Typography Tuesday
PROTOGOTHIC SCRIPT
We are preparing a recent gift for cataloging: a fabulous facsimile of the Great Domesday book produced in two volumes with separate volumes of maps and new translations by Alecto Editions of London between 1985 and 1992 for the 900th anniversary of this famous English/Norman manuscript originally produced in 1086. The Domesday Book was William the Conqueror‘s grand survey of his English domains in order to list his holdings and determine the taxes owed to him after his conquest of England in 1066.
Remarkably, this massive manuscript was produced in less that one year by possibly only a couple of scribes. What stands out for us is the hasty but neat, Protogothic script that offers us an example of the transition from the open, round Carolingian minuscule (that we tend to favor today) to the compressed, spiky, and attenuated Gothic scripts that would predominate the late Middle Ages and much of early Renaissance typography. We made posts about the Carolingian minuscule and the Gothic hand previously.
The historian V. H. Galbraith has suggested that Samson, an English cleric who was chaplain to both William I and William II and later the Bishop of Worcester, may have been the principle scribe. This Protogothic hand has a distinctive tendency toward roundness even when compressed. In Domesday, while the letters have become angular and have developed feet, the individual letters are well separated and there are no incomprehensible rows of minims. Letters such as h, b and l have wedged ascenders, supposedly an English characteristic, and the letter s is tall, the t is short, and the w is rather prominent.










