This medieval manuscript archive discovery promised to change European history

But what can these new documents tell us?
The church in Mediaș
The find was announced over Facebook
Some books date to the 1400s
Professor Dincă comments
The collection had an order
The books were an important part of the church
Part of a larger library
St. Margaret's collection was big in 1864
The collection included some medieval stars
Now the real work begins
Many books have their original bindings
Several fragments of manuscripts were found as well!
Some manuscript fragments date back to the Carolingian era
Lots of fragments were from before the Reformation
Margarethenkirche, the place where it all happened.
But what can these new documents tell us?

In September 2022, a group of Romanian researchers combing through the library of an old church in Mediaș made the discovery of a lifetime when they uncovered a long-forgotten cache of medieval manuscripts that had the potential to rewrite Eastern European history. 

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The church in Mediaș

Discovered in the Ropemakers’ tower of St. Margaret’s Church, the find included over 200 books and manuscripts with fragments of printed work that date back to the 9th century. 

Photos by: Facebook @Batthyaneum

The find was announced over Facebook

Adinel Dincă of Babeș-Bolyai University, the lead researcher on the team that found the manuscripts, announced the discovery over the university's Facebook page and went into more detail about what was actually found. 

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Some books date to the 1400s

139 books dating between 1470 and 1600 were found in good condition and many manuscript fragments were found inside the books, some of which date from as early as the Carolingian era and may date back to the 9th century. 

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Professor Dincă comments

"When I first encountered the books,” Professor Dincă said in an email to Medievalist.net, “I immediately noticed the disposition of the volumes according to a certain historical typology: bibles and biblical texts, patristic, theology.”

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The collection had an order

"This order doesn’t look like an improvisation and suggests that the collection was placed there at an earlier stage of development,” Dincă wrote, “Furthermore, older shelfmarks were following (with few exceptions) a clear order.”

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The books were an important part of the church

This all led Dincă to conclude that, “The books were part of the church patrimony and were mostly kept (from a certain moment on) for their intrinsic value.”

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Part of a larger library

This collection of books may have been part of an even larger library that the medieval church may have housed. 

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St. Margaret's collection was big in 1864

Professor Dincă noted that church records do show that St Margaret’s had a collection of over 7700 books in 1864. 

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The collection included some medieval stars

That library included dozens of early printed works, including some by prominent church reformers like Martin Luther and John Calvin, something the team is hoping they will find among their discovered manuscripts. 

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Now the real work begins

The team now plans to spend their time trying to match up the discovered books with those listed in the church’s 1864 catalog. 

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Many books have their original bindings

“One highlight of this historical collection is the large number of original 16th-century bindings,” Dincă noted, “many of them dated.” 

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Several fragments of manuscripts were found as well!

“In addition to that, in the series of administrative registers of the parish, there are several fragments of medieval manuscripts,” Dincă noted in his email. 

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Some manuscript fragments date back to the Carolingian era

Among the manuscripts found were several Carolingian minuscule and fragments of liturgical materials dating from the 14th and 15th centuries which are the most exciting pieces for Dincă’s research team. 

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Lots of fragments were from before the Reformation

“The closed context of re-use,” Dincă noted, “makes it very likely that such recycled pieces of parchment are in fact remnants of a pre-Reformation stock of manuscripts locally used.

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Margarethenkirche, the place where it all happened.

St. Margaret’s Church, Mediaș, also known as Margarethenkirche, dates back to the early 15th century and was established by a community of Transylvanian Saxons and served as a “fortress church” to protect the area from Ottoman raids. 

Photos by: Facebook @Batthyaneum

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