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Arundel Manuscripts

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The Arundel Manuscripts are the manuscripts collected by Thomas Howard (1585–1646), earl of Arundel and courtier during the reigns of James I and Charles I of England. Following the Great Fire of London in 1666, his grandson Henry Howard permitted the Royal Society to convene at Arundel House and allowed its fellows to access his library.[1] By 1669, he had agreed to John Evelyn's request that the works be given to the Society[2] but they remained at Arundel House until after he succeeded to the Duchy of Norfolk, by which point he had also been made Earl Marshall of England.[3] He allowed Evelyn to begin removing books for the Society to be held by Gresham College in 1678[4] but set apart a large number of manuscripts to be kept by the College of Arms overseen by the Earl Marshall.[5]

The part of the collection held by the Royal Society were purchased by the British Museum in 1831. They were later transferred to the British Library, where they form part of its manuscript collection.[6]

Notable manuscripts in the British Library's Arundel collection include:

The part of the collection that still remains with the College of Arms is sometimes distinguished as the Norfolk Manuscripts after Henry Howard's elevation to duke of Norfolk upon his brother's death in 1677.

Notable manuscripts in the College of Arms's Arundel collection include:

References

Citations

Bibliography

  • Young, Charles George (1829), Catalogue of the Arundel Manuscripts in the Library of the College of Arms, London: S. & R. Bentley.

Further reading

  • Catalogue of Manuscripts in the British Museum, New Series, Vol. I, Pt. 1: The Arundel Manuscripts, London, 1834.