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HISTORICAL FEATURE:
A Serious Question of Ethiopian Studies
Five Thousand Ethiopian Manuscripts Abroad, and the International Community
by Dr Richard Panhurst
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Introduction Ethiopic literature formed a major part of ancient and medieval Christian literature. Many important Ethiopic works were, and still are, unknown to the outside world: Foreign scholars learnt for example of the Book of Enoch and the Book of Jubilees only because they were preserved in Ethiopia. Though most Ethiopic literature is religious, numerous texts also cover subjects, including history, philosophy, law, mathematics, and medicine. For the study of Ethiopic, as other texts, scholars need to consult more than one copy. This is because MSS were written by hand, and scholars have to compare different versions to control the scribes accuracy, or lack thereof, and thus establish a definitive text. Ethiopian MSS often also include "marginalia", i.e. end papers, etc., containing notable secular material: data on land sales and grants, marriage settlements, church and monastic inventories, etc. See for example Tax Records of Emperor Tewodros of Ethiopia, published by the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, which I wrote with Girma Sellasie Asfaw, in 1978. Ethiopian MSS are no less important for the history of Ethiopian art. Illustrations, painted by hand, are by definition unique, for which reason too it is necessary to study several works, not merely one, on any theme. For all these reasons it is essential to collect as comprehensive a photographic collection of Ethiopian MSS as possible. EMML, UNESCO, and Professor Hammerscmidt It was for the above reasons too that Ethiopia facilitated the microfilming of MSS by UNESCO, and by the late Professor Ernst Hammerscmidt, of Hamburg University. The EMML went to immense pains microfilming thousands of MSS in remote parts of Ethiopia. By making such film available to scholars it gave an immense fillip to international, as well as Ethiopian scholarship. The Time Has Surely Come It is only fair to add that whereas microfilming in Ethiopia has been of major assistance to international scholarship, the failure to copy Ethiopian MSS in the rest of the world remains an obstacle to scholarship within Ethiopia itself. It is good that the odd Ethiopian manuscript is preserved in Spain or New Zealand, but this scarcely helps research in Ethiopia. The Five Thousand Manuscripts Abroad Great Britain The principal depositories of Ethiopian MSS are in the British Library, which, at my last count, had 598 MSS ; the Bodleaen Library, in Oxford, had 101; Cambridge University Library, 67; John Rylands Library, in Manchester, 42; the British and Foreign Bible Society, 35; the School of Oriental and African Studies, 9; and the Royal Library, Windsor castle, 6 particularly fine manuscripts (from Maqdala). There are also over 40 other MSS in other collections: 17 in the Wellcome Institute Library, in London; six in the India Office Collection of the British Library, also in London; five in the Selly Oaks College Library, in Birmingham; five in the Victoria and Albert Museum, in London; three in the National Library of Scotland, and three in the University of Edinburgh Library, both in Edinburgh; one in the Fitzwilliam Museum, in Cambridge; one in the Jews College, in London; and one in St. Andrews University Library, in Scotland. Nine scrolls, formerly in the possession of the London Library, all or mainly from Maqdala, were sold by Sothebys in July 1970. A substantial number of British Library MSS (but not all) have been generously microfilmed by the British Council, for the Institute of Ethiopian Studies, in Addis Ababa. MSS in other UK collections remain, however, uncopied. Germany These MSS are scattered throughout Germany: in Berlin, Bonn, Bremen, Dillingen, Dresden, Frankfurt, Gottingen, Hamburg, Heidelberg, Kessel, Mannheim, Munched, Munster, Reibek, Stuttgart, and Wiesbaden. Details are available in the admirable Veronika Six catalogues. France The Vatican There are also 9 manuscripts in the Library of the Potificio Istituto Biblico. The United States A further 39 MSS are in smaller collections: at the Walters Art Gallery, in Baltimore; the Public Library and Endowment for Biblical Research, both in Boston; the Newbury Library, in Chicago; the Public Library, in Cleveland; the Seminary Library, in Hartford; Haverford College, in Haverford; the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia; Vasser College, in Poughkeepsie; the Peabody Museum, in Salem; and the Catholic University Library and the Smithsonian Institution, both in Washington. The Netherlands Italy There are also smaller collections in the Biblioteca Angelica, the Biblioteca Casanatense, the Biblica dellAccademia Nazionale dei Lincei, the Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale, and the Biblioteca Ephemerides Liturgica, all five in Rome; the Biblioteca dellIstituto Universitario, in Napoli; the Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana, in Venezia; the Biblioteca Universitario, in Padova; the Biblioteca Communale, in Pistoia; the Museo Egzio, in Torino; and the Biblioteca Estense, in Modena. Russia Sweden Ireland Israel Austria Armenia Belgium, Canada, Switzerland, and Portugal The microfilms in Switzerland have been generously microfilmed for the Institute of Ethiopian Studies, Poland, Spain, New Zealand, and Greece The Scholarly Interest We urge that systematic action be taken to develop a comprehensive
microfilm and/or digital photograph project aimed at the creation,
in Addis Ababa, of a world-wide Ethiopian photographic manuscript
archive. This is a culturally imperative matter which deserves priority.
It is hoped that the above-listed repository countries, which have
preserved these MSS, will enthusiastically cooperate in this valuable
endeavour. |