
Contents
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Reading Servius from Manuscript to Print Reading Servius from Manuscript to Print
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Reading Virgil in Octavo Reading Virgil in Octavo
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
Chapter 2 examines a sample of printed copies of Virgil’s works which were owned in England during the fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries. Building on Chapter 1’s analysis of Virgil manuscripts and the influence of the late antique commentator Servius, the first half of Chapter 2 shows that humanist readers’ annotations continued to follow the same traditions of exegetic practice in the age of print. While the printing press initiated significant changes in the publication and presentation of Virgil’s texts, readers’ intellectual approaches remained consistent with earlier, well-established procedures of grammatical and rhetorical pedagogy. The second half of the chapter discusses Richard Pynson’s c. 1515 edition of Virgil’s works, the earliest extant edition of Virgil printed in England. The edition contains a set of printed marginalia designed to facilitate these traditional modes of exegesis.
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