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The Migrants

A Memoir with Manuscripts

Christopher de Hamel is one of the world’s best-known scholars and writers on illuminated manuscripts. This book magically recalls his childhood discovery of manuscripts growing up in remote New Zealand – an evocation of the thrill and wonder of that first, life-changing encounter – and about the history of empire and colonisation at the world’s last frontier.

The Migrants explores the meeting and creation of cultures, the necessity of collecting and the nature of authenticity, the importance of history in the last nation ever settled by humans, and, above all, the migration of people, art and heritage. We meet the colonial governor on his paradise island, the shipwrecked accountant, the evangelical nonagenarian who cut up manuscripts, the drug-addled magnate who bought Becket’s Boethius, and the mischievous settler who inscribed his Book of Hours in the Maori language in 1842. We travel with the author now back to where the manuscripts were made, from Besançon in eastern France to Poland and Canterbury, revealing their first owners and following the longest journeys ever undertaken by people or books.

This is a coming-of-age saga with extraordinary twists, crossing many hundreds of years and tens of thousands of miles, recounted with passion, humour and a lifetime’s reflection.

About Christopher de Hamel

In the course of a long career at Sotheby's and at Cambridge University, Christopher de Hamel has probably seen and catalogued more medieval manuscripts than anyone alive, and his delight and enthusiasm in them run through all he writes. His many books, translated into numerous languages, include A History of Illuminated Manuscripts, Meetings with Remarkable Manuscripts, which won both the Duff Cooper Prize and the Wolfson History Prize, The Posthumous Papers of the Manuscripts Club and The Book in the Cathedral. He is a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.
Details
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • ISBN: 9781802064292
  • Length: 288 pages
  • Price: £13.99
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