Printing and imprinting the Missale Nidrosiense: a multidisciplinary investigation of the first printed book of Norway
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Abstract
In our study, we employed an interdisciplinary approach to study the diverse parts of the Missale Nidrosiense, published in 1519. Our aim was a thorough investigation of the materials used and the manufacturing methods that may give indications on dating and provenance of the components of the book and where the book was bound. Initially, visual and multispectral methods were employed to investigate the books’ components, printing technology and bookbinding structure. Subsequently, other methods were applied: the composition of metallic components was determined by X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (XRF). Pigments, printing inks and binders were characterised by using a combination of XRF and synchrotron-based infrared microscopy. Non-invasive dendrochronology based on X-ray tomography was utilised, to indicate date and provenance of the wooden boards of the book. Additionally, we used a biocodicological approach to identify the species of animal used in the parchment. This resulted in a complete biography of the book. We were able to acquire new information about the materials used and their provenance. This provides new information about craft, economy, trade and commercial exchange in the beginning of the sixteenth century in North-west Scandinavia, despite the lack of written documentation from this period.
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Acknowledgements: We wish to thank Beasts2Craft member Matthew Teasdale for his input and comments on the study during its exploratory phase. We also thank the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie for the allocation of synchrotron radiation beamtime. We would like to thank Espen Karlsen, researcher at the National Library of Norway, for his contribution regarding the history, production and use, of books in early modern Norway. Also, thanks to Book and Paper Conservator Valeria Pesce for creating the drawings of the Missales' bindings, which have facilitated our comparison of blind tools. The comments of four anonymous reviewers have greatly contributed to the improvement of the paper.
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2050-7445

