Skip to main content
×
×
Home
  • Print publication year: 1999
  • Online publication date: March 2008

13 - The Royal Library under Henry VIII

from COLLECTIONS AND OWNERSHIP
Summary
At one time or another, Henry VIII owned more than fifty palaces, each presumably with its own collection of books. In the first decades of the sixteenth century the main collection was housed at Richmond. In 1534, William Tyldesley was designated Keeper of the King's library in the manor of Richmond and elsewhere. The most significant development in the history of the royal collection during the sixteenth century was a direct consequence of the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 1530s. When Henry VIII and his advisers started gathering together materials relating to the royal divorce, it was logical for them to turn to the monastic libraries. By the early 1530s, texts relating to the powers of the pope and medieval councils, as well as some historical items, began to trickle in. In 1549, Bartholomew Traheron, the Royal Librarian, was specifically empowered to bring books from other royal libraries to Westminster.
Recommend this book

Email your librarian or administrator to recommend adding this book to your organisation's collection.

The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain
  • Online ISBN: 9781139053648
  • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CHOL9780521573467
Please enter your name
Please enter a valid email address
Who would you like to send this to *
×
Backhouse, J. M. 1987Founders of the Royal Library: Edward IV and Henry VII as collectors of illuminated manuscripts’, in Williams, D. (ed.), England in the fifteenth century: proceedings of the Harlaxton Symposium for 1986, Woodbridge.
Birrell, T. A. 1987a English monarchs and their books from Henry VII to Charles II, Panizzi Lectures 1986, London.
Brewer, J. S. et al. (eds.), Letters and papers, foreign and domestic, of the reign of Henry VIII, 22 vols. in 38, London 1864–1932.
Carley, J. P. 1997bMarks in books and the libraries of Henry VIII’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 91.
Coates, A. 1991The old library at Trinity College, Oxford’, Bodleian Library Record, 13.
Dowling, M. 1991Anne Boleyn as patron’, in Starkey, 1991.
Gameson, R. and Coates, A. 1988 The Old Library, Trinity College, Oxford, Oxford.
Hobson, G. D. 1929 Bindings in Cambridge libraries, Cambridge.
Leland, J. 1549 The laboryouse journey & serche of Johan Leyland, for Englandes antiquitees …, London (rpt Amsterdam 1975).
Liddell, J. R. 1935Some notes on the library of Reading Abbey’, Bodleian Quarterly Review, 8.
Nixon, H. M. 1978 Five centuries of English bookbinding, London.
Omont, H. 1891Les manuscrits français des rois d’Angleterre au château de Richmond’, in Etudes romanes dédiées à Gaston Paris, Paris.
Starkey, D. (ed.) 1998 The inventory of Henry VIII, Vol. i: The transcript, London.
Toulmin Smith, L. (ed.), 1906–10 The itinerary of John Leland in or about the years 1535–1543, 5 vols., London.
Von Bülow, G. (ed.) 1892, assisted by Powell, W., ‘Diary of the journey of Philip Julius, duke of Stettin-Pomerania, through England in the year 1602’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, n.s., 6.
Winn, M. B. 1997 Anthoine Vérard, Parisian publisher, 1485–1512: prologues, poems and presentations, Travaux d’humanisme et Renaissance 313, Geneva.