The History of the Library in Western Civilization. Volume IV: The Medieval World in the West. From Cassiodorus to Furnival.
- ISBN: 9789061942900
- Year: 2010
- Size: 30 x 22,5 cm
- Binding: Cloth. with full colour dustjacket
- Illustration: With 170 illustrations.
- Pages: 540 pp.
Co-publication. Sales Rights: worldwide except USA. Available in the USA from OAK KNOLL PRESS (ISBN 9781584561811).
This work is the fourth part in an important, five-volume series addressing the unique role libraries have played in building and preserving Western culture. Mr. Staikos has become one of our foremost scholars on library history, writing such books as this as well as works like "The Great Libraries," a classic in its field.
This fourth volume discusses the publishing procedure for secular and religious writings of late antiquity and the factors that led to the impoverishment of the monumental libraries in Rome. New centers of learning grew up in the monasteries, where great libraries containing educational and instructive books and representative works of Christian literature came into being. Monastic libraries were founded throughout Europe, including the regions with Celtic and Anglo-Saxon populations: those at Monte Cassino, Bobbio, St. Gallen, Fulda, Cluny and elsewhere are dealt with extensively. Mention is also made of the libraries founded in universities and of the new philosophy of forming school libraries, as in Bologna and Paris.
Order all five volumes of `The history of the library in Western civilization` and get the Index volume for free!






