![]() |
An international fit? Photo by the incredible how |
When I was researching my doctoral thesis,
I had a persistent anxiety that the documents I was working with might all be
part of an elaborate hoax, the archives themselves a grand fabrication, because
it was hard to believe that those bits of 15C paper/parchment had really come,
as it were, from another world. A fantastical form of paranoia, I know, or
perhaps a crude form of post-modern angst. This worry only subsided once I was
working in the Vatican (Archivo Segreto Vaticano), and was able to cross
reference 15C documents there (outgoing letters copied into papal registers)
with those in Cracow (the original papal letter, as received and filed by the
kings of Poland). This was to my mind was such a strong paper trail, such a
perfect cross-referencing of very obscure late medieval documents, that is was
surely too elaborate to be a hoax.
I had a similar moment of cross-referencing
frisson yesterday. I was looking at letters exchanged between King Zygmunt I of
Poland and King Henry VIII
of England about the
Reformation, and specifically about Danzig merchants arrested in London for heresy. The
Polish side of the correspondence was printed in the 19C in the Acta Tomiciana. Yesterday, I ventured
for the first time onto Tudor State Papers online, and found a fine list of
those items of this correspondence which survive in the UK National Archive.
Better still, there was a little button labelled ‘Manuscript’. When I clicked
on this the scanned originals of Zygmunt I’s letters to Henry VIII opened up on
the screen in a flash, in the beautifully neat hand of the Polish chancellery’s
scribes, with ‘Sigismundus’ scrawled heavily at the bottom. That felt like a
little bit of magic, like two pieces of a 500 year old jigsaw fitting together.
No comments:
Post a Comment