first time, definitive criteria for what constitutes BCM according to palaeographic features, so that materials of Breton origin can be defined.
• O2: To initiate further analysis of other manuscripts with an attributed but not certain Breton origin with the intent to define more precisely the corpus of what can be considered ‘Breton’.
• O3: To facilitate this research through a new, unique, open-access database with an accompanying Descriptive Handbook of manuscripts that can be definitively identified as Breton.
So far, definitions of what constitutes ‘Breton’ have tended to be restricted; acute palaeographic analysis of key case studies will establish strict criteria against which future analyses of manuscripts can be made. These combined objectives will therefore initiate new investigations into the wider impact of Breton intellectual and material culture throughout early medieval western Europe.