Lov og tekst i middelalderen. Produksjon og resepsjon av Magnus Lagabøtes landslov
Abstract
This thesis investigates fifteen out of a total of thirtynine extant manuscripts containing The
Norwegian Code of the Realm (1274), henceforth the Code. They are all dated before 1400. The
fifteen manuscripts display some kind of harmonization of two particular chapters in the sections
on assault and land rent, respectively. I work from the hypothesis that these manuscripts share a
common background in a particular exemplar and/or scribal milieu.
The thesis has two aims. One is to further our understanding of the relation between the preserved
MSS of the Code. The other is to develop a method for analysis of texts which display contamination,
or texts that have been transmitted using several exemplars. The analyses are based on
parameters that are tied to the production and reception of the Code.
The new method is composed of elements from both textual criticism and material philology.
The object of study is raised from the level of the word, phrase, or clause to that of the graphic unit
of the chapter, defined by elements as initials and rubrics. The chapter is the crucial component
upon which the structure of the Code is built.
First, a selection of variables regarding codicology, layout, and script are analyzed. Based on the
scribes’ ability to execute these features, the manuscripts are sorted into three levels of proficiency.
Second, the analysis of the structure of the text shifts to a focus on the order of the chapters.
Thus, the structures of the fifteen manuscripts are put into a diagram. The variants are revealed as
patterns, which show that the manuscripts have additional variants in common. Nearly all variants
relating to rearrangement or interpolation turn out to be attested in earlier regional laws, although
by the time when the Code was promulgated, these should presumably have been rendered obsolete.
This suggests that the manuscripts derive from a milieu where the Code was seen as a symbiosis
of old and new rules, and that older law codes were used as exemplars together with the new
Code in order to produce the most convenient Code.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Arts
Institution
Department of Swedish ; Institutionen för svenska språket
Disputation
Lördagen den 12. mars 2016 kl. 10.15, Lilla hörsalen, Humanisten, Renströmsgatan 6
Date of defence
2016-03-12
Date
2016-02-19Author
Horn, Anna Catharina
Keywords
Middle Ages
scribe
manuscript culture
textual structure
textual culture
codicology
palaeography
material philology
Magnus Lagabøtes landslov
The Norwegian Code of the Realm
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-87850-61-5
ISSN
1652-3105
Series/Report no.
Göteborgsstudier i nordisk språkvetenskap
26
Language
nor