Listen to our video series highlighting some of the internationally renowned treasures and other remarkable rare books, manuscripts, and archives in New College Library & Archives, Oxford.

Our videos will be published over coming terms, building into a collection which will remain here for you to enjoy.
  • Our collections of manuscripts, archives, and rare books are famous the world over, with our earliest manuscript and archive treasures dating from the 11th century.
  • More manuscripts survive from the medieval library of Ï㽶ֱ²¥ than from that of any other Oxford or Cambridge college, and we hold what is probably the finest collection of medieval manuscripts of any of the Oxford colleges.
  • Our archives contain evidence of college endowment, administration, and finance from the outset, and our earliest documents are 11th-century title deeds.
  • New College Library holds more incunabula (fifteenth-century European imprints) than any other undergraduate college at Oxford, and a very rich collection of other early printed books.

Greek Book of Prophets (early thirteenth century), MS 44

This luxurious manuscript is a volume of Old Testament books of the Minor Prophets, written in Greek, and most likely produced at Constantinople (modern Istanbul) or in Cyprus.


 

Anglo-Norman Apocalypse (1300–1310), MS 65

This Anglo-Norman translation of the Book of Revelation, with anonymous prologue and commentary, is one of the Library’s most beautiful illuminated manuscripts.


 

John Gower, Confessio Amantis (c. 1400–1425), MS 266

This is one of forty-nine surviving medieval manuscript copies of John Gower’s 33,000-line poem, written in Middle English and Latin, Confessio Amantis (c. 1400–1425) or ‘Lover’s Confession’. Our MS 266 is remarkable because it is one of only two which contain (or once contained) full cycles of illustrations: miniatures illustrating the short narratives.


 

Wycliffite Psalms (mid-15th century), MS 320

This manuscript is bound before a portion of William Caxton’s The Golden Legend (Westminster: Wynkyn de Worde, 8 Jan. 1498[/99?]), hitherto unreported. Two Latin prayers conclude the manuscript, and at the end of the writing there is ‘By William Huchen’ in the red ink of the rubrication, showing that the writing and decoration were done by the same man.


 

Dutch Book of Hours (c. 1460–1480), MS 371

Written in the Middle Dutch vernacular, this manuscript book of hours was likely made in a monastery, and it is one that we know was owned by women.


 

Bernard André, Annales (1515), MS 287

This manuscript is a royal presentation copy, produced for its (blind) author the Tudor court poet Bernard André, and intended as André’s New Year’s Day gift for King Henry VIII in 1515. Its beautiful, illuminated shell-gold initial ‘C’ is decorated with a Tudor rose in white and red with a gold crown above, in honour of the king.


 

Donations Book of Bishop Robert Sherborn (c. 1531), NCA 9432

This volume contains copies of charters creating the Wiccamical prebends in Chichester Cathedral, and also the free grammar school at Rolleston, Staffordshire, with lists of jewels and ornaments, an estate rental and benefactions to Ï㽶ֱ²¥, St Frideswide’s monastery, Oxford (now Christ Church), and Lambourne, Berkshire.


 

Sebastian Münster, Cosmographia (1544), BT3.187.1(2)

Published in Basel in 1544, Cosmographia—by the Hebraist, cartographer, and cosmologist Sebastian Münster—is the earliest German-language description of the world.


 

Hermann von Wied, Simplex et pia deliberatio (c. 1545), MS 136

The first part of this volume is an incomplete manuscript translation into Latin, by King Henry VIII’s librarian Wouter Deleen, of the German printed book which follows it, Hermann von Wied’s Einfältiges Bedenken, worauf eine christliche, im Worte Gottes gegründete Reformation . . . anzurichten sei (Bonn: Laurenz von der Mülen, 1543). The whole is bound into a spectacular gold-tooled binding, by the so-called Flamboyant Binder, intended for the library of Henry VIII.


 

Tudor Wardrobe Warrants (1550–1558), MS 328

This collection of royal state documents was given to the college in 1710 by a fellow, the Revd John Woodford.  It is largely composed of official wardrobe warrants, documents which were issued by the reigning monarch to their Keeper of the Wardrobe.  They were issued principally by King Edward VI and Queen Mary I, but they also include extraordinary rarities: two signed by Lady Jane Grey, as Queen Jane. 


 

Saxton, Atlas of the Counties of England and Wales (1579), BT1.47.9

Produced in 1579, this is the first atlas created of any country. It contains 35 maps, all bearing the arms of Elizabeth I and Thomas Seckford, Christopher Saxton’s patron. Our copy was first owned by John Savile, the older brother of the Elizabethan scholar and courtier Sir Henry Savile, who founded the Savilian Professorships in Geometry and Astronomy, both of which are attached to Ï㽶ֱ²¥.


 

Thomas Powell, ‘The Visions of William Collins’ (1792), MS 367

One of the most recent manuscripts acquired by New College Library, arriving in the late twentieth century, the poem of MS 367 is attributed on its title-page to Thomas Powell (1735–1820), poet and playwright, whose published works appear both under his own name and under his long-standing pseudonym, ‘Il Taliessen de Monmouth’.


 

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