Dictionary Definition
palimpsest n : a manuscript (usually written on
papyrus or parchment) on which more than one text has been written
with the earlier writing incompletely erased and still
visible
User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
- /ˈpælɪmpsɛst/
Noun
- A manuscript or
document that has been
erased or scraped clean,
for reuse of the paper,
parchment, vellum, or other medium on which it was written.
Many historical texts have been recovered using ultraviolet light
and other technologies to read the erased writing.
- 2006: Cory Doctorow, "Correcting the Record: Wikipedia vs The Register" in http://www.boingboing.net/2006/01/11/correcting_the_recor.html — Wikipedia’s History and Discuss pages are palimpsests recording the process by which the truth was eventually negotiated.
- Monumental brasses that have been reused by engraving of the blank back side.
- Circular features believed to be lunar craters that have been obliterated by later volcanic activity.
- Geological features thought to be related to features or effects below the surface.
- Memory that has been erased and re-written.
- Something bearing the traces of an earlier, erased form.
- 2005: Patrick Radden Keefe, Chatter. "Miraculously, the Stasi's record of Garton Ash's years in Berlin remained intact, and in his extraordinary book The File he recalls going back to Berlin, sifting through the material, and piecing together those years for himself. The result is a palimpsest of memories, observations recorded by informants and agents, and the recollections in his own diaries at that time."
Derived terms
Translations
A manuscript scraped clean for reuse
- Croatian: palimpsest
- Czech: palimpsest
- French: palimpseste
- German: Palimpsest
- Hungarian: palimpszeszt
- Italian: palinsesto
- Latin: palimpsestus
- Polish: palimpsest
- Romanian: palimpsest
- Slovene: palimpsest
- Spanish: palimpsesto
Verb
Czech
Noun
palimpsestPolish
Noun
Romanian
Etymology
From palimpseste < palimpsestus < sc=Grek.Pronunciation
Noun
Declension
Slovene
Pronunciation
Noun
Extensive Definition
A palimpsest is a manuscript page, whether from
scroll
or book that has been
written on, scraped off, and used again. The word "palimpsest"
comes through Latin from Greek
παλιν + ψαω = ("again" + "I scrape"), and meant "scraped (clean and
used) again." Romans wrote
on wax-coated
tablets that could be smoothed and reused, and a passing use of
the rather bookish term "palimpsest" by Cicero seems to
refer to this practice.
Development
Because parchment, prepared from animal hides, is far more durable than paper or papyrus, most palimpsests known to modern scholars are parchment, which rose in popularity in western Europe after the sixth century. Also, where papyrus was in common use, reuse of writing media was less common because papyrus was cheaper and more expendable than costly parchment. But some papyrus palimpsests do survive, and Romans referred to this custom of washing papyrus. The reed from which it was made did not grow in Italy.The writing was washed from parchment or vellum using milk and oat bran. With
the passing of time, the faint remains of the former writing would
reappear enough so that scholars can discern the text (called the
scriptio inferior, the "underwriting") and decipher it. In the
later Middle Ages
the surface of the vellum was usually scraped away with powdered
pumice, irretrievably
losing the writing, hence the most valuable palimpsests are those
that were overwritten in the early Middle Ages.
Medieval codices are constructed in
"gathers" which are folded (compare "folio", "leaf, page" ablative case
of Larin folium), then stacked together like a newspaper and sewn
together at the fold. Prepared parchment sheets retained their
original central fold, so each was ordinarily cut in half, making a
quarto volume of the
original folio, with the overwritten text running perpendicular to
the effaced text.
Modern decipherment
Faint legible remains were read by eye before 20th-century techniques helped make lost texts readable. Scholars of the 19th century used chemical means to read palimpsests that were sometimes very destructive, using tincture of gall or later, ammonium hydrosulfate. Modern methods of reading palimpsests using ultraviolet and photography are less damaging. Superexposed photographs exposed in various light spectra, a technique called "multispectral filming," can increase the contrast of faded ink on parchment that is too indistinct to be read by eye in normal light. Innovative digitized images aid scholars in deciphering unreadable palimpsests. Multispectral imaging, undertaken by researchers at the Rochester Institute of Technology and Johns Hopkins University, retrieved some four-fifths of the text of the Archimedes Palimpsest. More recently, at the Walters Art Museum where the palimpsest is now conserved, the project has focused on experimental techniques to retrieve the remaining fifth. One of the most successful of these techniques has proved to be x-ray fluorescence imaging, through which the iron in the ink is revealed, even under a forged overpainting.As a form of destruction
A number of ancient works have survived only as palimpsests. Vellum manuscripts were over-written on purpose mostly due to the dearth or cost of the material. In the case of Greek manuscripts, the consumption of old codices for the sake of the material was so great that a synodal decree of the year 691 forbade the destruction of manuscripts of the Scriptures or the church fathers, except for imperfect or injured volumes. Such a decree put added pressure on retrieving the vellum on which secular manuscripts were written. The decline of the vellum trade with the introduction of paper exacerbated the scarcity, increasing pressure to reuse material.Cultural considerations also motivated the
creation of palimpsests. The demand for new texts might outstrip
the availability of parchment in some centers, yet the existence of
cleaned parchment that was never overwritten suggests that there
was also a spiritual motivation, to sanctify pagan text by
overlaying it with the word of God, somewhat as pagan sites were
overlaid with Christian churches to hallow pagan ground. Or the
pagan texts may have merely appeared irrelevant. Texts most
susceptible to being overwritten included obsolete legal and
liturgical ones, sometimes of intense interest to the historian.
Early Latin translations of Scripture were rendered obsolete by
Jerome's Vulgate. Texts
might be in foreign languages or written in unfamiliar scripts that
had become illegible over time. The codices themselves might be
already damaged or incomplete. Heretical
texts were dangerous to harbor: there were compelling political and
religious reasons to destroy texts viewed as heresy, and to reuse
the media was less wasteful than simply to burn the books.
Vast destruction of the broad quartos of the early centuries of
our era took place in the period which followed the
fall of the Roman Empire, but palimpsests were also created as
new texts were required during the Carolingian
renaissance. The most valuable Latin palimpsests are
found in the codices which were remade from the early large folios
in the seventh to the ninth centuries. It has been noticed that no
entire work is generally found in any instance in the original text
of a palimpsest, but that portions of many works have been taken to
make up a single volume. An exception is the Archimedes palimpsest
(see below). On the whole, Early Medieval scribes were
indiscriminate in supplying themselves with material from any old
volumes that happened to be at hand.
Some famous palimpsests
- The Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus, Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris: portions of the Old and New Testaments in Greek, attributed to the fifth century, are covered with works of Ephraem the Syrian in a hand of the twelfth century
- Among the Syriac manuscripts obtained from the Nitrian desert in Egypt, British Museum, London: important Greek texts
- A volume containing a work of Severus of Antioch of the beginning of the ninth century is written on palimpsest leaves taken from sixth century manuscripts of the Iliad and the Gospel of St Luke, both of the sixth century, and the Euclid's Elements of the seventh or eighth century, British Museum
- A double palimpsest, in which a text of St John Chrysostom, in Syriac, of the ninth or tenth century, covers a Latin grammatical treatise in a cursive hand of the sixth century, which in its turn covers the Latin annals of the historian Granius Licinianus, of the fifth century, British Museum.
- The only known hyper-palimpsest: the Novgorod Codex, in which maybe hundreds of texts have left their traces on the wooden back wall of a wax tablet
- The Ambrosian Plautus, in rustic capitals, of the fourth or fifth century, re-written with portions of the Bible in the ninth century, Ambrosian Library
- Cicero, De republica in uncials, of the fourth century, covered by St Augustine on the Psalms, of the seventh century, Vatican Library
- Codex Theodosianus of Turin, of the fifth or sixth century
- the Fasti Consulares of Verona, of 486 CE
- the Arian fragment of the Vatican, of the fifth century
- the letters of Cornelius Fronto
- the Archimedes Palimpsest, a work of the great Syracusan mathematician copied onto parchment in the tenth century and overwritten by a liturgical text in the twelfth century
- Sinaitic Palimpsest
- the unique copy of a Greek grammatical text composed by Herodian for the emperor Marcus Aurelius in the second century, preserved in the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna
- Codex Zacynthius – Greek palimpsest fragments of the gospel of Saint Luke, obtained in the island of Zante, by General Colin Macaulay, deciphered, transcribed and edited by Samuel Prideaux Tregelles
- "Dublinensis" (Codex Z) of St. Matthew's Gospel, at Trinity College Dublin, also deciphered by Tregelles
Extended usages
The word palimpsest also refers to a plaque which has been turned around and engraved on what was originally the back.In planetary
astronomy, ancient lunar craters
whose relief has disappeared from subsequent volcanic outpourings,
leaving only a "ghost" of a rim are also known as palimpsests. Icy
surfaces of natural satellites like Callisto
and Ganymede
preserve hints of their history in these rings, where the crater's
relief has been effaced by creep of the icy surface ("viscous
relaxation"). They are characterized by fast projectile which
penetrates the cold, icy crust. Inward flow of slushy surface
causes the surface to retain this upflowing of water from the
past.
In medicine it is used to describe an episode of
acute anterograde amnesia without loss of consciousness, brought on
by the ingestion of alcohol or other substances: 'alcoholic
palimpsest'.
The term is used in Forensic
science or Forensic
engineering to describe objects placed over one another to
establish the sequence of events at an accident or crime
scene.
Several historians are beginning to use the term
as a description of the way people experience times, that is, as a
layering of present experiences over faded pasts.
Palimpsest is beginning to be used by
Glaciologists to describe contradicting glacial flow indicators,
usually consisiting of smaller indicators (ie striae) overprinted
upon larger features (ie stoss and lee topography, drumlins,
etc).
Decipherment in architecture
Architects imply palimpsest as a ghost —- an image of what once was. In the built environment, this occurs more than we think. Whenever spaces are shuffled, rebuilt, or remodeled, shadows remain. Tarred rooflines remain on the sides of a building long after the neighboring structure has been demolished; removed stairs leave a mark where the painted wall surface stopped. Dust lines remain from a relocated appliance. Ancient ruins speak volumes of their former wholeness. Palimpsests can serve a noble duty in informing us, almost archaeologically, of the realities of the built past.Thus architects, archaeologists and design
historians sometimes use the word to describe the accumulated
iterations of a design or a site, whether in literal layers of
archaeological remains, or by the figurative accumulation and
reinforcement of design ideas over time. An excellent example of
this can be seen at The
Tower of London, where construction began in the eleventh
century, and the site continues to develop to this day.
Archaeologists in particular use the term to
denote a record of material remains that is suspected of having
formed during an extended period but that cannot be resolved in
such a way that temporally discrete traces can be recognized as
such.
Egyptologists
use the word for texts and representations inscribed in stone that
have been scraped away, either completely or partially, often with
a plaster filling being applied, and then a new inscription carved
on top.
Notes
External links
- OPIB Virtual Renaissance Network activities in digitizing European palimpsests
- Brief note on economic and cultural considerations in production of palimpsests
- Producing the Archimedes Palimpsest
- PBS NOVA: "The Archimedes Palimpsest" Click on "What is a Palimpsest?"
- Rinascimento virtuale a project for the census, description, study and digital reproduction of Greek palimpsests
palimpsest in Catalan: Palimpsest
palimpsest in Danish: Palimpsest
palimpsest in German: Palimpsest
palimpsest in Modern Greek (1453-):
Παλίμψηστο
palimpsest in Spanish: Palimpsesto
palimpsest in Esperanto: Palimpsesto
palimpsest in French: Palimpseste
palimpsest in Croatian: Palimpsest
palimpsest in Italian: Palinsesto
(filologia)
palimpsest in Hebrew: פלימפססט
palimpsest in Hungarian: Palimpszesztus
palimpsest in Dutch: Palimpsest
(manuscript)
palimpsest in Piemontese: Palinsest
palimpsest in Polish: Palimpsest
(piśmiennictwo)
palimpsest in Portuguese: Palimpsesto
palimpsest in Russian: Палимпсест
palimpsest in Finnish: Palimpsesti
palimpsest in Swedish:
Palimpsest